Scotland fans turn Boston police keepy-ups into a World Cup warm-up moment
A short video from a World Cup fan gathering in Boston shows a local police officer joining Scotland supporters for keepy-ups before Scotland's opening Group C match against Haiti. The moment is minor in sporting terms, but it captures a larger tournament theme: the 2026 World Cup is already being shaped as much by travelling fan culture as by the matches themselves. Scotland's supporters have filled parts of Boston with kilts, songs and bagpipes as the men's national team returns to the World Cup after a long absence. FIFA's tournament material places the event across Canada, Mexico and the United States, with Boston among the host cities. For Belgian readers, the story is a light World Cup marker rather than a Belgian event: it shows how the expanded tournament is spreading football spectacle across North American cities before Belgium begin their own Group G campaign.
For football followers in Belgium, this is a soft but revealing World Cup moment: before tactics and results dominate, travelling supporters are setting the tournament's public mood. Belgian fans, sports bars, broadcasters and families following the Red Devils can read it as a preview of the atmosphere around a larger, longer World Cup. The Belgian angle is secondary: Belgium's own Group G campaign starts separately, but the same North American logistics, time zones and fan-festival culture will frame how Belgian audiences experience the tournament.
Boston (Massachusetts city in the United States and one of the 2026 FIFA World Cup host areas) is staging World Cup activity around matches played in nearby Foxborough. Foxborough (town south-west of Boston) is home to Gillette Stadium, which FIFA uses under the neutral tournament name Boston Stadium. Scotland national football team (men's side representing the Scottish Football Association) are back at a World Cup finals for the first time since the 1998 tournament. Haiti national football team (Caribbean side governed by the Haitian Football Federation) are also in Group C. Tartan Army (nickname for Scotland's travelling football support) is widely associated with kilts, songs and visible away support. FIFA World Cup 2026 (men's global football tournament organised by FIFA) is the first edition planned across three host countries and with 48 teams, according to FIFA tournament information.
Background
Scotland's men's team last played at a World Cup in 1998, and the return has given their travelling support unusual symbolic weight before a ball is kicked. Haiti's previous World Cup appearance came in 1974, making the Boston opener a rare meeting of two countries with long gaps from the finals. FIFA's tournament information says the 2026 edition runs across Canada, Mexico and the United States, expanding the finals to 48 teams. That bigger format shifts attention beyond stadiums: fan festivals, city policing and public gatherings become part of the spectacle.
Why now
The moment is timely because Scotland supporters are in Boston for the start of Group C, with the fan-zone scene emerging around the opening weekend of the expanded 2026 World Cup.
What to watch
The next signal is whether Scotland's on-field start against Haiti matches the pre-match mood, and whether Boston's fan areas remain framed by celebration rather than crowd-management problems as Group C continues.
Opposing perspectives
- Tartan Army supporters
Scotland supporters would frame the scene as the point of travelling fan culture: visible, noisy and playful without making the matchday mood hostile. The fan reports gathered around Boston present kilts, bagpipes and songs as part of Scotland's return to the World Cup after 1998, turning the host city into a temporary gathering place for national celebration.
- Boston public-safety planners
Host-city officials would see the same scenes through crowd management and public order. Reports on Boston's preparations describe a large international event requiring coordination around stadium security, fan zones and city-centre gatherings. From that perspective, friendly police interaction is welcome, but it sits inside a wider operation built to keep crowds moving and risks contained.
Sources & evidence
- Al Jazeera - Keepy-up cop wows fans with football skills at World Cup event in Boston · 2026-06-13
- The Scottish Sun - Scotland fans persuade Boston policeman to wear strip and do keepy uppies as statue gets Duke of Well · 2026-06-13
- New York Post - Scottish soccer fans in Boston for World Cup are charming the city with cheerful pub vibes, kilts and ba · 2026-06-12
- The Guardian - Pipers and dreams: World Cup fever grips Scotland again after 28 years · 2026-06-13
- FIFA - FIFA World Cup 2026 tournament page
- FourFourTwo - World Cup 2026 fan zones: Where to watch World Cup matches across the host nations · 2026-05-13
