Levi’s Stadium may never carry the emotional pull of Candlestick Park for 49ers fans, but over the last five and a half months it has made a different kind of case for itself: not as a nostalgic home, but as a heavyweight event site.
That was the message from Al Guido, the 49ers president and a Bay Area Host Committee board member, after the stadium wrapped up six World Cup matches on Wednesday, including the United States’ knockout-round win over Bosnia-Herzegovina on July 1. Guido said the stretch that also included Super Bowl LX has pushed Levi’s into a new category.
“In the last five and a half months,” Guido said, “we have cemented our place as a global destination for marquee events.”
The numbers back up the pitch. Guido said the seven games across the Super Bowl and World Cup produced $1 billion in local economic activity. He compared that with the $2 billion generated during Levi’s Stadium’s first 12 years after opening in 2014.
“Between the Super Bowl and World Cup, you’re talking a million-plus visitors to our region,” Guido said. “What I’m most proud of, during Super Bowl 50 (in 2016), there was all this talk around like, ‘Is this a market that is going to continue to host big events or is this a one-off?’”
This year’s World Cup run gave the stadium another test, and it passed it in a big way. All six matches were reported as sellouts, with Levi’s configured for a maximum capacity of 68,827, a touch above the 68,500 limit for 49ers home games.
That happened even though the draw didn’t bring in the kind of traditional global powers that usually drive the loudest demand. Levi’s did not get France, Spain, Germany, Brazil or defending champion Argentina in the group stage.
Instead, the stadium hosted Qatar, Switzerland, Austria, Jordan, Algeria, Turkey, Paraguay and Australia.
The U.S. knockout match was the hottest ticket of the six, helped by Team USA clinching Group D after just two group-stage games and guaranteeing a Bay Area appearance. Guido said some doubters expected the draw to leave the building half-empty and the region underwhelmed.
“The complete opposite happened,” Guido said.
The atmosphere inside Levi’s told the same story. Even the smaller-name matchups carried energy, and the worries about inflated prices or travel problems never seemed to take hold in a meaningful way. The stadium that so many 49ers fans complain lacks Candlestick’s character instead became a gathering place for international visitors and Bay Area locals drawn to the sport’s biggest stage.
“One part that I didn’t see happening, but it was really neat to see, how (opposing countries) interacted with each other, the fan bases themselves. It was like a big party. That part was super cool,” Guido said.
The push to bring more of those events back is already underway. The Bay Area Host Committee announced June 30 that it was creating a “leadership council” to strengthen the sports commission and keep the region in the mix for major events.
That effort includes future Super Bowls and the 2031 Women’s World Cup, which will be cohosted by the U.S., Mexico, Costa Rica and Jamaica. The 49ers spent $200 million on stadium upgrades before the Super Bowl and World Cup, including new 4K-resolution scoreboards, scoreboard ribbons, a wider field for soccer and new premium club areas.
“I think we’re already publicly out there supporting our efforts to land the Women’s World Cup,” Guido said. I think it would be a great feather in our cap and I think we’re well positioned to do so.
“Will we put in for more Super Bowls? The answer is 100% yes.
I’m not ready to say which years yet. I would just tell you the stadium itself is in a good position, we have good public support to do so. ...
We have every intention to continue to bid on Super Bowls.”
The calendar is already crowded for the sport’s biggest game. The next four Super Bowls are set for SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta in 2028, Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas in 2029 and the new Nissan Stadium in Nashville in 2030. The next opening comes in 2031.
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