26 Jun
Fri
•3:00pm
Gillette Stadium • Boston
16 Jun
Tue
•3:00pm
MetLife Stadium • New York
22 Jun
Mon
•5:00pm
Lincoln Financial Field • Philadelphia
26 Jun
Fri
•3:00pm
Gillette Stadium • Boston
16 Jun
Tue
•6:00pm
Gillette Stadium • Boston
22 Jun
Mon
•8:00pm
MetLife Stadium • New York
26 Jun
Fri
•3:00pm
Gillette Stadium • Boston
France arrives at Boston’s Gillette Stadium as one of the true giants of modern football: world champions in 1998 and 2018, runners-up at Qatar 2022 after that unforgettable final against Argentina, and a team whose style blends physical power, technical class and lethal counterattacks.
Norway comes in with a very different identity: direct football, high tempo, plenty of aerial play and a young generation used to the intensity of the Premier League and Europe’s top competitions.
There’s no major recent World Cup clash between these two, so this one is all about contrast: French talent between the lines versus Nordic power and long strides.
In a World Cup group stage, every point is priceless: a corner, a second ball or a poorly defended transition can flip the group on its head.
Experiencing it live at Gillette, with close to 65,000 fans and steep stands, means feeling every tackle and every run almost right at pitch level.
France heads into this one off the back of a golden era of finals and trophies: champions in 2018, runners-up in 2022 and a constant presence in the latter stages.
Kylian Mbappé leads a national team that also leans on the vision of Antoine Griezmann, the reliability of Mike Maignan and a back line packed with centre-backs from Europe’s elite.
Norway missed out on Qatar 2022, but their World Cup story includes appearances in 1938, 1994 and 1998, and now they boast one of Europe’s most feared duos: Erling Haaland, an unstoppable goalscorer, and Martin Ødegaard, the brains and captain at the very top level.
France–Norway in Boston is your chance to see a world champion against a generation tipped to define an era. Secure your ticket and experience it live.
Gillette Stadium offers around 65,000 seats for football, with fully enclosed stands over several tiers, no athletics track and an atmosphere very similar to the great grounds in England or Germany.
The lower sidelines are the equivalent of a central main stand in Paris or Munich; behind the goals you’ll find the loudest fans, while the upper tiers are perfect for taking in the full tactical picture.
Using typical group-stage ranges from recent World Cups as a guide, you can roughly expect around €60–90 in the higher sections (category 4), €120–200 behind the goals and in the corners (category 3), €200–320 along the mid-level sidelines (category 2) and €320–450 for the central midfield seats (category 1).
Prices may vary depending on demand, the opponent and when you buy, but this gives you the range to aim for so you don’t miss out on France–Norway in Boston.