15 Jun
Mon
•18:00
Hard Rock Stadium • Miami
15 Jun
Mon
•18:00
Hard Rock Stadium • Miami
21 Jun
Sun
•12:00
Mercedes-Benz Stadium • Atlanta
26 Jun
Fri
•20:00
NRG Stadium • Houston
27 Mar
Fri
•19:45
Wembley Stadium • London
15 Jun
Mon
•18:00
Hard Rock Stadium • Miami
21 Jun
Sun
•18:00
Hard Rock Stadium • Miami
26 Jun
Fri
•18:00
Estadio Akron • Zapopan
Saudi Arabia and Uruguay meet in the group stage of the 2026 World Cup at Miami’s Hard Rock Stadium, a venue packed with more than 65,000 fans under its iconic canopy roof. Uruguay arrive with their trademark South American intensity: high press, hard tackles, set-piece threat and that “garra” which already delivered a 1–0 win over the Saudis at Russia 2018. Saudi Arabia answer with tactical discipline and a sharp Asian tempo, the same formula that produced their historic 2–1 victory over Messi’s Argentina at Qatar 2022.
It’s a showdown between a traditional powerhouse, currently in the FIFA top 20, and a team sitting around 60th but well used to taking down giants. In a World Cup group stage, every detail matters: this head‑to‑head could decide who reaches the final matchday still alive, and experiencing it from the stands turns every 50–50 challenge into a moment that can shape the whole group.
Saudi Arabia have seven World Cup appearances and three Asian Cups on their record, plus a recent unforgettable memory: beating the future world champions in 2022. Their attacking reference is still Salem Al‑Dawsari, a game‑changing winger who loves to step up on the biggest nights.
Uruguay arrive with two World Cups in their history (1930 and 1950) and 15 Copa América titles, credentials that command respect even after going out in the group stage in Qatar 2022 despite a 2–0 win over Ghana. La Celeste blend experience and hunger with names like Darwin Núñez up front and Fede Valverde charging in from midfield.
This Saudi Arabia–Uruguay clash in Miami has all the ingredients of a tense, physical, end‑to‑end match. Lock in your tickets and feel live a showdown that could completely reshape the group.
The Hard Rock Stadium offers around 65,000 seats for football, with open stands, a huge canopy covering most of the seating, and video boards in every corner keeping the action front and centre. If you’re used to European football, the central lower sidelines are the equivalent of the main stand at a big Champions League ground: perfect frontal view and the feeling of being right on top of the pitch. The upper sidelines give you a more tactical angle on the team shape and movement, while the ends are like the great European curvas: louder, more colour, and the match unfolding right behind the goals.
Using the official group-stage price range as a guide (roughly US$60 to US$620) and its approximate conversion into euros, indicative prices for this Saudi Arabia–Uruguay game could be: €60–€120 in upper tiers and corners, €120–€240 behind the goals, €220–€380 along the upper sidelines and €320–€580 in lower sidelines and premium areas. Exact figures will depend on demand, sales phase and precise location, but they all take you to the same place: the heart of a World Cup experience lived live in Miami.