27 Jun
Sat
•21:00
AT&T Stadium • Arlington
27 Mar
Fri
•21:00
Lusail Stadium • Doha
16 Jun
Tue
•20:00
Arrowhead Stadium • Kansas City
22 Jun
Mon
•12:00
AT&T Stadium • Arlington
27 Jun
Sat
•21:00
AT&T Stadium • Arlington
16 Jun
Tue
•21:00
Levi's Stadium • San Francisco
22 Jun
Mon
•20:00
Levi's Stadium • San Francisco
27 Jun
Sat
•21:00
AT&T Stadium • Arlington
Argentina arrives at the AT&T Stadium as reigning world champion, three stars on the badge and a very clear identity: feet on the ball, talent between the lines and a ruthless competitive edge when the game heats up. Jordan flies in from Asia with a growing football culture, fierce pressing and huge energy in every duel, ready to stare La Albiceleste straight in the eye.
There’s no World Cup head‑to‑head history between them, but the contrast in footballing schools speaks for itself: Argentina’s patience and quick combinations against a compact Jordanian unit that moves together and never switches off. In a group stage where every point can change the bracket, an early goal or a mistake playing out from the back can completely reshape the tournament.
Experiencing this showdown live in Dallas, under the retractable roof and with that giant video scoreboard hanging over the pitch, means feeling every tackle, every dribble and every chance as if you were standing on the touchline.
Argentina heads into the 2026 World Cup after conquering Qatar 2022 and stringing together more silverware in the Copa América, with a core group that already knows how to win finals. Lionel Messi is still the difference‑maker, backed by the firepower of Lautaro Martínez and Julián Álvarez, plus a squad that competes week in, week out at the very highest level in Europe.
Jordan, fresh from the best campaign in its history at the Asian Cup after reaching the final, no longer sees itself as just a guest: they battle, come from behind and press until the 90th minute. Players like Mousa Al-Tamari bring pace, flair and goals from Europe, supported by a team that’s perfectly comfortable sitting deep and breaking at speed.
Argentina–Jordan at the AT&T Stadium is a one‑off date with history: lock in your tickets and witness, in person, a clash that could define the entire group.
The AT&T Stadium holds around 80,000 fans for football, with multi‑tiered stands, a retractable roof and a gigantic central video board, offering an atmosphere and visibility very similar to the great European arenas. The best views for football are in the lower sidelines, equivalent to a central main stand in Madrid or Munich; the ends pack in the loudest supporters, while the upper tiers give you the perfect panorama to read every tactical move.
As a rough guide for group‑stage matches in a stadium of this category, you can expect around €60–90 in the highest sections (category 4), €120–200 behind the goals and in the corners (category 3), €200–320 along the mid‑tier sidelines (category 2) and €320–450 for prime central seats on the halfway line (category 1). Prices can shift depending on demand, the opponent and the sales phase, but this is the ballpark to keep in mind if you don’t want to miss this blockbuster match.