With soccer ‘clearly on the rise,’ U.S. fans unite for Gold Cup in Baltimore – Baltimore Sun

American flag shirt, shorts and bandanas replaced the typical purple Joe Flacco and orange Adam Jones jerseys on the streets surrounding M&T Bank Stadium and Camden Yards on Saturday.

The vendors with Orioles apparel had a special section filled with United States shirts. American flags were sold on street corners. And soccer balls replaced footballs at the tailgates.

Baltimore evolved into a soccer haven — at least for the day — with the first two games of the CONCACAF Gold Cup quarterfinals in town. Fans packed into M&T Bank Stadium to watch the doubleheader, first the United States men’s national team against Cuba and then Haiti against Jamaica.

“Any time you get U.S. soccer together, it’s going to be a good time,” said Ryan Ellis, a resident from Philadelphia who had friends from Texas, California and Colorado with him. “It’s always a party. People from all over the country come.”

When Baltimore hosted the 2013 quarterfinal between the U.S. and El Salvador, U.S. fans were heavily outnumbered in the crowd of more than 70,000. But with three Caribbean teams joining the U.S. in the quarterfinals in Baltimore, American fans dominated the crowd and the surrounding tailgates.

It has been a growing trend in recent years as soccer gathers steam in the United States. Fans pointed to the 2014 men’s World Cup and the women’s World Cup victory earlier this month as reasons.

“Soccer is clearly on the rise in this country,” Ellis said. “It’s fun to be a part of.”

U.S. coach Jurgen Klinsmann was happy with Baltimore and the turnout, too.