Argentina traveled the longest possible road at the 2026 World Cup, advancing all the way to Sunday’s final. But because of the way the tournament unfolded, the reigning world champions never played a match in California.
That absence could have made Argentina a footnote in Southern California’s Cup story, but instead it became one of its most compelling.
“Argentina did not have the opportunity to play in California during the tournament,” Argentine Consul General Héctor M. Monacci said. “Even so, Argentines have made their presence felt.”
They did so through technology, restaurants, neighborhood gathering places, business innovation and one of Southern California’s most passionate international communities.
From packed watch parties in Inglewood and South Los Angeles to Argentine entrepreneurs helping shape the digital World Cup experience and companies already building technology for Los Angeles’ next global sporting event, Argentina made its sky-blue mark on L.A.
As Los Angeles begins measuring what the FIFA World Cup meant economically and culturally, Argentina offers one of the clearest examples that the tournament’s legacy extends far beyond the stadium.
No official Argentine team bus crossed Los Angeles. No sea of sky-blue-and-white jerseys marched toward a Southern California match bearing Argentina’s name, yet Argentina was everywhere.

Its supporters filled restaurants, theaters and community gathering places across the region. Argentine entrepreneurs and software developers helped create technology through which fans experienced the tournament. An international company founded in Argentina continued shaping the future of spectatorship inside one of Los Angeles’ newest arenas.
Among the most visible gathering places was Fuegos, an Argentine steakhouse near Western Avenue and 39th Street operated by Los Angeles-based Argentines Federico Laboureau and Maximiliano Pizzi.
The pair previously designed the interior of the “casita” featured during Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl halftime performance, according to Monacci. During the World Cup, they transformed their restaurant into a destination for supporters of the reigning champions.
Crowds gathered to watch Argentina’s matches while sharing the ritual of the Argentine grill, a pairing of sport, food and national identity that brought the tournament into Los Angeles even when the team itself never arrived.
Other supporters assembled at the Argentine Association of Los Angeles and the Miracle Theater in Inglewood, which is owned by an Argentine-American couple. The locations were geographically dispersed but emotionally connected.
Each became a place where anticipation, frustration, relief and celebration could be experienced collectively rather than alone in front of a television.
The commercial impact of those gatherings cannot yet be fully measured. Stephen Cheung, president and chief executive of the Los Angeles County Economic Development Corporation and World Trade Center Los Angeles, cautioned that it remains too early to declare a final World Cup economic result.
The data required for a credible analysis, including hotel performance, visitor surveys, payment-card spending, airport arrivals, tax receipts, transportation activity and individual business revenues have not yet been fully collected or reconciled, Cheung said.
The Los Angeles Host Committee’s updated pre-tournament analysis projected approximately $892 million in near-term economic impact, including $515 million in direct visitor spending and $377 million in follow-on activity.
Cheung emphasized that those figures remain projections rather than an accounting of what actually occurred.

A preliminary assessment may be possible within three to six months, he said, while the most meaningful evaluation should examine the region six months and one year after the tournament.
That longer view is particularly relevant to Argentina’s impact. The value produced by its community was not limited to international travelers purchasing hotel rooms or match tickets. It included business generated by local residents, new attention directed toward Argentine-owned establishments and visibility for entrepreneurs whose work connected Los Angeles with Argentina’s technology and creative sectors.
Cheung said any serious post-tournament analysis must distinguish between gross activity and spending that occurred specifically because of the World Cup. It should also examine where that money traveled geographically and whether small businesses converted event-period crowds into sustained customers.
The Argentine experience occurred largely outside both. One of the country’s most notable contributions to the World Cup was technological rather than athletic.
According to Monacci, a team led by Los Angeles-based Argentine entrepreneur Andy Kleinman, and composed of American and Argentine software developers, created and launched the online multiplayer version of FIFA 26.
Among its new features, the game was made available to Netflix subscribers and could be controlled using an ordinary mobile phone, Monacci said. The project illustrates a fundamental change in the economics and culture of international sports.
Modern fandom is no longer confined to the person sitting inside a stadium or watching a television broadcast. It moves through gaming platforms, mobile devices, social media, creator content and interactive environments that allow supporters to participate from anywhere.
For Argentina, that meant its influence could be embedded in how people engaged with the World Cup, even when its team never came to Los Angeles.
Argentina has become a global source of technology and creative talent, and Monacci pointed to Globant as a leading example. Founded in Argentina, the international technology company has a presence in Los Angeles and a long record of developing digital systems for sporting events, organizations and venues.

At Intuit Dome, Globant worked at the Clippers’ request to support technological innovations designed to bring spectators closer to the intensity and engagement of the live event, Monacci said. “Argentina can certainly contribute the talent needed to make the Games shine even more brightly,” he said.
That fusion of technology and emotion may be one of Argentina’s most important contributions to the future of global sport.
Argentina’s presence also formed part of a larger international story for Los Angeles. The World Cup arrived during a challenging period for inbound tourism, as political rhetoric, visa concerns and perceptions of the United States affected some travelers’ decisions.
Adam Burke, president and chief executive of Los Angeles Tourism, said international visitors are essential to the region’s economy. Tourism supports more than 530,000 jobs, $43 billion in annual local business sales and approximately $300 million in City General Fund revenue, according to the organization. Overseas visitors also spend approximately three times as much as domestic travelers, Burke said.

For Los Angeles, the World Cup was therefore not merely an event, but a global advertisement. “With hundreds of thousands of visitors during the World Cup and an estimated six billion global viewers, the last month has done more to restore the image of the U.S. than we could have imagined,” Burke said. “Through the Beautiful Game, the way international visitors have been embraced by L.A. and the other host cities has reminded the global community that travel and tourism transcends politics.”
Argentina’s story reinforces that point in an unexpected way. The country did not need a Los Angeles match to create international attention for the city. Argentine supporters around the world saw Los Angeles-linked entrepreneurs, businesses and institutions participating in the tournament. Local watch parties became expressions of the region’s diversity. Technology developed by Argentine and American teams tied the two places together.
Looking toward the Olympics, Monacci expects Argentina’s presence in Southern California to grow substantially. “The 2028 Olympic Games will undoubtedly bring renewed Argentine attention to Los Angeles,” he said.
“Argentines have always taken a keen interest in international sporting competition, and we expect the Games to attract a considerable number of visitors.”