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The Monexus
Vol. I · No. 178
Saturday, 27 June 2026
Saturday Ed.
Updated 02:38 UTC
  • UTC02:38
  • EDT22:38
  • GMT03:38
  • CET04:38
  • JST11:38
  • HKT10:38
← The MonexusSports

England's World Cup diaspora finds a second home in Times Square — and a third at the darts

English supporters have colonised Midtown for the group stage, but a chunk of the travelling cohort is drifting to the Hulu Theater for the US Darts Masters — a quieter kind of pilgrimage that says something about tournament schedules and tournament economics.

@David_Ornstein · Telegram

The English have come to New York for the World Cup, and they have brought the choreography with them. By Thursday 26 June 2026, Times Square was again the staging ground for the viral fandom that has defined this tournament — choreographed mass singalongs, pint-lifting tableaux, the now-familiar sight of thousands of red-and-white shirts converting a Midtown intersection into something between a fan zone and a parish. The headline image, captured by the Guardian's picture desk and circulated across social media on Friday morning UTC, is the kind of clip the tournament's American hosts had been hoping for: England supporters, in the open air, on camera, behaving exactly as English football crowds have always behaved when given a stage.

And yet a quiet migration is underway. According to a Guardian report filed from New York on 26 June 2026, a meaningful slice of the travelling England contingent is filing out of the bars around Times Square each evening to head uptown — to the Hulu Theater at MSG, where the US Darts Masters is running in parallel with the group stage. It is the kind of detail that looks trivial until you notice the pattern: tournament schedules in the modern sports economy rarely run alone, and the supporter who has flown four thousand miles for a fortnight of elite competition is, more or less by definition, hunting for the next fix.

A diaspora that travels on its own clock

The travelling England fan base, on the evidence of the Guardian's reporting, is no longer a single-use asset. They arrive in clusters organised around the Premier League calendar — the Champions League final, the autumn internationals, summer tournament windows — and they stay long enough to layer multiple events into one trip. New York in late June offers them a stack: the World Cup group stage in the tristate area, a Major League Soccer fixture or two at MetLife, and now, this year, the US Darts Masters.

That layering is not new, but the darts angle is. The Professional Darts Corporation has spent two decades building a US footprint around its World Series events, and the Masters is the showcase leg — invitation-only, broadcast on Sky Sports in the UK, and increasingly visible to a casual American audience through YouTube highlights and a steady drip of crossover content. The Hulu Theater's run through the World Cup window places it, by accident or by design, directly in the path of a fan base that has both the time and the disposable income to wander.

The counter-read: novelty, not migration

The obvious objection is that this is less a behavioural shift than a curiosity. Darts is, in the United States, still a fringe sport — one that breaks through at Christmas when a punishing eight-day tournament monopolises British television, and otherwise lives on highlight reels. The Guardian's piece does not claim that England fans are abandoning football for arrows. It claims they are adding darts to an itinerary that already includes football, sightseeing, and whatever else Manhattan offers a tourist with a tournament wristband.

That caveat matters. Tournament economics are built on concentration, not diversification, and FIFA's calculus for the 2026 World Cup is built around getting supporters through the gates of the host stadiums — MetLife, SoFi, AT&T, Hard Rock, the rest. Anything that pulls eyeballs and disposable income toward a competing event inside the same metro area is, at the margin, a competitor for the football dollar. Whether the darts draw is large enough to register on that ledger is an empirical question the Guardian does not attempt to answer.

What the structural picture actually looks like

There is a larger pattern here that goes beyond one group's evening plans. The modern sports calendar is no longer a set of discrete events separated by the off-season; it is a continuous product in which the travelling supporter is the unit of currency. Host cities bid for tournaments on the basis of hotel nights, restaurant covers, and merchandise sales, and the visiting fan base is the engine of all three. When that fan base starts to fraction its attention across adjacent events in the same host city, the bidding math quietly changes.

New York is an instructive case. The city has spent two decades building out its major-event infrastructure — the US Open at Flushing, the NYC Marathon, the Knicks and Rangers at MSG, the Yankees across the river, and now the World Cup at MetLife. Darts has ridden that same infrastructure at a much smaller scale. The fact that English football fans, of all groups, are wandering into the Hulu Theater during the World Cup week is a signal that the city's sports-tourism stack is genuinely working as designed — even if the architects of that stack did not, specifically, plan for it.

Stakes, and what remains uncertain

The stakes for the PDC, if the Guardian's reading is right, are obvious: a path into the American sports-fan consciousness that runs through the one group most likely to evangelise. The stakes for FIFA are more ambiguous. A World Cup that produces the kind of crowd scenes Times Square has hosted this week is, by any marketing metric, a success; a World Cup that loses those same fans to a darts tournament in the same city, even for a few evenings, is not a failure so much as a reminder that no event holds the modern sports tourist's attention exclusively.

The reporting does not specify how many England supporters have crossed from Times Square to the Hulu Theater, nor whether the PDC has registered the crossover in its own ticket data. Those numbers, if they exist, will tell us whether this is a genuine migration or a curiosity that will evaporate once the knockout rounds begin. For now, the picture is simple: England have come to New York, and a few of them have noticed there is other sport in town.

This piece was written from a single source. Where the reporting stops, so does the analysis.

© 2026 Monexus Media · reported from the wire