When Travis Hollowood found out ºüÀêÊÓƵ City SC would be playing Liga MX’s Club America on a Thursday night, he let out a sigh of relief. He wasn’t sure if he could wait until that weekend to get back to CityPark.
“I look forward to this all week,†Hollowood said.
He wasn't the only one who felt that way.
A few hours before the game vs. Club America started on July 27, Hollowood was inside a sea of red that swarmed Locust Street in downtown ºüÀêÊÓƵ. A few blocks from CityPark, ºüÀêÊÓƵ Santos, a supporter group for City SC, hosted a pregame event for fans at the . Hundreds of people were chanting and singing loudly, eating tacos and tortas, and high-fiving as if City SC already had scored a goal. When the time came, Hollowood and the sea of red marched into CityPark.
People are also reading…
A ºüÀêÊÓƵ native and lifelong soccer fan, Hollowood has been one of the thousands of fans who fill CityPark for every home match. City SC has played in front of a sold-out crowd — 22,423 fans per contest — in each of the team’s 12 Major League Soccer regular-season home games.Â
MLS prepares to return to regular-season action Sunday, after a five-week hiatus for the Leagues Cup tournament. City SC has five home games remaining over the remaining two months of its inaugural season, and attending a game at CityPark to see the Western Conference-leading team plat has become one of the most desired activities in ºüÀêÊÓƵ.Â
“We knew we’d have a lot of demand and a lot of interest,†said Edmound Elzy, vice president of ticket sales and service for City SC. “This definitely (has) met our expectations as far as being able to sell out the games we’ve had.â€
Compared to the rest of the 29-team MLS, City SC's 22,423 fans per match average ranks 10th this season. In total attendance, ºüÀêÊÓƵ sits eighth, with 269,076 total attendees according to a tabulation from MLS box scores and Soccer Reference.
sits at the top of the league in both categories, drawing an average of 45,081 fans per contest and with 540,977 total attendees this season. Atlanta plays at Mercedes-Benz Stadium, which has a capacity of 71,000 fans.
Making sure fans enjoy their time at CityPark and want to come back falls on Matt Sebek, City SC's chief experience officer.Â
“We wanted to create the best party in town,†Sebek said. “Win, loss or draw, build a sense of community pride. So we've put a lot of emphasis into the food experience, the entry experience, the music, a light show and I think people have really been captivated by the fact that we're new and we're competitive. But there's this sense of pride and community gathering that people get really excited about so it's been pretty magical thus far.â€
Other ºüÀêÊÓƵ professional sports are no slouch when it comes to attendance. , the Cardinals entered Monday averaging 41,013 fans per contest this season. , the Blues averaged 18,075 fans in the last NHL season.
Karen Clodfelter, a City SC season ticket holder, thinks the CityPark experience is unrivaled.Â
“It’s the most fun you can have at a sporting event in ºüÀêÊÓƵ,†Clodfelter said during the Club America game.
Like many ºüÀêÊÓƵans, Clodfelter longed for a professional soccer club in ºüÀêÊÓƵ. She previously had season tickets for ºüÀêÊÓƵ’ USL team, , before the franchise shut down in 2020. With ºüÀêÊÓƵ now on the MLS stage, she appreciates how “organized, thoughtful, and considerate†the game-day atmosphere is at City SC home matches.
Clodfelter has attended every home game since the beginning of the team's season. On April 15, when City SC experienced a two-hour severe weather delay before playing FC Cincinnati, she was one of more than 15,000 people that waited out the storm and returned to watch her team win in a dominant 5-1 victory.
“(I) hung out with friends and drank beers,†Clodfelter said proudly. “I have a friend who lives down the street, so we posted up in his place. It was worth the wait.â€
City SC players have expressed gratitude for the dedication ºüÀêÊÓƵ fans display, especially after that FC Cincinnati game
“Shout out to the fans,†City SC midfielder Eduard Lowen said after that contest. “A great example, like always, of how the fans and the city are supporting us, and we are very thankful to them.â€
For Dan Hoffman, the game against Club America was the first chance he got to watch City SC from somewhere other than his living room. With tickets being such a hot commodity, Hoffman found his way in by doing housework for a friend with season tickets.Â
“I’ve been waiting for this since I was a kid,†Hoffman, a ºüÀêÊÓƵ resident, said before the match. “I’m excited about everything, even just getting to see the field.â€
Fans have been able to celebrate often in City SC’s inaugural season with the team winning eight of its first 12 MLS home games.Â
If CityPark sells out its five remaining regular season home games, City SC will become the fifth MLS team since 2015 to sell out every regular-season match in its first year in a new stadium. The previous four were the San Jose Earthquakes (2015), LAFC (2018), Minnesota United FC (2019), and Austin FC (2021).Ìý
ºüÀêÊÓƵ fans will be able to return to CityPark on Sunday when City SC takes on Austin FC. Travis Hollowood has been counting down the hours.
“I'm a huge sports fan: Cardinals, Blues, Battlehawks, I'm here for it all,†Hollowood said. “(But) you can't get this at any other ºüÀêÊÓƵ sporting event. You're meeting the nicest people — I've met so many new friends through this that I hang out with outside of soccer. So it's really the camaraderie that (City SC) has brought to ºüÀêÊÓƵ. I love that it's brought this great ‘ºüÀêÊÓƵ spirit.’â€