Soccer-German players to pay for 600 fans' stadium trip amid soaring transport costs


Soccer Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Germany Training - Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, U.S. - June 10, 2026 A football with the FIFA World Cup logo is pictured during training IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters/Scott Kinser

June 11 (Reuters) - German players ⁠have stepped up to ease fans' pain from soaring ⁠transport costs at the World Cup, offering to pay ‌for 600 of them to travel by bus to their last Group E game against Ecuador in New Jersey on June 25, media reports said.

City ​authorities hiked rail and bus fares from ⁠New York to the ⁠MetLife Stadium in New Jersey by several times citing increased pressure ⁠on ‌the public transit systems.

That triggered a backlash from fans who have already paid high prices for match ⁠tickets.

"In light of the high cost of bus ​and train travel ‌in New York during the World Cup, the German national ⁠team players ​have organised free transport to the final group match for 600 fans," the BBC quoted the German Football Association as saying.

"Captain Joshua ⁠Kimmich and his teammates are covering the ​cost of buses to take supporters from New York to the arena in New Jersey for the match against Ecuador."

Reuters could ⁠not immediately confirm the statement.

A round trip to the stadium by train, which usually costs $12.90, has been set at $98 during World Cup games, down from the originally proposed $150 fare after NJ ​Transit faced heavy criticism.

Shuttle buses will cost $20, ⁠down from the initial $80 price tag.

Transport was free for fans at ​the last two World Cups in ‌Russia and Qatar.

Four-time champions Germany will ​begin their campaign in Houston against Curacao on Sunday.

(Reporting by Chiranjit Ojha in Bengaluru; Editing by Andrew Cawthorne)

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