Soccer-Scotland's Tartan Army digs deep into pockets for World Cup return


Soccer Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Group C - Haiti v Scotland - Preview - Boston, Massachusetts, U.S. - June 12, 2026 Scotland fans gather in Boston ahead of the match REUTERS/Peter Cziborra

BOSTON, June 12 (Reuters) - Scotland's raucous Tartan Army of supporters massed in downtown Boston on Friday, with fans saying ⁠they had no qualms about the thousands of dollars they are spending to see their team ‌return to the World Cup after a 28-year absence.

"I've spent the kids' inheritance," joked Willie Dowie, 61, over a beer after giving a lung-busting rendition of "Flower of Scotland" on his bagpipes to fellow fans in the Dubliner Irish Pub near the city's waterfront.

Dowie - who emigrated from Scotland to Australia 42 ​years ago - and his wife Caroline arrived in Boston on Thursday after ⁠a 30-hour journey from Adelaide ahead of the ⁠Scots' opening match of the tournament against Haiti on Saturday.

The couple paid $4,000 for four tickets to see the team's first ⁠two ‌World Cup matches since 1998 but said the high prices - plus the airfares and accommodation costs - were worth it.

"This is a trip of a lifetime for us," Caroline, 58, said. "If we wait another 28 years, we will ⁠be dead."

A group of younger fans said they had all been born ​in 1999, a year after the ‌last time Scotland played in the sport's global showpiece event.

"I don't know if it will happen again so ⁠we had to ​come," Mark Kelly from East Kilbride near Glasgow, who parted with $450 for his ticket to see Saturday's match, said.

Gail Nicholl flew into Boston from Edinburgh but said she had no plans to attend a match, preferring just to join in the partying instead.

"The Tartan Army ⁠are known for having fun," she said. "It's the camaraderie. Everyone looks after ​everyone. It's fabulous. It's a big family."

Long-time Tartan Army member Martin Riddell said the Scots - despite the loud singing and hard drinking - were always determined to win over their hosts.

"As armies go, it's nothing to be fearful of -- it's the biggest peacekeeping ⁠army in the world, I would say," Riddell, chair of the Association of Tartan Army Clubs, said.

Many Scotland fans are brimming with confidence that their team will advance into the knockout rounds of a World Cup for the first time ever.

Under the competition's newly expanded format, a win on Saturday against Haiti - ranked a lowly 83rd in the global standings by ​FIFA - would go a long way towards making that dream come true even if ⁠tougher opposition in the form of Morocco and Brazil await in Scotland's other Group C games.

Veteran fan Sandy Willson is crossing ​his fingers for more luck than when he travelled with the Tartan ‌Army to France in 1998 and Spain in 1982, but ​heartbreak at both those tournaments has taught him to keep his hopes in check.

"If your expectations are low, you are never disappointed," he said. "We'll just go and have a party."

(Writing by William SchombergEditing by Toby Davis)

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