World Cup Fans Find Home at Bars Around Buffalo

World Cup Fans Find Home at Bars Around Buffalo 1

When Celia Pearce started thinking about moving to Buffalo, it didn’t take long to find a reminder of her native Argentina. 

“If Argentina wins, it’s a party everywhere,” she said of the traditionally strong national men’s soccer team. “Everyone is on the streets celebrating, out with their flags and singing – it’s a madhouse. It’s like if the Buffalo Bills won the Super Bowl, but it’s a celebration like that after every game we win.” 

Looking for a taste of home, she and her husband, Shawn, a Buffalo native, found Mès Que on Hertel Avenue and discovered the city’s blooming soccer culture while visiting his parents during the 2014 World Cup. 

World Cup Fans Find Home at Bars Around Buffalo 2

Argentina fans at Mès Que / Photo: David Staba

“We Googled and saw they were the soccer bar for European leagues, so we were like ok, let’s check that place,” she said. “We thought we were going to be the only ones wearing Argentina jerseys. But the place was full of Argentina fans.” 

The same was true during Argentina’s 2-1 win over Australia during the 2022 World Cup. Pearce and dozens of her fellow supporters filled Mès Que with the national team’s sky blue and white colors. The steady buzz throughout the match elevated to a roar when their team scored and remained there in the moments before and after the final whistle that signaled a berth in the tournament quarterfinals. 

Places like Mès Que, Banshee Irish Pub on Franklin Street and Duende at Silo City opened as early as 5 a.m. for the group stage of the World Cup, due to the time difference between Buffalo and Qatar, the tournament’s host nation. 

World Cup Fans Find Home at Bars Around Buffalo 3

Croatia fans find a hub at Banshee / Photo: Banshee Irish Pub

“I went down to Banshee a couple mornings and I was impressed with the number of people who were there for a 5 a.m. game,” said Denis Yacinthe, vice-president of the Buffalo chapter of the national soccer boosters organization American Outlaws, which gathers regularly for international matches throughout the year. 

The match between the United States Men’s National Team and England triggered a rare sight – lines extending out the door early on a Friday afternoon. 

“The Black Friday game was unbelievable, two floors completely packed, sold out and a line of 60 or 70 people outside,” Yacinthe said. 

The cavernous Hofbrauhaus Buffalo was also filled to capacity that day, with chants of U-S-A repeatedly echoing through the beer hall as the USMNT battled to a 0-0 draw that helped secure a spot in the subsequent Round of 16. 

While interest in the World Cup, particularly America’s success, caused a spike in the crowds at each of the city’s soccer hotbeds during the tournament, hardcore fans meet up regularly for international competitions like the English Premier League and European Champions League. 

“If there’s a game that matters in the soccer world, people will be there watching,” Yacinthe said of Banshee. 

The same holds true at Mès Que and Duende, which opened in time for the 2018 World Cup. 

“We believe in providing space and land for people for all walks of life, and thought having regular matches on the screen would be something that would help cultivate the international experience for people here,” said Kevin Cain, Duende’s manager. “You’ve got guys from the First Ward, and they’re standing next to people who were born in Cameroon and the Congo.” 

Duende also offers space for fans to get to know each other away from the bar and televisions. 

World Cup Fans Find Home at Bars Around Buffalo 4

Fans gather in the Watu Cantina at Duende / Photo: Duende at Silo City

“In the back yard, we have small practice nets in the back yard and we always have soccer balls for people to kick around,” said Cain, who noted the sport has been integral to Duende’s appeal. 

“It’s about culture, the interaction between people — those are the things we really care about cultivating down here,” he said. “The thing that really matters is people are coming together and learning about far-away places from standing and talking to someone. It’s a lofty goal that we really strive for.” 

For Pearce, who has lived in the United States for 24 years, the last seven in Buffalo, realizing there is a vibrant and growing soccer culture in an area internationally known for its love of its American football team helped make moving to her husband’s hometown a natural fit. 

“My husband grew up here, his family is here – when we had kids we wanted to be closer to Shawn’s parents,” she said. “It was a no-brainer to move here.” 

Lead photo by Banshee Irish Pub

• • •

Anyone wanting to sample the soccer culture in Buffalo can learn about upcoming matches and events by contacting the venue or American Outlaws. 

Mès Que

1420 Hertel Avenue, Buffalo, NY 14214 / (716) 836-8800 

mesque.com & Facebook 

Duende at Silo City

85 Silo City Row, Buffalo, NY 14203 / (716) 235-2380 

duendesilo.city & Facebook 

Banshee Irish Pub 

257 Franklin Street, Buffalo, NY 14202 / (716) 783-9003 

bansheeirishpub.com & Facebook 

Hofbrauhaus Buffalo

190 Scott Street, Buffalo, NY 14204 / (716) 939-2337 

hofbrauhausbuffalo.com & Facebook 

American Outlaws 

theamericanoutlaws.com/chapters/buffalo & Facebook 

The post World Cup Fans Find Home at Bars Around Buffalo appeared first on Visit Buffalo Niagara.

Related articles

The one official best positioned to stop Trump only has two months left on the job



There's one government agency that the Washington Post says can push back on President Donald Trump, but they don't have long to do it.

Writing Monday, the Post explained that the Government Accountability Office has an appointee whose term expires in two months.

"The agency’s leader, Comptroller General Gene Dodaro, has about two months left in his term, and Trump will nominate his replacement, potentially scuttling some of the Government Accountability Office’s most forceful attempts at oversight — including by taking the White House to court if necessary," the report said.

Already, the agency has retained a law firm to navigate whether the White House is breaking the law over spending issues.

“They are looking at everything,” said a source when speaking to the Post.

Once Trump is able to appoint his own people to the post, the agency will be "defanged," the Post described.

Congress can send Trump a list of who they think should be appointed, but the president can ignore it and pick whomever he wishes.

Office of Management and Budget director Russ Vought has spent his first few months in the post claiming the GAO is illegitimate and that it "shouldn't exist" to begin with. Republicans in Congress already tried to kill funding to the agency so that they couldn't afford to sue the administration on behalf of Congress, the report said.

"But the agency has taken on more prominence in recent months. A federal appeals court in August held that only GAO had the standing to sue over violations of spending laws, cutting out the groups that claimed harm from Trump’s decisions," the report explained.

“If Trump nominates the next comptroller general — I don’t want to make a political thing out of it, but his track record about caring about oversight and independent evaluations is not terribly strong,” said Henry Wray, a former GAO lawyer and ethics counselor. “GAO is really the only truly independent source of executive branch oversight in government.”

The most recent legal example is Trump attempting to kill funding allocated by Congress before he was president. The GAO could step in and say that it violates the Impoundment Control Act.

Read the full report here.

Cheektowaga Condemns Republican-Led Cuts to Meals on Wheels Funding

Cheektowaga, NY — The Cheektowaga Democratic Committee is calling...

ICE sent into frenzy to return longtime Trump golf employee mistakenly deported to Mexico



A longtime former employee at one of President Donald Trump's golf clubs was mistakenly deported to Mexico, The New York Times reported — sending U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement into a mad scramble to correct the error and bring him home.

"Alejandro Juarez stepped off a plane in Texas and stood on a bridge over the Rio Grande, staring at the same border that he had crossed illegally from Mexico 22 years earlier," reported Luis Ferré-Sadurní and Hamed Aleaziz. "As U.S. immigration officials unshackled restraints bound to his arms and legs, Mr. Juarez, 39, pleaded with them. He told them he was never given a chance to contest his deportation in front of an immigration judge after being detained in New York City five days before."

As it turned out, the Department of Homeland Security had mistakenly put him on a deportation flight instead of sending him to a detention facility in Arizona ahead of his immigration hearing, to which he was entitled.

"Their actions probably violated federal immigration laws, which entitle most immigrants facing deportation to a hearing before a judge — a hearing Mr. Juarez never had," said the report. "ICE officials raced to decipher his whereabouts, exchanging bewildered emails and contacting detention facilities to pinpoint his location, according to internal ICE documents obtained by The New York Times. It is unclear how many other immigrants like Mr. Juarez have been erroneously removed, in part because ICE has not in the past tracked such cases."

Juarez "had worked for more than a decade at a Trump Organization golf club in New York," noted the report, and suddenly found himself expelled from the United States.

Similar administrative mistakes have happened on other occasions, most notably with Salvadoran migrant Kilmar Abrego Garcia, who was deported from his family in Maryland to the infamous CECOT megaprison in his home country, despite a court order prohibiting his removal there. After months of denying they had jurisdiction to repatriate him, the Trump administration finally did so, but then immediately hit him with flimsy gang charges, and started shopping around for any other country that would accept him, including several in Africa.