
The weekend Philly turned yellow
Philadelphia bleeds green. This weekend, it turned yellow.
Why it matters: After years of planning to host the world's biggest sporting event, the globe's gaze fell on Philly — and Ecuador and Ivory Coast fans gave the city its first taste of World Cup fever.
State of play: Ecuador is considered the "sleeper" team of the tournament, but there was nothing sleepy about their fans' presence at Sunday's 1-0 loss to Ivory Coast.
The heat was relentless. So was the fan commitment. Photo: Isaac Avilucea/Axios
Outside the stadium: World Cup-goers took a page from Eagles fans, setting up sprawling tailgates throughout the stadium parking lots, with flags staking out their territory.
An orange-clad enclave of Ivory Coast fans cheered behind their team's bench. Photo: Isaac Avilucea/Axios
In the stands: As one Ivory Coast fan made his way to his seat, an Ecuadorian supporter loudly booed in his ear. The fan laughed it off, just happy to be attending his first World Cup match.
Ecuador's head coach Sebastian Beccacece told Axios through a translator that he was devastated about not delivering a win for the fans.
Ivory Coast's midfielder Ibrahim Sangare celebrates with forward Amad Diallo. Photo: MAURO PIMENTEL / AFP via Getty Images
Zoom out: Philadelphia's World Cup debut came amid sweltering heat, which peaked around 92 degrees.
What they're saying: Not even an ankle injury could keep Gabriel Cobena from experiencing the World Cup.
Photo: Isaac Avilucea/Axios