Something I Can’t Fully Explain
I’ve been to sports events in cities where I didn’t speak the language, didn’t fully understand the rules, and didn’t know anyone in the stadium. These have consistently been among the most memorable experiences of any trip I’ve taken. I’ve been trying to understand why for a while, and I don’t have a complete answer – but I have some observations that feel true.
There’s something about watching sport in a foreign country that creates a very specific kind of presence. You can’t default to half-attention. You don’t know what’s going on well enough to zone out. You’re watching, actually watching, in a way that’s rarer than it should be.
The Crowd Energy You Don’t Fully Understand
At a home game in a city where you grew up, you know what the crowd noises mean. You know which chants are funny, which are tribal, which are genuinely moving. You understand the register. In a foreign stadium, you hear the same emotional volume without the semantic layer. The result is that you experience the feeling more purely – the joy, the tension, the collective despair – without the cultural shorthand that usually mediates it.
I was at a football match in Naples a couple of years ago and the crowd went from silence to total delirium in approximately three seconds. I had no idea what had just happened – something with a substitution, I think, rather than the score. It didn’t matter. The wave of feeling that moved through the stadium was completely unmistakable and completely overwhelming. I was part of it before I understood it, which is not something that happens often enough in adult life.
The Food Traditions You Can’t Google

Stadium food abroad is genuinely one of the underrated pleasures of sports travel. Not always in a “this is delicious” way – sometimes in a “this is extremely specific to this place and I have no idea what I’m eating” way. The vendors at the Naples match sold something that looked like a stuffed fried dough, served wrapped in paper, that I watched the people around me eat with a specific fold-and-bite technique I had to observe and replicate. No one taught me this. No travel guide mentioned it. It was just the thing you did, and figuring it out was quietly wonderful.
This is the version of food tourism I find most compelling. Not the restaurant-reservation food tourism where you’ve done your research and you know exactly what you’re getting. The accidental, observational, trying-to-not-make-a-mess food tourism that happens because you’re in a crowd of people doing what they always do when they come here, and you’re trying to keep up.
How It Forces You Into the Actual City
Sports events pull you into parts of cities that tourist itineraries never reach. The stadium is rarely in the tourist district. The bars and restaurants around it serve locals, not visitors. The transport routes to and from are the routes that ordinary people use. You end up navigating neighbourhoods with your phone’s map, buying food from places with no English signage, standing at a tram stop next to a group of fans who look at you with friendly curiosity. This is the city. Not the museum district version of it.
I’ve found more interesting places – cafes, markets, side streets – through pre- and post-match wandering than through any amount of deliberate sightseeing research. The game creates a destination and from that destination you improvise. Some of my favourite accidental meals have happened within two hours of a match in a foreign city.
“The foreign stadium is one of the few places where you are genuinely a guest – not in the tourist sense, but in the human sense. You’re in someone else’s ritual, and if you pay attention, it teaches you something.”

Not Always Knowing the Rules
I want to say something honest here: I don’t always know the rules of the sport I’m watching. I’ve been to baseball games understanding maybe 60% of what was happening. Rugby – I consistently lose track of the breakdown rules. Sumo wrestling in Tokyo: I had essentially no framework. These were all excellent experiences. You don’t need to understand sport fully to feel it.
What you need is curiosity and the willingness to be the person who’s a bit lost and working it out. The crowd teaches you. The rhythms teach you. The people around you, if you make any gesture of interest, often want to explain. I’ve had fifteen-minute conversations at matches in languages I didn’t speak through a combination of pointing and enthusiastic nods that were genuinely warm and connecting in a way that tourist-site interactions rarely are.
Why I Keep Going Back
Live sport abroad is not the most comfortable or convenient form of travel. It involves logistics, language barriers, navigating transport systems under time pressure, and occasionally being the only obvious outsider in a very local crowd. But it’s the travel experience I recommend most readily to people who feel like they’ve done the obvious things and want to go somewhere differently. Not a different destination – a different mode of engaging with wherever you already are.
Book one match on your next trip. Any sport, any team, local league rather than tourist-friendly international event. Go early, eat the thing wrapped in paper, stand when everyone stands. You’ll figure out what’s happening. And it’ll be the part of the trip you talk about for years.
