The 2026 FIFA World Cup opened on June 11 at Estadio Azteca in Mexico City — the first edition of the tournament expanded to 48 teams, with 104 matches played across the United States, Canada, and Mexico. It is the largest World Cup in history, and everyone is watching.
Image: 2026 FIFA World Cup Opening Ceremony Live
Among the 16 host venues, AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas is carrying one of the heaviest loads of the tournament. Every match played there will feature the LED display system engineered and manufactured by Yaham.
Image: Wikimedia Commons – AT&T Stadium
Nine matches. Zero margin for error.
With a capacity of 94,000, AT&T Stadium sits firmly in the top tier of this World Cup’s venues. FIFA’s official schedule has designate 9 matches at this venue — among the most of any stadium in the tournament — including several marquee fixtures featuring the sport’s biggest names.
That compressed calendar is exactly what makes it a demanding environment for display infrastructure. There is little downtime between fixtures, and every minute of operation happens under broadcast-level scrutiny. A dropped frame, a color shift, or a failed module doesn’t just affect the fans in the building — it happens in front of a global audience. Sustained stability and image quality aren’t nice-to-haves here; they’re the baseline requirement.
Image: Wikimedia Commons – AT&T StadiumNine matches: AT&T Stadium’s full 2026 World Cup schedule
Two systems, 1 Solution 4,290.6 m² of display
For a venue of nearly 100,000 spectators, Yaham designed a dual-system solution: a center-hung videoboard paired with a 360° ribbon display, totaling 4,290.6 m² of active displays — all of it running simultaneously throughout the tournament.
Center-hung videoboard (S1 Series)
The centerpiece measures 2,614.5 m² (48.8 m × 21.9 m) and delivers 4K ultra-high-definition output. A high refresh rate keeps the board clean on broadcast cameras, while accurate color reproduction renders live action, instant replays, and player close-ups in meticulous detail — allowing fans in the bleeders to enjoy the same clarity as one at pitch level.
Image: Getty Images
Ribbon fascia display (R1 Series)
Wrapping the seating bowl, the 1,676.1 m² ribbon uses curved, seamless splicing and operates in sync with the center-hung board — displaying live scores, match data, and interactive content in real time. It’s the layer that turns a big screen into a full-venue visual experience.
Image: BoardingArea
A track record built in North American pro sports
Yaham is no newcomer to this market. As a certified National High-Tech Enterprise with years of focus on high-end display systems, the company has already delivered installations across all four major North American leagues — the NFL, NBA, MLB, and NHL.
The World Cup project extends that portfolio to the global stage for the world’s most popular sport, and it reflects the company’s growing role in the high-end display supply chain worldwide. Tournament conditions impose near-uncompromising reliability requirements, and Yaham’s systems are built for them: pairing highly reliable components and redundant design, so the show never stops.
Image: Getty Images
The World Cup is now in full swing. Through every kickoff, replay, and roar at AT&T Stadium, Yaham’s displays will be doing what they were engineered to do — rendering the tournament, moment by moment, for millions of fans watching in the stands and around the world.