Scotland fans have turned their 2026 World Cup trip into a traveling show across Boston, and their visit to Fenway Park sparked an unexpected baseball debate.
Their trip to the area was built around Scotland’s World Cup fixture in Foxborough, but the Tartan Army’s influence stretched well beyond the soccer pitch.
Supporters packed streets, bars and local venues before bringing their songs and energy into one of baseball’s most iconic ballparks.
That atmosphere caught the attention of one baseball outlet, which joked that Scotland deserved a new sporting stage altogether.

Jomboy Media calls for Scotland to join World Baseball Classic
In a post shared by Jomboy Media on X, the outlet reacted to Scotland fans bringing their World Cup spirit to a Boston Red Sox game.
“I’ve seen enough get Scotland in the World Baseball Classic just so their fans keep showing up at ballparks,” the outlet tweeted.
The line worked because it captured what made the Fenway moment so unusual. Scotland fans were not there as a typical baseball crowd, but they brought the noise, rhythm and visual presence of a major soccer away support into an MLB setting.
Fenway Park already has its own energy, but groups of Scottish fans in kilts and national colors gave the game a different kind of buzz.
Their songs, including familiar Tartan Army chants and Scottish anthems, turned a regular ballpark visit into a viral crossover moment.
Scotland fans changed the Fenway mood in a way baseball rarely sees
The World Baseball Classic joke also landed because Scotland is not currently treated as a separate WBC entry in the way its soccer team is on the World Cup stage.
Players with Scottish ties can be part of Great Britain’s baseball setup, and Great Britain has already made progress in the tournament structure. Scotland, as its own fan-backed baseball identity, remains a much less realistic short-term idea.
That is why the call was more about supporters than playing strength. The clip showed how international fan culture can change the feel of an American ballpark, even when many visitors were experiencing baseball as part of a wider World Cup trip.
Boston was the perfect place for that crossover. The Red Sox game gave fans a historic venue to visit, and they gave baseball social media something it rarely gets from visiting soccer supporters.
Scotland might not be joining the World Baseball Classic anytime soon, but if the Tartan Army keeps showing up like that, baseball would gladly borrow the noise.
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