Why Spain’s Soccer Team Chose A Tennessee High School For The World Cup

The Spanish national soccer team goes into the 2026 World Cup as the number one ranked side in the world according to the FIFA rankings, reigning European champions, and heavy favorites to go deep in the tournament. Their base camp for the group stage is a high school in Chattanooga, Tennessee.

The Baylor School, a private prep school of around 1,000 students on the banks of the Tennessee River, was announced in late January as the Real Federación Española de Fútbol (RFEF)’s official training site for the group phase. Spain’s players, coaching staff and delegations will stay at Embassy Suites by Hilton Chattanooga Downtown and make the short trip to Baylor’s soccer complex for sessions during the opening weeks of the tournament.

The decision was not accidental, and it was not a compromise. According to reports in MARCA, the RFEF evaluated three options in the Atlanta area, including Atlanta United’s training facility, which offered only its youth academy fields, before concluding that Baylor offered something the professional sites did not: a controlled, secluded environment with top-quality pitches and a level of privacy that is difficult to guarantee at an MLS training ground open to media scrutiny and club staff.

Why Chattanooga won the race to host Spain

Spain’s group stage schedule makes Chattanooga a sensible operational base. The Iberian nation opens Group H against tournament debutants Cape Verde in Atlanta on June 15 and return to the same city to face Saudi Arabia on June 21, then travel to Guadalajara, Mexico, for the final group game against Uruguay on June 27. Two of three group games at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta, roughly 90 minutes from Chattanooga by road, gives the base camp a clear logistical rationale.

Proximity to Atlanta was one factor among several. Elite national teams at major tournaments have consistently shown a preference for controlled environments over convenient ones. The 2026 World Cup is the first to span three countries and 16 host cities, a a format that makes the base camp more important than ever as a stable operational centre in a geographically scattered competition.

Spain’s setup at Baylor mirrors what other leading nations are doing: Germany chose Wake Forest University in Winston-Salem, North Carolina; Brazil took the Red Bulls’ training facility in Morristown, New Jersey; Argentina picked Sporting Kansas City’s training centre. In each case, quality of environment and privacy ranked above proximity to match venues.

Spain, Croatia and Switzerland have all selected US high schools as their bases, Baylor, Episcopal High School in Alexandria, Virginia and San Diego Jewish Academy respectively, a detail that looks counterintuitive until you look at what those facilities actually offer: multiple full-size professional-grade pitches, dedicated support spaces and a contained campus environment that is far easier to secure than a city-centre training ground.

The impact of Spain’s presence on Chattanooga

For the city, the announcement was a moment of a different order. Chattanooga is a mid-sized Tennessee city of around 180,000 people that does not feature on the World Cup match schedule and was not originally expected to figure in the tournament’s commercial picture. Spain’s choice changes that.

The players, families, media representatives and wider delegation, a travelling party that for a major national team at a World Cup typically runs to several hundred people over several weeks, will eat, sleep and spend in downtown Chattanooga throughout the group phase.

Local officials have been direct about what they expect. Barry White, CEO of Chattanooga Tourism Co., told Knoxville WVLT-TV that the selection “represents years of groundwork and vision” and described the city’s bidding process as long-term and deliberate. The city partnered with Baylor School, Vision Hospitality Group, Hamilton County, and the Sports and Events Corporation to put together the package that ultimately won the RFEF’s approval.

Comparable estimates from other non-host base camp cities give a sense of the scale. San Antonio, another non-host US city serving as an official FIFA training hub, has been cited in economic projections as likely to generate between $5 million and $15 million from a base camp arrangement, according to analysis prepared for the city’s World Cup planning by Market Edge.

Chattanooga’s return will depend on how far Spain progress, with the RFEF saying explicitly that base camp arrangements for the knockout rounds would be evaluated separately depending on match locations. But even a group-stage-only arrangement brings weeks of high-profile international presence to a city that would otherwise have been peripheral to the tournament entirely.

The broader pattern across the US is consistent. Atlanta’s Metro Atlanta Chamber estimates more than $500 million in economic impact for Georgia from out-of-state visitors alone. Non-host cities within the orbit of those venues, such as Chattanooga, Macon, Kennesaw, are being pulled into that economic geography by base camp decisions, adding to the tournament’s reach beyond the 11 official US host cities.

How the 2026 World Cup has changed how teams prepare

The 2026 World Cup’s continental scale has forced a fundamental rethink of tournament preparation logistics. At Qatar 2022, all teams were within an hour of each other and matches could be attended on consecutive days. In North America, a group stage game in Atlanta may be followed by a knockout fixture in Seattle or New York, with days of travel in between.

The base camp is no longer a convenient training location, rather it is an operational headquarters that teams will return to repeatedly over a month-long campaign, and its selection has become a competitive decision as much as a logistical one.

Spain’s RFEF went through a process that involved evaluating facilities across multiple cities, assessing field quality, privacy, security infrastructure and transport links before reaching Chattanooga. That process, replicated across the 48 qualifying nations, has created a secondary competition running alongside the draw itself with cities across the US, Canada and Mexico competing for the presence of national teams whose arrival brings weeks of international visibility regardless of what happens on the pitch.

Chattanooga has won that secondary competition for the most coveted team in the draw. Whether Spain lift the trophy in New Jersey on July 19 or not, the Baylor School and the Tennessee River will have spent several weeks as the operational base of the world’s number one side. For a city of 180,000 people with no World Cup matches of its own, this summer could be one to remember.

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/samleveridge/2026/03/31/why-spains-soccer-team-chose-a-tennessee-high-school-for-the-world-cup/