Football, sports, and ice cream. At first glance, the connection is not obvious. But if you turn off the TV and go to the stadium, you'll understand: it's a love triangle that has lasted for over a century. The sweet chill on a hot day, when millionaires are running on the field and the stands are buzzing. Ice cream is not just a dessert for fans. It's a ritual, an industry, and even part of the strategy (in the figurative sense). Let's figure out how the ice cream cone and football intertwined into a global tradition.
As early as the 1920s, vendors selling ice cream appeared on English stadiums. Fans, tired of shouting and the noise, needed refreshment. In the US, ice cream in waffle cones was sold at baseball games since the 1930s. Football picked up the trend later, in the 1950s, when mass refrigerators were introduced. In the 1960s, ice cream became a symbol of "dolce vita" for fans at Italian stadiums (Milan, Turin). Today, in 2026, it's hard to imagine a football match without ice cream carts in the aisles. In Brazil, at the Maracana, ice cream is sold with cries of "Sorvete! Sorvete!" drowning out the roar of the crowd.
The reasons are physiology and psychology. On a hot day (and many championships are held in the summer), ice cream lowers body temperature and helps prevent overheating. During the half-time break, fans spend energy on cheering, clapping, and stamping their feet. Ice cream provides a quick sugar (glucose) boost, nourishing the brain and muscles. Taste buds also want a celebration: sweet flavors trigger the release of dopamine, enhancing the joy of the game. Moreover, ice cream is social glue. Sharing ice cream with a neighbor on the stands, laughing at a dropped spoon — all this brings people closer. And it's practical: eat the cone and there's no waste (except for the napkin).
Fans vote not only with flags but also with their wallets. In Europe, the best ice cream at stadiums is famous at the "Allianz Arena" in Munich. There, they sell gelato from the local factory "Munchen Gel" with added wheat beer. At "Camp Nou" in Barcelona, there's strawberry and lemon sorbet, reminiscent of Catalan markets. At "Santiago Bernabeu" (Madrid), there's creamy ice cream with pieces of alfajores (cookies). At "The Emirates" (London), there's apple sorbet, a nod to English gardens. At "Luzhniki" in Moscow, you can find ice cream by Soviet ГОСТ (15% fat) sold in bricks — nostalgia for the older generation.
Football clubs have long understood that ice cream is not just food but also a way to make money and foster loyalty. "Bayern Munich" releases a limited edition ice cream in the club's colors (red, blue, white). "Manchester United" — ice cream bars with the club logo. "Paris Saint-Germain" — ice cream with a picture of Mbappé on the packaging. In 2026, the Italian brand "Gelateria Calcio" created a series "Tastes of Legends": ice cream "Maradona" (caramel with rum), "Baggio" (chocolate with chili), "Maldini" (fig and honey). A portion of the proceeds goes to children's football schools.
Major tournament finals do not go without ice cream. According to statistics, ice cream sales in the host country increase by 300% on the day of the final. In 2018, in Russia, ice cream was sold at the entrance to the stadium during the final, and it was sold in "Match" branded cones. In 2022, in Qatar, due to the heat, ice cream was literally a lifesaver — it was even distributed by volunteers with carts. In 2026, at the final in the US ("MetLife Stadium"), a record is expected: 50,000 portions in one evening. Organizers even brought refrigerators for waffle cones so they wouldn't melt under the sun in New Jersey.
What about the players themselves? Can they eat ice cream? On one hand, it contains a lot of sugar and fat, which is harmful to their shape. On the other hand, even dietitians at top clubs allow a small amount (one popsicle after the match). For example, Cristiano Ronaldo was allowed to eat ice cream on his son's birthday. Lionel Messi prefers fruit sorbet (sorbet) without milk. After winning the championship at "Manchester City," players are served ice cream with champagne. However, coaches do not recommend it: a protein bar is better. However, for fans, ice cream is not about the players, but about themselves.
The internet is full of memes about ice cream and football. A classic: "If your team loses, an ice cream cone softens the pain." Or: "The referee ate ice cream and didn't notice the penalty." In 2025, a video went viral on Twitter where a Liverpool fan ate a cone and cried after Everton scored a goal in the last minute. During the 2026 World Cup, a challenge #IceCreamGoal will be launched on social networks: record yourself eating ice cream at the moment when your team scores a goal.
The football world is one, but the flavors of ice cream vary. In Japan, they sell ice cream with miso soup and unagi (eel) flavors on the stands. In Mexico, they have chili and lime to "spice up" the stands. In Brazil, there's ice cream with acai berries and cachaca (sugar cane). In Australia, there's ice cream with Vegemite (salted paste), but this is for extreme fans. In England, they tried to launch ice cream with shepherd's pie flavor, but the experiment failed. In Russia, there's also a unique offer: "Luzhniki" sells "Mors-ice cream" made from cranberry and lingonberry — sour-sweet and invigorating.
Football fans are superstitious people. Some eat ice cream with one hand, others in a certain order (first chocolate, then vanilla). In Italy, there's a belief: if you eat pistachio ice cream before a derby, your team won't lose. In Germany, fans buy ice cream at the stadium only after their team scores a goal — otherwise, you can "jinx" it. In Brazil, it's customary to drink acai with a straw, like a talisman.
Football, sports, and ice cream are the three pillars on which the happiness of the fan stands. Field, game, sweetness. Without one of them, the evening would be incomplete. In 2026, when the world gathers again at the stadiums, don't forget to stop by the ice cream stand. Buy two cones. One for yourself, one for your neighbor on the stands. Football unites, and ice cream makes this unity sweeter.
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