Safety, Efficiency

The teams behind the tournament: Meet the operators giving the winning assist

June 11, 2026

Get the latest from Samsara

Subscribe now

This summer, 16 cities across the U.S., Canada, and Mexico will host the world's biggest sporting event, watched by billions around the globe. All eyes will be on the players and coaches, with fans cheering every goal, save, and win. But before any of that can happen, operators have to prepare the airports, roads, stadiums, and transit networks that make the tournament possible. Just like the teams on the field, they’ve spent years getting ready for this moment. None of what happens on the field is possible without all the hard work they did off of it. 

The assists that built the world stage

Every one of the 104 matches is the result of an extraordinary list of assists that many people will never hear about. Operators working behind the scenes for transit networks in cities like New York, Houston, Miami, Atlanta, and Vancouver are preparing for record demand, while airports have been upgraded and are ready for an unprecedented surge. The scale is hard to picture, but it shows up clearly in the data. Samsara tracked more than two million construction fleet trips around host stadiums and found activity surging in the months before kickoff.

Some of that work started years before the first match. Maxim Crane Works, one of North America's largest crane rental companies, has had a hand in shaping some of the most iconic venues in the U.S., including Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta, one of this summer's host venues. Planning for lifts at this scale begins months or even years before a project breaks ground, bringing together engineering, logistics, and operations teams to coordinate them. At Mercedes-Benz Stadium, Maxim Crane had 24 cranes onsite, completed 72,618 machine hours without a major incident, and lifted roof trusses weighing 1.6 million pounds each.

Skanska USA has been reconfiguring four miles of roadway at Los Angeles International Airport (LAX), one of the world's busiest airports. At the same time, their team is building a 1,950-space parking facility at the John F. Kennedy International Airport (JFK) Ground Transportation Center and driving more than 1.5 miles of foundation piles (some over 120 feet deep) to support bridge construction around terminals. 

For Ben E. Keith, a distributor of food and beverage products, keeping the tournament moving means keeping supply chains running at scale. Its food business is delivering 14.7 million cases during the tournament window and managing 900 routes a day across more than 25 states. In Texas, the beverage side of their business is driving more than 350,000 miles across the Dallas/Fort Worth Metroplex and logging 11,000 hours to supply bars, restaurants, and retailers with the drinks fans will reach for before, during, and after the match.

Getting fans to the matches is its own operation, and it’s not easy when thousands of people are trying to get to the same place at the same time. In Boston, Yankee Line is running more than 20 daily routes to Gillette Stadium as they support Boston Stadium Express as a direct bus service for the matches.

These are the assists that make the tournament possible. You won't see them on TV, and most fans will never think about them. That's exactly why we wanted to give the operators behind them a spotlight.

Player cards

The team behind the tournament

We created a set of player cards celebrating the operators who made these matches happen, and continue to keep them running smoothly. Each card highlights the work, the numbers, and the people behind some of the most complex operations in the world. Explore our interactive map and player cards for each city to get to know the operators, how they’re making an impact, and what sets them apart.  

Meet the operators

The operations teams behind the tournament aren’t the only ones with stats worth celebrating. Every day, operators like you keep complex operations running safely and efficiently. Upload your photo, add your best stats, and build your own personalized player card. Share it on social and remember to tag Samsara — we’ll choose a few of our favorites and share them over the next few weeks. 

Create your player card

How does your operation perform under pressure? 

The teams running this tournament built systems that hold up under pressure, and there's a lot any operation can learn from how they work. On July 1, we're hosting a live webinar featuring these operators. Join us as they walk through how elite teams prepare for, manage, and recover from demand at this scale.

Register now

Get the latest from Samsara

Subscribe now
Person holds Samsara Vehicle Gateway 34 product plugging in vehicle connector cables.

Get Started with Samsara

Check our prices