Sports

2 Lake Norman teachers, 9 World Cups and a lifetime of soccer memories

Terry Shinn (left) and Greg Crowley are longtime high school teachers who have made a hobby out of traveling to the World Cup every four years. Their first one was in 1994; the upcoming 2026 World Cup will be their ninth. They are holding souvenirs from previous World Cups: a soccer ball from the 2014 World Cup in Brazil and a stuffed toy from the 2010 World Cup in South Africa.
Terry Shinn (left) and Greg Crowley are longtime high school teachers who have made a hobby out of traveling to the World Cup every four years. Their first one was in 1994; the upcoming 2026 World Cup will be their ninth. They are holding souvenirs from previous World Cups: a soccer ball from the 2014 World Cup in Brazil and a stuffed toy from the 2010 World Cup in South Africa. sfowler@charlotteobserver.com
Key Takeaways
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  • Two longtime Lake Norman high school teachers have attended every World Cup since 1994.
  • The pair have seen close to 30 World Cup matches apiece over 32 years, from 1994 to 2026.
  • Crowley and Shinn value travel memories and cultural encounters more than match results.

Millions of fans around the world will attend World Cup games in North America this summer starting Thursday, when the 48-team, 2026 version of soccer’s biggest tournament begins.

But few will be looking forward to it more than two former high school teachers from the Lake Norman area.

Greg Crowley and Terry Shinn are both in their mid-70s now, and the World Cup has been a passion of theirs for 32 years.

The two friends began innocuously, by attending a World Cup match in Washington, D.C., in 1994. After being hooked by the spectacle of a Mexico-Norway match in the old RFK stadium, they have made it to every World Cup since.

In order, after starting in 1994 in America, the duo has attended World Cup games in France (1998), Japan (2002), Germany (2006), South Africa (2010), Brazil (2014), Russia (2018) and Qatar (2022).

Now they will be right back to the U.S., where this whole World Cup quest started for them. Their first game for this quadrennial event is in Atlanta on Monday, when World Cup tournament favorite Spain faces Cape Verde. They see 3-4 matches every World Cup, and usually buy their tickets for the early stages of group play.

“We’re just two average Joes,” Crowley said, “who happen to really love soccer.”

Mexico's goalkeeper Carlos Acevedo dives for the ball during a training session ahead of the FIFA 2026 World Cup at Centro de Alto Rendimiento in Mexico City on June 6, 2026. (Photo by Rodrigo Oropeza / AFP via Getty Images)
Mexico's goalkeeper Carlos Acevedo dives for the ball during a training session ahead of the FIFA 2026 World Cup. There will be 48 teams competing in the tournament, playing throughout sites in North America. RODRIGO OROPEZA AFP via Getty Images

Do they care who they see? Not really.

The World Cup ticket lottery system — which is how they have gotten almost all of their tickets, for face value — allows you to choose games by location. That’s what they have done over the years, picking places they’d like to visit and just seeing what teams end up in those cities. It’s luck of the draw.

They’ve seen players like Messi and Ronaldo, but they’ve also seen memorable games between random teams like Croatia and Australia.

“A lot of times, it turns out to not really be about the soccer,” Shinn said. “It’s more about the people.”

Indeed, the teachers’ favorite memories on many of these trips aren’t about an incredible goal they saw.

Instead, they talk about the two days they spent with their families and a guide in the recesses of the Brazilian jungle, or the elephants emerging out of the bush at a national park in South Africa, or the time when they were lost in Japan and a young woman helped them find their train, handed them some candy from the factory where she worked and thanked them for visiting her country.

Longtime high school teachers Terry Shinn (left) and Greg Crowley (right) have traveled to the World Cup every year since 1994. The upcoming 2026 World Cup in North America will be Shinn and Crowley’s ninth one. Greg’s daughter Liz (center) has often accompanied them on their trips.
Longtime high school teachers Terry Shinn (left) and Greg Crowley (right) have traveled to the World Cup every year since 1994. The upcoming 2026 World Cup in North America will be Shinn and Crowley’s ninth one. Greg’s daughter Liz (center) has often accompanied them on their trips. Scott Fowler sfowler@charlotteobserver.com

Often, their wives or some combination of their children or siblings have gone along on these trips. Crowley’s daughter, Liz, played soccer as a youth and will be attending her seventh World Cup this year.

“I’ve been tagging along ever since I could pay my own way,” she said. And now, Crowley said, while gesturing fondly at her own children: “I’ve got to pay for these knuckleheads.”

Crowley, 74, and Shinn, 77, didn’t grow up loving nor playing competitive soccer themselves. They discovered the intricacies of the game as adults, once their own children started playing it.

Crowley was a math teacher, mostly at South Iredell High. Shinn was a history and civics teacher, mostly at Mooresville High. Eventually, they each started coaching soccer, too.

In fact, Crowley directed a South Iredell team that won the 3A North Carolina state championship in 1989. He later also took several youth teams to Europe to play in exhibition tournaments, too, and it was there he and the players experienced firsthand how huge of a sport soccer was overseas.

GLASGOW, SCOTLAND - NOVEMBER 18: Scotland player Kenny McLean celebrates with Lyndon Dykes and team mates after scoring the fourth Scotland goal during the FIFA World Cup 2026 qualifier match between Scotland and Denmark at Hampden Park on November 18, 2025 in Glasgow, Scotland. (Photo by Stu Forster/Getty Images)
Scotland player Kenny McLean celebrates with Lyndon Dykes and teammates after scoring the fourth Scotland goal during a FIFA World Cup 2026 qualifier match against Denmark in 2025. Team Scotland has been training in Charlotte prior to the 2026 World Cup. Stu Forster Getty Images

There were some cultural differences, too, on those youth soccer trips. After a game in Germany once, the players from the Lake Norman area were amazed to see 15-year-old German soccer players smoking cigarettes and drinking beer. The Germans, in turn, were amazed that some of the 16-year-old players from the U.S. were actually allowed to drive cars by themselves (as a father of four, this fact has long amazed me too).

It was the culture of soccer overseas that really hooked the duo — how fans all over the world would take off for a full month to follow their team around for the World Cup, and often stick around even when their team was eliminated. Shinn and Crowley have collected rooms full of souvenirs from their trips. At the game in Atlanta Monday, which falls on Crowley’s 75th birthday, he plans to wear a Spain jersey with the number 9 and the nameplate “In A Row.”

Get it? Nine World Cups, in a row.

Greg Crowley got a specially designed soccer jersey for this World Cup that tells everyone he’s gone to nine World Cups in a row.
Greg Crowley got a specially designed soccer jersey for this World Cup that tells everyone he’s gone to nine World Cups in a row. Scott Fowler sfowler@charlotteobserver.com

I first met and wrote about Crowley and Shinn 16 years ago, just before the 2010 World Cup began in South Africa. That was well before Major League Soccer awarded the Charlotte FC franchise to owner David Tepper. Soccer was a minor sport in Charlotte back then, and having an MLS team here seemed like a pipe dream.

It’s not like that any longer. MLS regularly draws 25,000-30,000 fans to home games at Bank of America Stadium. Charlotte will soon host the MLS all-star game for the first time, in late July.

And while the Queen City won’t host any World Cup games, there will be watch parties around Charlotte with various fan contingents.

At those gatherings, there will be fans like these two schoolteachers, who have saved their money for decades to watch the world’s best play all over the world.

In all of that travel in far-flung countries, Shinn and Crowley have never been robbed and never had a much worse experience than getting lost. They’ve seen close to 30 World Cup matches apiece, including the U.S. team three times (the Americans have never won a World Cup game while they have been watching, however).

Charlotte FC's Tim Ream on Tuesday, May 12, 2026. Ream will be playing with the USMNT this summer in the World Cup.
Charlotte FC defender Tim Ream will captain the U.S. Men’s National Team this summer in the World Cup. JEFF SINER jsiner@charlotteobserver.com

They’d like to keep going to the 2030 World Cup, which will be held primarily in Spain, Portugal and Morocco. But at this point in their lives, they know that any World Cup could be their last.

This year should be the easiest travel they’ve ever had — a relatively simple four-hour drive down Interstate 85 to Atlanta.

But you never can tell what’s in store. That’s what they like the most. A World Cup game to them is always full of adventure, another door waiting to be opened into the soccer universe they never tire of seeing.

Scott Fowler
The Charlotte Observer
Columnist Scott Fowler has written for The Charlotte Observer since 1994 and has earned 26 APSE awards for his sportswriting. He hosted The Observer’s podcast “Carruth,” which Sports Illustrated once named “Podcast of the Year.” Fowler also conceived and hosted the online series and podcast “Sports Legends of the Carolinas,” which featured 1-on-1 interviews with NC and SC sports icons and was turned into a book. He occasionally writes about non-sports subjects, such as the 5-part series “9/11/74,” which chronicled the forgotten plane crash of Eastern Air Lines Flight 212 in Charlotte on Sept. 11, 1974. Support my work with a digital subscription
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