The San Francisco Bay Area, which includes the major cities of San Francisco, Oakland, and San Jose, hosts five major league sports franchises, with a major women's sports franchise soon to start play, as well as several other professional and college sports teams, and hosts other sports events.
Team | Sport | Bay Area since |
League | Venue | Average attendance |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
San Francisco 49ers | American football | 1946 | NFL | Levi's Stadium Santa Clara |
70,799 |
San Francisco Giants | Baseball | 1958 | MLB | Oracle Park San Francisco |
41,677 |
Golden State Warriors | Basketball | 1962 | NBA | Chase Center San Francisco |
18,064 |
San Jose Sharks | Ice hockey | 1991 | NHL | SAP Center San Jose |
16,747 |
San Jose Earthquakes | Soccer | 1996 | MLS | PayPal Park San Jose |
20,979 |
Bay FC | Soccer | 2024 | NWSL | PayPal Park San Jose |
20,979 |
Golden State Valkyries | Basketball | 2025 | WNBA | Chase Center San Francisco |
The Bay Area is home to the National Football League San Francisco 49ers, who play at Levi's Stadium[1] The 49ers have won five Super Bowls (XVI,[2] XIX,[3] XXIII,[4] XXIV,[5] XXIX[6]) and lost three (XLVII,[7] LIV,[8] LVIII[9]). The Bay Area hosted Super Bowl XIX, Super Bowl 50, and Super Bowl LX.
The Bay Area is home of a Major League Baseball team, the San Francisco Giants who play at Oracle Park[10] and have won eight World Series titles (three as the San Francisco Giants (2010, 2012, and 2014) and five as the New York Giants).
The 1989 World Series was known as the "Earthquake Series", "Bay Bridge Series", and "Battle of the Bay", as the then Oakland Athletics and Giants played against each other, and Oakland swept the Giants in a 4-game series.[11] However, the series is probably best known for the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake which struck on the day of Game 3.[12][13]
San Francisco was ranked #1 in 2012 among America's Best Baseball cities. The study examined which U.S. metro areas have produced the most Major Leaguers since 1920.[14]
The Bay Area has hosted the 1961, 1984, 1987, and 2007 All Star Games.
The Golden State Warriors returned to San Francisco beginning with the 2019–20 NBA season when the new Chase Center opened in the Mission Bay district. Originally, the Warriors played in Philadelphia, but relocated to San Francisco in 1962 and then to Oakland in 1971. During their days in Oakland, the Warriors won four NBA Finals (1975,[15] 2015, 2017, 2018). Their first ever championship while residing in the San Francisco limits came in 2022. The expansion Golden State Valkyries of the WNBA will begin play at Chase Center in 2025. The Bay Area has hosted the 1967 and 2000 NBA All-Star Games, and is scheduled to host the 2025 edition of that event.
San Jose hosts the San Jose Sharks of the National Hockey League and play at the SAP Center at San Jose.[16] The Sharks began play in 1991, playing their first two seasons at the Cow Palace before moving to their current home in 1993. They have been Pacific Division champions six times, as well as having won the Presidents' Trophy for the best regular season record in the league in 2009, and the Clarence S. Campbell Bowl as the Western Conference champions in 2016. Though the Sharks have yet to win a Stanley Cup, they made their first Stanley Cup Finals appearance in 2016. The Bay Area hosted the 1997 and 2019 All Star Games.
Beginning in 1996, the San Jose Earthquakes, then known as the San Jose Clash, competed in Major League Soccer, and became the Earthquakes in 1999. The Quakes won MLS Cup 2001 against the Los Angeles Galaxy 2–1,[17] as well as MLS Cup 2003 against the Chicago Fire 4–2. The Quakes then moved to Houston in 2005, and became the Houston Dynamo,[18] but in a fashion similar to the Cleveland Browns move,[19] the Earthquakes name and history stayed in San Jose for a future team. In 2008, the current incarnation of the Earthquakes made its return[20] and subsequently played seven seasons at Buck Shaw Stadium in Santa Clara. In March 2015, the Earthquakes opened Avaya Stadium, now known as PayPal Park, across from San Jose International Airport.[21] The Bay Area hosted the 2016 MLS All-Star Game.
In April 2023, the National Women's Soccer League, the top level of the women's game in the US, announced that it had awarded a new Bay Area franchise that began play in 2024.[22] The team revealed its identity as Bay FC on June 1,[23] and announced on July 21 that it would play its home games at PayPal Park.[24]
The Bay Area was a host of the 1994 FIFA World Cup and will also serve as one of eleven US hosts of the 2026 FIFA World Cup.[25]
Stanford Stadium hosted a total of six matches during the 1994 FIFA World Cup:
Date | Time (UTC−7) |
Team #1 | Result | Team #2 | Round | Attendance |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
June 20, 1994 | 13:00 | Brazil | 2–0 | Russia | Group B | 81,061 |
June 24, 1994 | 13:00 | 3–0 | Cameroon | 83,401 | ||
June 26, 1994 | 13:00 | Switzerland | 0–2 | Colombia | Group A | 83,401 |
June 28, 1994 | 13:00 | Russia | 6–1 | Cameroon | Group B | 74,914 |
July 4, 1994 | 12:35 | Brazil | 1–0 | United States | Round of 16 | 84,147 |
July 10, 1994 | 12:35 | Romania | 2–2 (a.e.t.) (4–5 pen.) |
Sweden | Quarter-final | 83,500 |
Levi's Stadium is one of 16 venues which will host matches during the 2026 FIFA World Cup. It is one of eleven US venues for the tournament and is also one of two venues in California which will host matches, the other being SoFi Stadium in the Los Angeles suburb of Inglewood. During the event, the stadium will be temporarily renamed to "San Francisco Bay Area Stadium" in accordance with FIFA's policy on corporate-sponsored names. The stadium will host six matches: five group stage matches and one Round of 32 match.[26]
Date | Time (UTC−7) | Team #1 | Res. | Team #2 | Round | Attendance |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
June 13, 2026 | --:-- | B3 | – | B4 | Group B | |
June 16, 2026 | --:-- | TBD | – | TBD | Group J | |
June 19, 2026 | --:-- | D4 | – | D2 | Group D | |
June 22, 2026 | --:-- | TBD | – | TBD | Group J | |
June 25, 2026 | --:-- | D2 | – | D3 | Group D | |
July 1, 2026 | --:-- | Winner Group D | – | 3rd Group B/E/F/I/J | Round of 32 |
Oakland Athletics (MLB)[edit]4 World Series titles[i] San Francisco Giants (MLB)[edit]3 World Series titles[ii] San Francisco 49ers (NFL)[edit]5 Super Bowl titles
|
Oakland Raiders (NFL)[edit]2 Super Bowl titles[iii] Golden State Warriors (NBA)[edit]5 NBA Finals titles[iv] Oakland Oaks (ABA)[edit]1 ABA Finals title Oakland Clippers (NASL)[edit]1 NASL Final title San Jose Earthquakes (MLS)[edit]2 MLS Cup titles
|
Team | Sport | League | Venue |
---|---|---|---|
Oakland Ballers | Baseball | Minor League Baseball (Pioneer League) | Laney College |
San Jose Barracuda | Ice hockey | American Hockey League | Tech CU Arena |
Oakland Roots SC | Soccer | USL Championship | Laney College Football Stadium |
The Town FC | Soccer | MLS Next Pro | Saint Mary's Stadium |
Bay Area Panthers | Indoor Football | Indoor Football League | SAP Center |
San Jose Giants | Baseball | California League | San Jose Municipal Stadium |
Sonoma Stompers | Baseball | Pacific Association | Arnold Field |
Vallejo Admirals | Baseball | Pacific Association | Wilson Park |
Napa Silverados | Baseball | Pacific Association | Napa Valley College Storm Field |
The San Jose Giants are a Minor League Baseball team in the California League. They've been a farm team of the San Francisco Giants since 1988 and have played continuously since 1962 under several different names and affiliations. The San Jose Giants have developed more than 190 major league players, including current and former San Francisco Giants such as Buster Posey, Tim Lincecum, Matt Cain, Pablo Sandoval, and Madison Bumgarner.
The Oakland Ballers are a Minor League Baseball team in the Pioneer League that was created in 2024 as a response to the Oakland Athletics relocation to Las Vegas.
The Pacific Association of Professional Baseball Clubs is an independent baseball league with three teams in the northern and eastern parts of the Bay Area. The league is currently on hiatus due to the pandemic.[27]
In the Bay Area Collegiate League, Palo Alto is home to the Palo Alto Oaks, the oldest continuously operated, wood-bat, baseball team in the Bay Area. The Oaks played their inaugural season in 1950, making 2018 their 69th consecutive season of baseball. They are joined by seven other teams in the Bay Area: Alameda Merchants, Burlingame Bucks, San Carlos Salty Dogs, San Mateo Rounders, Solano Mudcats, Walnut Creek Crawdags, and the West Coast Kings.[28]
Amateur men's soccer has been played in San Francisco since 1902 through the San Francisco Soccer Football League.[29] Over 40 teams in 4 divisions play throughout the city between March and November. Premier Division games are played at the 3,500-seat Boxer Stadium. Amateur women's soccer is played on over 30 teams in the Golden Gate Women's Soccer League.[30]
Supporter-owned San Francisco City FC, founded in 2001 as part of the SFSFL, has played in USL League Two since 2016.
San Francisco Glens SC, commonly known as SF Glens, is an American soccer club based in San Francisco that was founded in 1961. Their first team currently competes in USL League Two.
Project 51O is a soccer club from Oakland, California, competing in the Southwest Division of USL League Two. They are the reserve club of USL Championship club Oakland Roots SC.
El Farolito is an amateur soccer club based out of San Francisco, California. It currently plays in the National Premier Soccer League.
Napa Valley 1839 FC is a men's soccer club based in Napa, California. It competes in the NPSL Golden Gate Conference. The club's colors are green and white.
Sonoma County Sol is an American soccer team based in Santa Rosa, California, United States. Founded in 2004, the team plays in the National Premier Soccer League
In 2015, the Sharks American Hockey League affiliate team, the Worcester Sharks, became the San Jose Barracuda and share the SAP Center at San Jose until the 2021–2022 season. The San Jose Barracuda now play their home games at the sparkling new Tech CU Arena next to the San Jose Municipal Stadium and adjacent to San Jose State CEFCU Stadium.
The San Francisco Pro-Am Basketball League is an important summer league venue for aspiring players to be discovered by talent scouts.[citation needed] Games are held at the 4,000 seat Kezar Pavilion. Players from all levels participate, with regular appearances by off season NBA professionals.[31]
San Francisco Rush played in the inaugural 2016 PRO Rugby season at Boxer Stadium.[32] The club folded after one season. The San Francisco Golden Gate Rugby team competes in the Pacific Rugby Premiership. In rugby sevens, the Bay Area hosted the 2018 Rugby World Cup Sevens at AT&T Park which saw over 100,000 in attendance over the three days of the tournament.[33]
The Silicon Valley Strikers and Bay Blazers are teams playing in the 2021 inaugural season of Minor League Cricket.[34][35][36]
The San Francisco FlameThrowers Ultimate (sport) team were founded in 2014 when the American Ultimate Disc League (AUDL) expanded to the west coast.[37] In 2017, the Flamethrowers won the AUDL Championship game, with a final score of 30–29 over the Toronto Rush. The FlameThrowers folded after the 2018 season, but maintained rights to the FlameThrower brand and hinted at a rebirth as a women's team.[38]
The Oakland Spiders ultimate team also joined the league in 2014 as the then San Jose Spiders. They won the league championship during their inaugural year and the following year in 2015.[39] They play home games at Foothill College Stadium.[40]
The Oakland Panthers of the Indoor Football League were set to begin play in 2020 at Oakland Arena, looking to fill the hole left by the Raiders' departure, but the season was canceled by the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. The team also withdrew from the 2021 season, then moved to San Jose as the Bay Area Panthers for 2022.
The Bay Area is also well represented in college sports. Six area universities are members of NCAA Division I, the highest level of college sports in the country. Three have football teams and three do not. Bay Area Deportes is the only media outlet in San Francisco Bay Area to fully cover NCAA college sports in Spanish.
All three football-playing schools in the Bay Area are in the Football Bowl Subdivision, the highest level of NCAA college football. The California Golden Bears and Stanford Cardinal compete in the Atlantic Coast Conference, and the San Jose State Spartans compete in the Mountain West Conference.[41] The Cardinal and Golden Bears are intense rivals, with their football teams competing annually in the Big Game for the Stanford Axe.[42] One of the most famous games in the rivalry is the 1982 edition, when the Golden Bears defeated the Cardinal on a last-second kickoff return known as "The Play".[43]
The three non-football Division I programs in the Bay Area are the San Francisco Dons, located in the city of San Francisco; the Saint Mary's Gaels, from Moraga in the East Bay; and the Santa Clara Broncos, located in Santa Clara. All three are charter members of the West Coast Conference, and consider each other major rivals.
The following table shows the college teams in the Bay Area that average more than 2,000 attendance:
The Bay Area hosted the 2013 America's Cup. The Bay Area has a leading and innovative alternative, outdoor and action sports culture. Examples include mountain biking, Alcatraz triathlon, team handball (Olympic handball), skateboarding/Thrasher Magazine, CrossFit (Santa Cruz) and surfing at well known breaks such as Steamer Lane, Mavericks, Ocean Beach and Bodega Bay.
TPC Stonebrae is a private golf club that hosts the TPC Stonebrae Championship, part of the Korn Ferry Tour since 2009.
SF CALHEAT[44] is a Team Handball club which participates in tournaments across the nation at all levels
San Francisco Team Handball is the only team handball club focused on youth (U14 / Middle School) and (U18 / High School), competing at local and international levels.
San Francisco Shock is an American professional Overwatch esports team based in San Francisco, California. The Shock compete in the Overwatch League (OWL) as a member of the league's Pacific West Division. They are currently the 2-time Overwatch League Grand Finals Champions.
Founded in 2017, San Francisco Shock is one of the twelve founding members of the OWL and is one of three professional Overwatch teams in California. The team is owned by Andy Miller, co-owner of the Sacramento Kings and NRG Esports. In the upcoming season, the team will play their home matches at Zellerbach Hall in Berkeley and the San Jose Civic in downtown San Jose.
The League of Legends World Championship was held in 4 locations, one of them being held in San Francisco, California, at Chase Center.
With an ideal climate for outdoor activities, San Francisco has ample resources and opportunities for amateur and participatory sports and recreation. There are more than 200 miles (320 km) of bicycle paths, lanes and bike routes in the city,[45] and the Embarcadero and Marina Green are favored sites for skateboarding. Extensive public tennis facilities are available in Golden Gate Park and Dolores Park, as well as at smaller neighborhood courts throughout the city. San Francisco residents have often ranked among the fittest in the U.S.[46] Golden Gate Park has miles of paved and unpaved running trails as well as a golf course and disc golf course.
Boating, sailing, windsurfing and kitesurfing are among the popular activities on San Francisco Bay, and the city maintains a yacht harbor in the Marina District. The St. Francis Yacht Club and Golden Gate Yacht Club are located in the Marina Harbor.[47][48] The South Beach Yacht Club is located next to AT&T Park and Pier 39 has an extensive marina.[49][50]
Historic Aquatic Park located along the northern San Francisco shore hosts two swimming and rowing clubs.[51][52] The South End Rowing Club, established in 1873, and the Dolphin Club maintain a friendly rivalry between members. Swimmers can be seen daily braving the typically cold bay waters.[citation needed]
The Oakland Athletics previously played at the Oakland Coliseum from 1968 to 2024.[53] The Athletics won nine World Series titles (four as the Oakland Athletics, (1972, 1973, 1974, and 1989) and five as the Philadelphia Athletics). After the 2024 season concluded, the Oakland Athletics moved to Sutter Health Park in West Sacramento for three years until their new ballpark in Las Vegas is completed in January 2028.[54] The Athletics had previously relocated to Oakland from Kansas City in 1967.
San Jose had a women's basketball team from 2005 to 2006 in the National Women's Basketball League called the San Jose Spiders.[55]
From 1960 until 1982 and again from 1995 until 2019 the Bay Area was home to the Oakland Raiders of the National Football League. The Raiders played at the Oakland Coliseum and won two Super Bowls during their stay in Oakland (XI,[56] XV,[57]), and lost two (II,[58] XXXVII[59]). By the 2020 NFL season, the Raiders relocated to Las Vegas, Nevada, where they are now known as the Las Vegas Raiders.
From 1995 to 2008, as well as between 2011 and 2015, the Bay had the San Jose SaberCats of the Arena Football League, who played at the SAP Center at San Jose.[16] The SaberCats won 3 ArenaBowls (XVI,[60] XVIII,[61] XXI[62]), and lost in another (XXII[63]).
The Bay Area had a United Football League team in 2009 named the California Redwoods, who played at AT&T Park[10] and Spartan Stadium, though the Redwoods moved to Sacramento in 2010.[64]
Before the Sharks, the Bay Area had the California Golden Seals, who had been previously named the California Seals and the Oakland Seals. The Seals came into existence in the 1967 NHL expansion.[65] The Seals played at the Oakland–Alameda County Coliseum Arena (now Oracle Arena). The Seals later became the Cleveland Barons in 1976 and then merged with the Minnesota North Stars in 1978 (who in turn later became the Dallas Stars).[66] The Golden Seals/Barons franchise is notable as the last franchise in North America's four major leagues to permanently cease operations.
For one season (1995–96), it was home to the San Francisco Spiders of the International Hockey League.[67]
The San Francisco Bulls were founded as an expansion team in the ECHL and began play in the 2012–13 season. The team was based at the Cow Palace and was the farm team of the NHL's San Jose Sharks before folding mid-season on January 27, 2014.[68]
Before the existence of the current San Jose Earthquakes of MLS, a separate San Jose Earthquakes played for the original North American Soccer League, Major Indoor Soccer League, and the Western Soccer Alliance.[69] After they folded, the San Francisco Bay Blackhawks played for the WSA. Eventually, the Blawkhawks became the San Jose Hawks, and folded in 1993.
San Jose Grizzlies were a professional indoor soccer team based in San Jose, California. The team was founded in 1993 as a member of the Continental Indoor Soccer League. After playing in the 1994 and 1995 CISL seasons, the Grizzlies folded following the 1995 season. The team played at San Jose Arena.[70]
FC Gold Pride was a charter member of Women's Professional Soccer, playing alongside the Earthquakes in the league's inaugural 2009 season before moving to Hayward for 2010. Led by Brazilian star Marta, the team had a championship season in 2010, but folded after the season.[71] WPS itself played only one more season before folding. The Bay Area did not receive franchise in WPS' effective successor, the current National Women's Soccer League, until the announcement of the future Bay FC in 2023.
San Francisco Deltas was a charter member of the second North American Soccer League to play at the Kezar Stadium in 2017. The Deltas beat the New York Cosmos 2–0 to win the Soccer Bowl 2017, but folded after the season.
Stadium | City | Capacity | Type | Tenants | Opened | Closed | Fate |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Candlestick Park | San Francisco | 70,207 | Multi-purpose | San Francisco Giants San Francisco 49ers |
1960 | 2013 | Demolished |
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