Beijing Boyce

A Somewhat Young China Hand on the Local Drinking Scene

World Cup in Beijing: Updated list of spots to catch matches

Buy a meter of booze, get a half-meter free, during World Cup games at Tun.

-

Good times in Beijing during the last World Cup as nearly every bar and its sibling had a TV screen to attract football fans (see All About Placement: World Cup Venues). Here is an an updated list of spots to catch games this time around. I hope to add more venues, and maps for each, by the end of tomorrow afternoon. If anyone has info to add, please let me know at beijingboyce (at) yahoo.com.

Finally, if you are looking for country flags, SLS is hard to beat. For jerseys, it looks like some are already hard to get, though I did spot quite a few at the sports shop in Workers Stadium this week. I’ll also have info very soon on some special T-shirts a crew are making in Beijing for the World Cup.

More places, more maps to come…

-

WORKERS STADIUM

The Den (map): A veteran on the sports bar scene, it is open 24 hours and has five screens, good pub grub, a reasonably efficient staff, and an excellent happy hour (5 to 10 PM daily, with half-price drinks and pizzas), though you would require the Hand of God to finagle a free glass of water here. Look for Danish fans to hang out here — The Den, The DenMark, get it?

The Pavillion (map): Among the busiest spots during the last World Cup, it has large screens on one of the better patios in town, as well as screens and TVs inside, though the latter are at an angle that can lead to sore necks.

Uama Teppanyaki: The Budweiser-sponsored beer patio outside includes two large screens. Bud draft is RMB20 and there is a variety of other beers and mixed drinks available.

Hooters: The only Beijing outlet of this U.S. franchise; expect pricey but passable food (try the chili dog), a handful of screens, and waitresses dancing and singing to songs such as “You Are My Sunshine.”

Danger Doyle’s (map): Formerly known as Stadium, this two-floor Irish bar, with back and rooftop decks, has screens upstairs and downstairs.

Drei Kronen 1308: Sibling establishment of Danger Doyle’s, this three-story German beer house offers three kinds of home brew.

Workers Stadium: Look for the Football City beer ‘garden’ with large screen. Guoan fans can catch the World Cup in the shade of their home stadium.

SANLITUN NORTH

Tun: Buy a meter of drinks during the World Cup, get a half-meter for free. Tun will screen games on the deck outside and on the TVs and that huge surface behind the stage inside.

Beer Mania: Buy one, get one free deal on Beijing draft during the games as well as T-shirt and ball giveaways for Stella drinkers.

SANLITUN SOUTH

Blue Frog: Wear you team colors on game day at Cafe Europa and the first beer is free (with purchase). Look for lots of Dutch fans to hang out here.

Luga’s Villa: Free drink for those in uniform when their team is playing. Option of hanging in the villa, in the basement, or on the second floor or ground floor decks.

Saddle Cantina: Catch games on the first or second floors. Should be a wild night when the World Cup coincides with Cinco de Drinko.

Union Bar & Grille: One of the comfier bars in town, it has a handful of screens and will show games starting at 7:30 PM and 10:30 PM. All-day happy hour on Tuesdays.

Paddy O’Shea’s: Will shows games downstairs and in Kamat’s upstair, have an outside bar and hot dog stand, and an Anyone But France campaign inspired by the Thierry Henri hand ball that dashed Ireland’s chances of making the Workd Cup.

LIDO

Frank’s Place (map): The Lido reincarnation of what is widely considered the first non-hotel bar to open in Beijing. Plenty of screens as well as a large party area out back.

Eudora Station (map): Located in the Lido area, this place shows sports, has a vast menu, and includes a lounge area out back and a nice patio up front.

The Irish Volunteer (map): While not a sports bar, it has kept NHL fans happy and will also show World Cup matches.

Parkside Bar & Grill: Newcomer to the Lido scene with several 55-inch screens.
SHUNYI
The Pomegranate (map): The Shunyi-based sibling of Paddy O’Shea’s.

MORE

The Goose and Duck (map) Recently upgraded, this is a 24-hour sports bar with loads of paraphernalia and screen and a diverse menu.

Obiwan: Three story Xihai area venue. More details on this spot soon.

Salud NLGX: Look for a good crowd to gather at this Nanluoguxiang bar, drink homemade rum shots, and cheer on their teams. Free draft for the first goal scored during the World Cup.

Ned’s: Aussies. Beer.

Souk: A Chaoyang Park West Gate venue that combines the feel of a lounge and some of the amenities of a sports bar.

Tim’s Texas BBQ: Home of a wide range of Tex-Mex food, including a decent “Mexican burger”, this place also shows sports.

All-Star (map): This place includes booth and table seating, solid pub grub, a four-sized bar, and dozens of flat screens in the Solana areay

Cafe Europa: Private areas for up to 20 people or up to 40 people, with big screen and CCTV feed, three 11-litre kegs of Krombacher Pils, and appetizers. RMB3000 for 7:30 PM games. RMB3500 for 10 PM games.

11 comments

11 Comments so far

  1. Jenn June 11th, 2010 4:33 pm

    Thank you for this, BeijingBoyce. You rawk.

  2. m-dawg June 11th, 2010 4:38 pm

    awesome list.

  3. cale June 11th, 2010 4:39 pm

    Andy at Union Bar and Grille will have ENGLISH commentary throughout the World Cup, something that may or may not be too common……………………..

  4. djchunky June 11th, 2010 5:19 pm

    im at union and i can confirm that its in english- and andy is quite excited about it also. i know nothing about soccer so i’ll probably stick to union for the big games

  5. Jeremiah June 12th, 2010 7:42 am

    Also for students/those on the west side of town, Old Bike Cafe (Weigongcun, outside the back gate of BFSU East Campus) will have all the games as well. Decent food, British owner, not a bad place for those summer students who don’t want to have to schlep to Sanlitun.

  6. Julien June 12th, 2010 2:33 pm

    Note that Pavillion charge 100RMB for entrance with a free drink !

    Went yesterday to 4 different places: The Chua’r place near my home, Eudora station, Parkside and the Pavillion. The last one is still the best !

  7. Thomas June 12th, 2010 5:46 pm

    re Salud: tried that for the opening match: only CCTV5 on, and with a green tinge, sound incomprehensible, crowd indifferent, no sight of free draught after the first goal (or the second)… not to be repeated.
    re Pavilion: a friend said there was 100 RMB cover charge, what kind of attitude is that…
    I heard 2 Kolegas would do outdoor screening, anyone who can confirm that? Which matches?
    Thanks for the great effort! Th.

  8. Phoenix June 12th, 2010 11:59 pm

    Stopped by Luga’s Villa for Korea game–they are not offering free drinks for uniformed spectators as advertised, though I asked several times. Waiting for the tepid food takes the patience of Job, but buckets of Tsingtao were served pretty quick.

  9. chinabeergeek June 13th, 2010 1:50 pm

    i think you have sanlitun north and south mixed up?

  10. Thomas June 14th, 2010 12:19 pm

    my second night: Frank’s (crowd not crowdy, not enthusiastic, but nice location in principle, English tv commentary), Goose&Duck (oh my! I spent many hours in the old G&D at the 2006 World Cup, that was awesome. But now… completely empty, CCTV 5 commentary only – the whole place does have no atmosphere), Paddy O’Shea (quite a good crowd, not too full, English Commentary, first proper football watching experience of the WC), and some places around Lanluoguxiang (Ned’s was fun in particular, CCTV5 commentary, plus live cursing by the Aussie crowd while their team got taken apart by the Germans)

  11. boyce June 18th, 2010 5:59 pm

    Thanks to everyone for the info!

    @ Thomas, that was quite the tour! I’m hoping to get down to Ned’s this weekend.

    Cheers, Boyce

Leave a reply