In the World Cup, the chimes usually mean a goal has been scored in another match. A second chime often means that the goal or related replay is about to appear on the stadium screens.

What people hear

  • One chime: a goal happened elsewhere in the tournament.
  • Two chimes: a follow-up alert, often pointing to a replay or broadcast update.

Why it matters

This helps fans follow simultaneous matches, especially during group-stage games when several results are changing at once. It’s basically the stadium’s way of saying, ā€œsomething important just happened in another game.ā€

Different reports

Some posts describe the sound as a ā€œding-dongā€ or ā€œgong,ā€ but the basic idea is the same: it is an alert tied to match events, not something mysterious or ceremonial.

TL;DR

The chimes are an alert system for goals and match updates in other World Cup games.