The women of Boston say their 'faith in men has been restored' after boozed-up Scotsmen flooded to the city for their World Cup opener against Haiti. Thousands have made the trip Stateside to watch the Tartan Army's first World Cup appearance in 28 years - and they enjoyed a dream start to the tournament last weekend. A deflected goal from John McGinn was enough to see Steve Clarke's side beat the Haitians 1-0 at the Gillette Stadium on Saturday, sending fans in Boston and back home wild.And, according to social media, the Scotsmen who made the trip to the east coast have been a major hit with the American locals. Hundreds of young women from Boston flooded to TikTok this week to share videos of them drinking, dancing and partying with kilt-wearing Scots. One blonde woman even organised a dating event, and called on all Scots to visit a bar where 100 single US women were desperate to meet them. Thousands of Scots have flooded to the east coast to watch the World Cup - and they've been a major hit with the Americans Videos posted to TikTok showed local woman hailing the Scotsmen for 'restoring their faith in men' One lady even organised a dating event encouraging Scots to go and meet '100 American' women Another local wrote: 'The vibes the Scots have been bringing to Boston were the vibes we needed'Another lady, who posted a video of her in a Scotsman's arms, wrote on the app: 'I may not be happily married but at least I'm single while the Scottish are in town for the World Cup.'A separate video, which racked up more than 70,000 likes, showed a fan carrying a woman on his back through the streets of Boston, with the caption reading: 'If he won't, a Scottish man will.'While one more American hailed the 'kindness' of the travelling Britons, urging American men to take notes. The lady said: 'If I was a single girly living in Boston right now... you need to go by the bars. If you don't go, you're doing something wrong because you could find a nice Scottish man. 'They seem very nice. They wanted to pet my dog. So I'm just saying, you should all go (to local bars).'Others hailed the Scottish tourists for 'bringing the vibes' to Boston as World Cup fever well and truly hit the city. It was estimated that more than 50,000 fans flooded to the east coast - and most stayed there all week ahead of Scotland's second match against Morocco this evening at the Gillette Stadium.Devon Savage, who owns the company which runs the local bar Samuel Adams Taproom, said the travelling fans 'had drunk them dry'. Another American, who said she is married, urged all single women to head to Boston to meet the Scots Scotland won their first group game thanks to a deflected strike from John McGinnShe added: 'For perspective, from Thursday to Sunday, the Tartan Army drank four times as much Boston Lager as we run through on a typical four-day holiday stretch like July 4. 'We had to schedule an emergency delivery on Saturday morning. We sold over 3,000 pints of lager over the weekend with our teams picking up 70 empty kegs on Monday.'A host of other Boston pubs, bars and nightclubs also recorded sales. The Scots have, in fact, impressed mayor of the city Michelle Wu so much that it was announced yesterday that a letter of intent had been signed to make Glasgow and Boston twin cities. Mrs Wu said: 'We are both cities that are champions of arts and culture and innovation, but also we are willing to fight for it. 'We have the grit, we have the passion for making sure people are at the center of everything that we do. There are many points in our history where Boston and Scotland have been tied hand in hand.'After the clash with Morocco, the army of Scottish fans will travel south to Miami for their final group match against World Cup icons Brazil. Clarke's side currently sit top of Group C following their defeat of Haiti, but Morocco and the Brazilians - the world's sixth and fifth ranked sides respectively - will pose a much tougher test. Man of the moment McGinn, however, insists that the nation have 'more gears to go up' ahead of two of the biggest matches in their history.'Haiti score a lot of goals and are dangerous up front, so the crucial thing was that we kept a clean sheet. Brazil and Morocco are two teams who are in the top 10 in the world. 'We know the qualities they possess, but it might suit us a little bit better to play on the counter-attack and make it difficult for them. We know what's at stake. The good thing for us is we've got more gears to go up.' Can YOU master Craig Hope's World Cup quiz? Test your knowledge HERE