Skip to content
You can now search across every topic, entity and event.What's new
2026 FIFA World Cup
14JUN

Azteca set for a third World Cup opener

4 min read
11:18UTC

Mexico kick off the 2026 World Cup against South Africa at the Estadio Azteca tonight, the first ground to stage three separate World Cup opening matches. They have never won an opener in seven attempts.

SportDeveloping
Key takeaway

Mexico open the largest World Cup in history at the only ground to stage three tournament openers.

Mexico kick off the 2026 World Cup against South Africa at the Estadio Azteca in Mexico City tonight, the first match of a 104-game tournament across 48 teams and three host nations. Kickoff is 1pm local. The Azteca becomes the only ground in history to stage a World Cup opening match at three separate tournaments, after Mexico against the USSR in 1970 and Italy against Bulgaria in 1986. 1

Mexico have never won a World Cup opener. Seven attempts have brought five defeats and two draws, 0W-5L-2D, one of those draws at this same stadium in 1970. Head coach Javier Aguirre lines up a 4-3-3 with Raul Jimenez leading the line and Edson Alvarez holding midfield. Aguirre said publicly he is wary of the visitors, an unusual admission from a host coach in front of a sold-out crowd of roughly 87,000 at altitude. 2

Hugo Broos, who has confirmed this is his final tournament before retirement, returns Bafana Bafana to the World Cup after a 16-year absence dating to their own 2010 finals. South Africa are no warm-up opponent for the hosts. He told his players to silence the Mexican crowd, and his counter-attacking pace through Appollis and Mofokeng is real, even after limp draws against Nicaragua and Jamaica in the warm-up. The Azteca held no formal FIFA clearance less than a week ago, after concrete fell from beneath its seats ; it hosts the opener regardless.

The ground carries commercial and neutral names, Estadio Banorte and the FIFA-mandated Mexico City Stadium, but it is the Azteca, the only stadium to have staged two World Cup finals, including Maradona's in 1986. The expanded 48-team bracket also lowers the stakes of a single result, with 32 of the field reaching the knockouts, so one poor opener no longer ends a campaign.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Mexico are one of three countries hosting the 2026 World Cup, alongside the United States and Canada. They open the whole tournament at the Estadio Azteca in Mexico City, a famous 87,000-seat ground that has hosted more football than almost any other stadium on earth. South Africa, their opponents, have not been at a World Cup since 2010, when they hosted the tournament. Their coach Hugo Broos, a Belgian in his 70s, has been rebuilding the side for years. Mexico's coach Javier Aguirre has managed Mexico three times, and is known for being disciplined rather than attacking. The Azteca had a safety scare just days ago: chunks of concrete fell from beneath seats during a league match, but FIFA cleared it to host. The stadium sits 2,240 metres above sea level, which makes the thin air a factor for any team unused to altitude.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Mexico's 0W-5L-2D opening record at World Cups reflects a structural tension specific to host-nation openers: the governing federation, FEMEXFUT, historically selects a manager willing to be publicly conservative rather than tactically ambitious, because a host nation opener loss triggers disproportionate domestic political consequences.

Aguirre's appointment in 2023 (his third spell in charge after 2001-02 and 2009-13) follows this pattern. He is Mexico's 'safe pair of hands' choice rather than a tactically innovative one. The consequence is a squad better organised defensively than offensively, which explains the low-event, high-discipline opener profile against South Africa.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    A South Africa win or draw would reshape Group A from a formality for one co-host into a competitive three-team race from match one.

  • Risk

    Any repeat concrete or structural failure at the Azteca, even a minor one, during a match with 87,000 spectators and global broadcast coverage would expose FIFA to the worst-case reputational scenario it avoided by granting belated clearance.

First Reported In

Update #18 · 0 Days to Go: the football finally starts

ESPN· 11 Jun 2026
Read original
Causes and effects
This Event
Azteca set for a third World Cup opener
The host nation begins the largest tournament in football history at a stadium with no rival in World Cup record, carrying a seven-tournament opening-match drought into a sold-out night at altitude.
Different Perspectives
Football Supporters Europe / broadcast critics
Football Supporters Europe / broadcast critics
The VAR transparency failure in Santa Clara on 13 June arrives alongside Football Supporters Europe's active Article 102 complaint against FIFA on ticket pricing; the missing offside graphic adds a second accountability line, reinforcing the argument that FIFA's expanded referee powers require an equivalent expansion in public explanation.
Scotland national team
Scotland national team
John McGinn's deflected 28th-minute goal ended 36 years without a World Cup win and 28 years without a World Cup appearance; Scotland top Group C after one round and face Brazil next, a fixture that is already a live knockout indicator.
FIFA / Gianni Infantino
FIFA / Gianni Infantino
FIFA's three-hour delay in explaining the missing VAR graphic during Qatar vs Switzerland, and the technical-outage justification that followed, drew a live television rebuke from Gary Neville and added a governance failure to an institutional record already carrying active ethics complaints and US attorney-general subpoenas.
Canada Soccer
Canada Soccer
Cyle Larin's 78th-minute equaliser, 121 seconds after coming off the bench, ended a 40-year run of World Cup losses stretching across 1986 and 2022. The point is modest in table terms but historically significant for a federation hosting its first World Cup.
Mohamed Ouahbi / Morocco
Mohamed Ouahbi / Morocco
Ouahbi's senior international debut produced a dominant spell against Brazil before a crowd of 80,663 and a point the 2022 semi-finalists can build on. His squad's tactical cohesion under a new coach in a first match is the most credible signal that Morocco remain genuine contenders.
Carlo Ancelotti / Brazil
Carlo Ancelotti / Brazil
Ancelotti said his side were nervous after being held by Morocco; with Neymar targeting the Haiti fixture on 19 June, Brazil's next match is already against Scotland, who lead the group. The margin for error has closed on matchday one.