Mexico City's government declared "saldo blanco", no incidents, at 22:11 local time on Sunday, two hours after the final whistle at the Estadio Azteca and across the Zocalo and Angel de la Independencia fan zones 1. It was the capital's first mass stadium crowd since a crush on Paseo de la Reforma killed four celebrating fans on 30 June .
"Saldo blanco", literally a clean slate, is the phrase Mexican authorities use to confirm a large public event has passed without death or serious injury. The declaration followed a 40,000-strong security deployment , a citywide dry law and a US Embassy safety warning issued before kick-off . The city had spent the week preparing for its most exposed test since the Reforma deaths.
Mexico lost and went out, so the crowd filed away in silence and the Zocalo sent the team off with fireworks rather than the mass celebration that had turned deadly a week earlier. Crush risk turns on density and inward flow, not headcount: a defeated crowd disperses outward, while a victorious one converges. The only disruption on the night came from the weather, an electrical-storm protocol pushing kick-off back an hour 2. The operation has not yet faced a home win under the new protocol, which is the exam the city has still to sit.
