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2026 FIFA World Cup
16JUL

Banorte still has no FIFA clearance yet

2 min read
10:33UTC

Estadio Banorte, formerly Azteca, had received no formal FIFA clearance as of 5 June after concrete fragments fell from under seats during Liga MX matches and FIFA demanded network fixes before the World Cup opener.

SportDeveloping
Key takeaway

Azteca's renamed venue has no formal FIFA clearance after structural defects and outstanding network fixes.

Estadio Banorte, the renamed Estadio Azteca in Mexico City, had received no formal FIFA clearance as of 5 June 1. Concrete fragments fell from under seats during Liga MX matches, and FIFA demanded network fixes before the venue could be used. No clearance statement has been published.

The silence stands out against the other host venues. MetLife laid its Carolina Tahoma 31 grass surface ahead of the 13 June opener , a visible sign of readiness. Banorte has no equivalent. A flagship opener venue without published clearance leaves the safety question open at the point it most needs to be closed, and any unresolved structural fault carries crowd-safety risk for a packed opening match.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Estadio Banorte is the newly renamed Estadio Azteca in Mexico City, one of the most famous football stadiums in the world. It was due to host the World Cup's first match (Mexico vs South Africa on 11 June) but as of 5 June it did not have formal FIFA approval to host the game. During Liga MX (Mexican league) matches at the stadium, concrete fragments fell from underneath the seating areas. FIFA said it needed network upgrades (probably for communications systems) before it would give clearance. Neither the stadium nor FIFA has published a statement confirming the work is done and the stadium is cleared. For comparison, MetLife Stadium in New Jersey (which hosts the Final) had its pitch installed and was on track. Banorte's situation is unusual because stadiums typically receive a published clearance well before the tournament starts.

First Reported In

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StadiumDB· 5 Jun 2026
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Causes and effects
This Event
Banorte still has no FIFA clearance yet
Mexico's flagship World Cup venue is hosting an opener without a published safety sign-off, a reputational and logistical risk six days before the first match.
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