TRENDING
Xenophobia: 262 Nigerians To Arrive From South Africa Today, Says FG • World Cup: Why Nigerians must support Mexico against South Africa – Abati • New York renames streets after Thierry Henry, Pele ahead of World Cup • LAWMA evacuated 418,500 tonnes of waste in May – Official • Budget Day: Cost of living, public spending top Kenyans' concerns • Friendly: Neto delighted with Portugal’s performance against Super Eagles • INEC Announces Restoration of Suppressed Constituencies in Benue, Delta, Jigawa, Kogi • Ugandan Tech Elite Shine at the Huawei ICT Competition Global Finals in Shenzhen • Stanbic Shareholders Hail Francis Karuhanga as he assumes Regional Leadership Role • Dickson admits irregularities in NDC primaries, begs aggrieved aspirants • Plateau: Troops thwart robbery attack in pastor’s house, launch manhunt for suspects • Major breakthrough as ISWAP bomb-making specialist, senior commander surrender to troops in Yobe • World Cup countdown: Davido wears custom jacket bearing names of abducted pupils, teachers • 5 Nigerian startups closest to unicorn status in 2026 • NCAA suspends operator’s permit after aircraft lands on roadway near Asaba • Sanwo-Olu unveils Hamzat, Sonayon-James as Lagos APC governorship flagbearers • Army restores calm in C’River after Cameroonian troops’ border incursion • OPEC May Output Lowest Since 2000 • World Cup 2026 Preview: Ronaldo, Messi, Mbappé lead chase for football’s grandest prize • Breaking: DSS, Army Foil Planned ESN Attacks in Southeast, Recover Rocket Launcher, Arms Cache • Xenophobia: 262 Nigerians To Arrive From South Africa Today, Says FG • World Cup: Why Nigerians must support Mexico against South Africa – Abati • New York renames streets after Thierry Henry, Pele ahead of World Cup • LAWMA evacuated 418,500 tonnes of waste in May – Official • Budget Day: Cost of living, public spending top Kenyans' concerns • Friendly: Neto delighted with Portugal’s performance against Super Eagles • INEC Announces Restoration of Suppressed Constituencies in Benue, Delta, Jigawa, Kogi • Ugandan Tech Elite Shine at the Huawei ICT Competition Global Finals in Shenzhen • Stanbic Shareholders Hail Francis Karuhanga as he assumes Regional Leadership Role • Dickson admits irregularities in NDC primaries, begs aggrieved aspirants • Plateau: Troops thwart robbery attack in pastor’s house, launch manhunt for suspects • Major breakthrough as ISWAP bomb-making specialist, senior commander surrender to troops in Yobe • World Cup countdown: Davido wears custom jacket bearing names of abducted pupils, teachers • 5 Nigerian startups closest to unicorn status in 2026 • NCAA suspends operator’s permit after aircraft lands on roadway near Asaba • Sanwo-Olu unveils Hamzat, Sonayon-James as Lagos APC governorship flagbearers • Army restores calm in C’River after Cameroonian troops’ border incursion • OPEC May Output Lowest Since 2000 • World Cup 2026 Preview: Ronaldo, Messi, Mbappé lead chase for football’s grandest prize • Breaking: DSS, Army Foil Planned ESN Attacks in Southeast, Recover Rocket Launcher, Arms Cache
Mexico hoping football emerges from the chaos surrounding World Cup
Back to Home

Mexico hoping football emerges from the chaos surrounding World Cup

The Guardian Football about 2 hours 2 mins read

It may just be time to forget the sullied buildup and enjoy the tournament although co-hosts are not optimistic

It has been difficult to go anywhere in Mexico City this week without seeing Hugo Sánchez, the great former Real Madrid striker, trying to sell you something. Raúl Jiménez is on a few billboards and Toluca’s Alexis Vega on a couple of others, but Sánchez remains the king. Football adverts predominate. At the airport a Fifa sign obstructs the view of the arrivals lane for those with foreign passports, which might seem an apt metaphor if immigration procedures, here at least, weren’t absurdly straightforward. Amid the endless traffic, worsened by a teachers’ strike and associated street protests, women wander selling knock-off Mexico shirts.

Does that constitute a pre‑tournament mania? Perhaps not. There’s a newly added football element to many of the murals around Coyoacán, at which many of the Frida Kahlo murals appear to be looking askance – but then stern disapproval was her default look. There are flags hanging from walls and from ceilings in bars and cafes in some areas, but the excitement of waiters and taxi drivers at meeting somebody actually going to the World Cup suggests there hasn’t been any great influx yet. If traffic jams are a sign of excitement, then Mexicans are bang up for it but, anecdotally, few seem to expect much from their side and most seem feel a little frustrated at being a sideshow to Donald Trump’s main event.

Continue reading...

This article was sourced from an external publication.

Share this article

Comments (0)

Want to join the discussion?

Sign in to post comments and engage with the community.

Be the first to comment!

Scottish Premiership

View All
AD
OneClick Africa Logo

Africa's premier digital hub for impactful news, entertainment, and business insights.

© 2026 OneClick Africa. All rights reserved.