Football icons don’t get much bigger than Mexico City’s Estadio Azteca.
By some measures the most legendary football stadiums of them all, the Azteca is a fearsome institution with decades of history no other venue can match.
No other stadium has hosted games at three different World Cups. No other stadium has been the site of two World Cup finals. It might have had its name temporarily switched to Mexico City Stadium for FIFA purposes at World Cup 2026 but the essence of Azteca is untouchable.
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Mexico’s record at Estadio Azteca
Mexico themselves have been the chief beneficiaries of the Mexico City monolith’s immaculate aura. As they prepare to face Ecuador there in the round of 32 and, they hope, England or DR Congo in the round of 16, El Tri hope to tap into their remarkable historical record.
Javier Aguirre’s team played their first and third Group A matches in Mexico City, beating South Africa and Czechia without conceding a goal and adding two more wins to Azteca’s formidable tally.
In the context of the World Cup alone, Mexico and Azteca have been a powerful combination. In 1970, Mexico played all three group stage matches there without conceding a goal. They were knocked out elsewhere in the next round.
In 1986, another four World Cup matches involving Mexico were played at Azteca and they conceded twice. Again, they were eliminated in another city altogether. They have never lost a World Cup finals match at their preferred home.
That’s a run that now stretches to nine matches. Ecuador would be 10, the round of 16 another on top.
Crossing the border for the quarter-final could be as much a psychological hurdle for Mexico as traipsing up to Mexico Stadium has been for their opponents.
The Soviet Union team of 1970 and the excellent Belgium class of 1986 were both beaten by Mexico at Azteca, where South Africa, South Korea and Czechia joined them among the ranks of the slain in the group stage in 2026.
Azteca’s unique spirit and the ferociously partisan home crowd are both factors.
Another is altitude: Azteca stands at more than 2,000 metres above sea level and either England or DR Congo will find that a challenge in the round of 16 whether Mexico are there or not.
One of the World Cup 2026 qualifiers least likely to be adversely affected by altitude is Ecuador, whose home qualifiers have always been favourable precisely because of Quito’s elevation.