LIVE
No live matches
🌍 Other regions



🌐 All regions
ONE GAME. ONE COMMUNITY. ALL TOGETHER.
← Back to articles

World Cup

Altitude vs ambition: England's test at Mexico's Azteca

🇬🇧
Mexico will defend its unbeaten World Cup record at the 87,523‑seat Estadio Azteca, where the 7,220‑foot altitude and hostile atmosphere loom over England, who arrive on Friday – two days before kickoff – to acclimatise to thin air and a venue steeped in English football trauma. Mexico’s dominance at the Azteca is reflected in its 70 wins, 17 draws and only two defeats from 89 matches there. In this World Cup the hosts have already won four games, scored eight goals and kept a clean sheet. The stadium’s lore for England centres on the 1986 quarter‑final when Diego Maradona’s “Hand of God” and “Goal of the Century” both came against Peter Shilton. England’s last visit to the venue ended with a 3‑0 win over Paraguay before that infamous match. Thomas Tuchel recalled watching the 1986 drama as a 12‑year‑old in Germany, saying, “Even me. I didn’t have a connection to English football … I remember, of course, the World Cup of Maradona. The two goals against England.” He added after the 2‑1 DR Congo win, “It will reward us… Karma will come back for us.” England’s Football Association adjusted travel plans, landing in Mexico City two days before the Sunday clash rather than the usual one‑day arrival required by FIFA. Tuchel explained that the ball may travel five yards farther at altitude and that the team will train to adapt. Scientific research supports the altitude challenge: a 2007 analysis of more than 1,400 South American matches showed home teams win about 53 % when playing at similar heights, rising to 82.5 % in extreme cases. The study estimated each 3,281 feet of elevation adds roughly half a goal for the higher side.

Discussion (0)

International discussion — reactions from football fans across all countries come together here. Use the translate button for comments in other languages.

Be the first to comment!

Comment on this article

Choose a display name — you don't have to use your real name

Your display name is shown, your email never. Privacy

← Back to articles