← Back to News
'A huge advantage for Mexico' - England face an Azteca altitude problem
Venue
S
Sky Sports·about 14 hours ago

'A huge advantage for Mexico' - England face an Azteca altitude problem

"It is one of the most beautiful fixtures you can have playing Mexico in the Azteca," said Thomas Tuchel after England booked their World Cup last 16 spot. But it is also one of the hardest fixtures in football.

England go to the 87,000 Azteca Stadium full of joy after Harry Kane's heroics against DR Congo - but not only do they have to play better against the co-hosts, they will be as testing an environment as they have faced in a generation.

Mexico's record at their national stadium is phenomenal: in 89 competitive fixtures there, they have lost just twice and are unbeaten in 13 years. No World Cup team has beaten Mexico there in 10 attempts.

Image: Mexico's home record

But the biggest problem is not the raucous Mexico crowd, nor the national team's excellent record there. England's biggest challenge? How do they survive the altitude?

Image: Up in the clouds - the Azteca Stadium has an altitude of 7,000 feet

The Azteca Stadium sits over 7,000 feet above sea level. That's one-and-a-half times higher than the summit of Ben Nevis, which is the United Kingdom's highest point.

"If this was played anywhere else, England would win this football match," said Paul Merson to Sky Sports. "No Mexico player gets in the England team - we're by far the better team.

"But altitude at 7,000 feet? It's mind-blowing."

World Cup 2026 fixture schedule - your day-by-day guide

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Playing at higher altitude matters. It affects your breathing, as less oxygen gets into the body, while it can lead to higher heart rates and a quicker route to fatigue. The thinner air can also affect the spin and movement of the ball.

"You have to really judge it right in altitude - it's really hard on the body physically," Sol Campbell told Sky Sports News this month.

And the tricky thing for England is you cannot master altitude training in three days. "England can't do anything," added Merson. "It takes a couple of weeks to get acclimatised. That is the biggest, biggest obstacle for England."

"It's great if you're there for two weeks, you're flying," added Campbell. "But if you're parachuted in there, you have to time it right. It can take a lot out of your energy, it can sap a lot out of you."

Even Tuchel knows it. "My understanding is we cannot adapt to the altitude," said the England boss after beating Congo.

"It's a huge advantage Mexico will have. We have three days in between the [Congo and Mexico] matches and we cannot adapt to it. We knew that before. It's just a disadvantage, for which we will have to deal with."

Mexico, unlike England, are well used to the conditions. As well as playing in the capital on a regular basis, the co-hosts have already had three games at the Azteca at this tournament - the group wins over South Africa and Czech Republic, and the last-32 victory over Ecuador.

Image: Mexico have already played three games at the Azteca in the tournament so far

Compare that to England,. The last time they played a match over 7,000 feet was also their last trip to the Azteca - for the 1986 World Cup quarter-final with Argentina.

That game was known for Diego Maradona's 'Hand of God' - but it also saw the Argentine superstar dance and hurdle over England players in the heat for his other mesmerising goal.

The last time England played above 4,000 feet was at the 2010 World Cup, where they played two games in South Africa against the USA and Germany.

Despite Fabio Capello taking his team on a high-altitude training camp before the tournament, England still didn't manage to win either of those two games.

England will have to rely on their extensive warm weather training to try and counteract the latest challenge. "We came very early to the country and to the US, we banked good heat training into our bodies," said Tuchel. "That was the idea behind it.

"The players have lots and lots of heat training which will help them. The heat and humidity is not the problem. We are used to that."

England are going to have to rely on their individual quality to get over the line. They are going to need Kane at his best.

"Mexico in Mexico is as big as it gets in the World Cup," said Kane after the Congo match.

"The atmosphere is going to be incredible and tough for many different reasons. If you want to be world champions, you have to go through tough games."

There may be tougher opponents, but it is hard to think of a more difficult environment.

Sign up for Sky Sports push notifications Upgrade to Sky Sports to watch every minute of end of season X Facebook TikTok Instagram YouTube WhatsApp Partners Sky Bet Super 6 TEAMtalk.com Football365.com Sky Sports Channels Sky Sports Main Event Sky Sports Premier League Sky Sports Football Sky Sports Cricket Sky Sports Golf Sky Sports F1 Sky Sports Tennis Sky Sports Action Sky Sports News Sky Sports+ Sky Sports Racing Sky Sports Mix More Sky Sites Sky.com Sky News Sky Go Sky Group Sky For Businesses Sky Partnerships Sky Impact Store Locator Advertise With Us Terms & Conditions Privacy & Cookies Notice Privacy Options Accessibility Information Contact Us © 2026 Sky UK

Sources: Sky Sports

Get WC 2026 Updates

Match previews, results, and standings — delivered to your inbox.

Related Articles

England fans face resale prices of at least £2.6k for Mexico tickets
Venue

England fans face resale prices of at least £2.6k for Mexico tickets

Image source, Getty Images Image caption, England have played two previous World Cup matches at the Estadio Azteca, beating Paraguay 3-0 in 1986 only to then lose 2-1 to Argentina in the quarter-finals

B
BBC Sport·about 14 hours ago
England avert disaster against DR Congo but they must be better in Mexico City | Jacob Steinberg
Venue

England avert disaster against DR Congo but they must be better in Mexico City | Jacob Steinberg

It was an almost Iceland in Atlanta but Thomas Tuchel will have to get it right from the start in the cauldron of Azteca It was looking bleak out there. Ten years on, it was looking like Iceland all over again. The clock was ticking and the panic was

T
The Guardian·about 14 hours ago
Comeback Complete! England Avoids Upset vs. DR Congo, Advances To Round Of 16
Venue

Comeback Complete! England Avoids Upset vs. DR Congo, Advances To Round Of 16

England avoided a historic upset with a late comeback against DR Congo at Atlanta Stadium on Wednesday to win 2-1 and advance to the 2026 FIFA World Cup round of 16 for the third consecutive tournament.

F
Fox Sports·about 14 hours ago
Rangnick urges Austria underdogs to show bite
Venue

Rangnick urges Austria underdogs to show bite

"We're massive underdogs," Austria coach Ralf Rangnick conceded. "We couldn't be more of an underdog than we are in this game. We'd probably lose seven, eight or even nine matches out of ten against Spain. We have to make sure [this] isn't the tenth

F
FIFA Official·1 day ago
Paraguay fairy tale continues against flying France
Venue

Paraguay fairy tale continues against flying France

Saturday, 4 July | Philadelphia Stadium

F
FIFA Official·1 day ago
‘It’s like being close to home’: World Cup vibes immaculate in richly diverse New York
Venue

‘It’s like being close to home’: World Cup vibes immaculate in richly diverse New York

A lmost 200,000 Ecuadorians and Ecuadorian Americans live in New York City, and last week quite a lot of them were in a Brooklyn restaurant called El Encebollado de Victor to watch their football team take on Germany – a traditional World Cup powerho

T
The Guardian·1 day ago