The long wait is finally over as the 2026 Fifa World Cup kicks off today across North America, with 48 nations beginning their quest for football’s greatest prize.
Traditional powerhouses will look to reaffirm their dominance, while emerging contenders and underdogs aim to script unforgettable stories on the sport’s biggest stage.
Over the coming weeks, stadiums across the United States, Canada and Mexico will host a festival of football filled with passion, drama and dreams.
With global stars ready to shine and history waiting to be written, the race to lift the coveted trophy is officially underway.
Mexico will launch their home World Cup campaign against South Africa today under pressure to deliver the winning start fans expect at the Estadio Azteca, where the tournament returns for a third time.
The Group A clash marks a return to the World Cup stage for the iconic venue that hosted matches in 1970 and 1986, while also reviving memories of the 2010 tournament opener, when South Africa held Mexico to a 1-1 draw in Johannesburg.
This time, the hosts arrive as clear favourites and know victory could prove crucial to their hopes of finishing top of a group that also includes South Korea and the Czech Republic.
Mexico have gone unbeaten in their last eight matches, equalling the longest unbeaten run they have taken into a World Cup and providing further encouragement for Javier Aguirre’s side ahead of the tournament.
The atmosphere is expected to be festive as more than 80,000 fans pack the renovated Azteca for the first match of the expanded 48-team tournament, but the occasion will bring its own pressure for a side expected to make the most of home advantage.
South Africa, meanwhile, are back at the World Cup for the first time since hosting the tournament in 2010 and coach Hugo Broos believes his largely domestically based squad can surprise more fancied opponents.
The Belgian, who faced Mexico in the 1986 World Cup, acknowledged the challenge posed by the opening-day atmosphere but said his players must remain focused.
“For us it will be a fantastic experience,” he said.
“It is very important that we keep ourselves to the game plan and don’t listen to what is happening in the stands.”
South Africa’s preparations were disrupted by visa issues that delayed the arrival of several members of the travelling party, costing them valuable time to acclimatise to conditions in central Mexico.
Yet Broos’s side emerged from a difficult qualifying campaign and will hope to frustrate the hosts once again, 16 years after earning a draw in the last World Cup opener involving the two nations.
For Mexico, however, anything less than three points would be viewed as an early setback in a tournament they hope will finally deliver a breakthrough on home soil.
The World Cup will kick off under familiar North American summer threats: extreme heat, suffocating humidity and thunderstorms capable of delaying matches with little warning.
Seasonal forecasts indicate above-normal temperatures across large parts of the US, while moisture flowing north from the Gulf of Mexico could fuel thunderstorms and severe weather during the opening weeks of the tournament.
While conditions for individual matches cannot be predicted this far ahead, sports scientists say there are clear weather-related risks facing a summer World Cup.
The key measure is not air temperature alone but wet-bulb globe temperature, which incorporates heat, humidity, sunlight and wind to estimate heat stress on the body.
World Weather Attribution has warned that roughly a quarter of matches could be played in conditions that exceed recommended safety limits.