By Roy Denish.
Mexican soccer fans disrupted England’s World Cup preparations with hotel noise, fireworks, chants and party foam before kickoff.
Mexican soccer fans turned the hours before England’s 2026 FIFA World Cup Round of 16 clash in Mexico City into a noisy battle of nerves. Long before kickoff against Mexico, the pressure began outside the squad’s hotel.
The English Football Association had taken major precautions to keep the team’s base hidden. Officials had even inquired about several possible venues to protect the accommodation details. However, passionate Mexican supporters still tracked the squad to the JW Marriott in the Santa Fe district.
Mexican soccer fans bring sleepless pressure
Through the night, a large crowd gathered outside the hotel with one clear aim: disrupt England’s sleep. Supporters created a relentless wall of sound that carried into the early hours, using a live band, mariachi instruments, drums, trumpets, car horns, and synchronized chants.
Fireworks and pyrotechnics also lit up the Santa Fe skyline. Meanwhile, local police formed a heavy security cordon and placed metal barriers to push the crowd back. Even so, the noise remained clearly audible inside the hotel.
The hostile reception followed England into matchday. As the national team buses headed toward the iconic Estadio Azteca, groups of local supporters crowded nearby streets. Fans greeted the vehicles with boos, jeers, whistling, and party foam, a familiar feature of local football celebrations.
Although the scenes looked aggressive, the disruption stayed psychological. Authorities reported no injuries or major security breaches.
The tactic has now become part of Mexico’s home-field edge as a tournament co-host. Mexican soccer fans had used the same sleepless-night strategy against Ecuador outside their hotel before Mexico’s previous knockout match. Mexico later won that game, while the Ecuadorian federation filed a formal complaint to FIFA.
For England, the episode showed how World Cup knockout pressure can begin long before the first whistle.
