
England delay Mexico City arrival to guard tactics and manage altitude challenge
Thomas Tuchel’s side will fly in late for the last-16 tie after a 2-1 comeback win over DR Congo, as the thin air of the Azteca and the threat of fan disruption shape preparations.
England secured a place in the World Cup last 16 with a 2-1 victory over the Democratic Republic of Congo in Atlanta, a match that required two late goals from captain Harry Kane to overturn an early deficit. The result, which extended Kane’s tournament tally to five goals and his all-time World Cup total to 13, sets up a meeting with co-hosts Mexico at the Estadio Azteca on Sunday. The performance, however, did little to quiet concerns about the team’s consistency, with British media noting that England have yet to fully convince as title contenders.
The immediate focus has shifted to the physical challenge posed by the Azteca, which sits at 2,240 metres above sea level. Thomas Tuchel, the England manager, described the altitude as “a big disadvantage” and said it was “impossible” for his players to adapt in the four days between fixtures. German sports medicine specialist Tim Meyer, a former team doctor for the German national side, told Reuters that the lack of acclimatisation time would hand Mexico a “quite decisive” advantage, explaining that the body’s production of oxygen-carrying red blood cells requires days to weeks. Mexican outlets have pointed to the home side’s familiarity with the conditions, having played three group-stage matches at the venue, and to a pattern in which five of Mexico’s six goals in the group phase came in the second half, when opponents showed signs of fatigue.
In response, England have adjusted their travel schedule, flying from their Kansas City base to Mexico City on Friday afternoon rather than the day before the match, a compromise between arriving early enough to begin adapting and the FIFA requirement to be in the host city at least 24 hours before kick-off. British press reports indicate that the team also intends to keep the location of their hotel secret, a precaution taken after Ecuador filed a formal complaint with FIFA over noise disturbances caused by Mexico fans outside their accommodation before the round-of-32 match. The England delegation is said to be providing players with ear plugs, white-noise machines and natural sleep aids to mitigate any disruption.
The fixture carries historical weight for England, who are returning to the Azteca for the first time since the 1986 quarter-final defeat to Argentina, a match remembered for Diego Maradona’s ‘Hand of God’ goal. Tuchel, speaking to British journalists, framed the occasion as a chance to “make peace with the stadium” and invoked the idea of karma, while acknowledging the iconic status of the venue. Mexican media have highlighted the hosts’ formidable record at the ground, where they have lost only twice in 89 official matches and have never been beaten in ten World Cup fixtures. Javier Aguirre’s side have also progressed to the last 16 without conceding a goal, a defensive solidity Tuchel himself noted.
The winner of Sunday’s contest will advance to the quarter-finals. England’s preparations, shaped by the constraints of altitude and the need for secrecy, reflect the broader logistical and environmental factors that have come to define this tournament staged across three host nations.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
2 editorial groups · 3 languages
Latin American press frames the England-Mexico match as a historical appointment: England is haunted by a curse that always sees them lose when playing in Mexico. Altitude and adaptation difficulties are just a detail; the real obstacle is adverse fate. The narrative emphasizes Mexico's chance to exploit this curse and advance.
Atlantic press focuses on security measures after four fans died during celebrations of Mexico's victory. The match is framed as a high-risk event, with doubled security and crowd limits. Altitude and Tuchel's statements are absent; the emphasis is on public order management.
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