Sign in
Edition of 20:00 CETSaturday, July 4, 2026
311 outlets · 17 languages226 briefings today
SportFriday, July 3, 2026

Mexico-England kick-off chaos ends with original 6pm slot intact

A day of conflicting reports, angry reactions and a late reversal by FIFA left the last-16 tie at the Azteca unchanged, though the episode exposed deep frustrations on both sides.

The World Cup last-16 match between Mexico and England will kick off at 6pm local time on Sunday, as originally scheduled, after a tumultuous 24 hours in which FIFA considered, and then abandoned, a plan to move the game forward by six hours. The governing body never issued a public statement, but by Friday evening both federations had been informed that the evening slot would stand, ending a sequence of leaks, denials and recriminations that had engulfed the tournament’s knockout phase.

The initial push for a midday start, first reported by Mexican media, was driven by forecasts of severe thunderstorms and flooding in Mexico City, conditions that had already delayed Mexico’s round-of-32 victory over Ecuador by an hour. Behind the scenes, however, multiple sources indicated that commercial considerations also played a role: an earlier kick-off would place the match in prime time for British television audiences, rather than the small hours of Monday morning. The proposal drew immediate fire from both camps. Mexico manager Javier Aguirre, speaking to Radio Fórmula, described the change as “a kick in the gut” that would force his staff to rip up meticulously laid plans for meals, rest and activation. “Nobody consulted me and I’m quite angry,” he said, adding that the team had performed superbly in the evening slot throughout the tournament.

England’s reaction was equally sharp. Manager Thomas Tuchel had already flagged the altitude of the Azteca — 2,240 metres above sea level — as a “big disadvantage” that his squad could not physiologically adapt to in four days. The prospect of losing further preparation time, and of playing in hotter midday temperatures, was seen by the English camp as an unacceptable sporting handicap. British media noted that the Football Association was caught off guard by the reports, learning of the potential switch through Mexican outlets rather than official channels. Former England defender Gary Neville called the episode “disruptive” and questioned FIFA’s “willy nilly” approach, arguing it created a sporting integrity issue.

The reversal, confirmed by sources close to the discussions, came after both federations formally objected. Brazilian officials had also been monitoring the situation, as any change to the Mexico-England kick-off risked compressing the schedule with Brazil’s own last-16 tie against Norway in New York, which could have been pushed back by an hour. The episode is the latest weather-related disruption at a tournament already marked by lengthy delays: France’s group match against Iraq was suspended for over two hours due to lightning, and FIFA’s own regulations grant it broad discretion to reschedule matches for safety reasons. Yet the chaotic handling of the Mexico-England affair has left a sour taste, with Aguirre’s blunt language capturing a sense of powerlessness felt by teams on the ground.

With the schedule now settled, England will travel to Mexico City on Friday evening, keeping their hotel location secret after Ecuador’s squad was kept awake by noisy fans before their match. The winner of Sunday’s contest will face either Brazil or Norway in the quarter-finals in Miami.

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 1 languages

9%
ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Sub-Saharan African pressSoutheast Asian press
Sub-Saharan African press/ Anglophone
DetachmentPragmatism

FIFA decided not to change the kickoff time for the England-Mexico match despite storm forecasts. The decision was made after discussions, and the game will proceed as originally scheduled. The report is factual and neutral.

Southeast Asian press
DetachmentPragmatism

FIFA canceled the plan to change the kickoff time for the England-Mexico match, which remains as scheduled. The match is described as crucial for both teams. The tone is measured but with a hint of importance.

Broaden your view

Read more
Breaking
Hostile Reception and Riot Police Greet England in Mexico City·Mbappé: ‘If we have to get our hands dirty, we’ll do it’ as France edge Paraguay·In Goiânia, a Single Ticket Held Six Numbers That Changed Everything·Cape Verde’s defiant World Cup run ended by Argentina in extra-time thriller·Erdogan Warns Against Israeli Sabotage of US-Iran Deal, Seeks Regional Ownership·As AI Outpaces Lawmakers, States Rush to Fortify Digital Oversight·Le Pen verdict nears as Trump’s delay bid fails·First Imported Ebola Case in France Recovers as Central African Outbreak Surpasses 450 Deaths·Hostile Reception and Riot Police Greet England in Mexico City·Mbappé: ‘If we have to get our hands dirty, we’ll do it’ as France edge Paraguay·In Goiânia, a Single Ticket Held Six Numbers That Changed Everything·Cape Verde’s defiant World Cup run ended by Argentina in extra-time thriller·Erdogan Warns Against Israeli Sabotage of US-Iran Deal, Seeks Regional Ownership·As AI Outpaces Lawmakers, States Rush to Fortify Digital Oversight·Le Pen verdict nears as Trump’s delay bid fails·First Imported Ebola Case in France Recovers as Central African Outbreak Surpasses 450 Deaths·
Upd. 02:53 AM1 language · 2 outlets
2 outlets|1 language|3 min read
Friday, July 3, 2026

Mexico-England kick-off chaos ends with original 6pm slot intact

A day of conflicting reports, angry reactions and a late reversal by FIFA left the last-16 tie at the Azteca unchanged, though the episode exposed deep frustrations on both sides.

The World Cup last-16 match between Mexico and England will kick off at 6pm local time on Sunday, as originally scheduled, after a tumultuous 24 hours in which FIFA considered, and then abandoned, a plan to move the game forward by six hours. The governing body never issued a public statement, but by Friday evening both federations had been informed that the evening slot would stand, ending a sequence of leaks, denials and recriminations that had engulfed the tournament’s knockout phase.

The initial push for a midday start, first reported by Mexican media, was driven by forecasts of severe thunderstorms and flooding in Mexico City, conditions that had already delayed Mexico’s round-of-32 victory over Ecuador by an hour. Behind the scenes, however, multiple sources indicated that commercial considerations also played a role: an earlier kick-off would place the match in prime time for British television audiences, rather than the small hours of Monday morning. The proposal drew immediate fire from both camps. Mexico manager Javier Aguirre, speaking to Radio Fórmula, described the change as “a kick in the gut” that would force his staff to rip up meticulously laid plans for meals, rest and activation. “Nobody consulted me and I’m quite angry,” he said, adding that the team had performed superbly in the evening slot throughout the tournament.

England’s reaction was equally sharp. Manager Thomas Tuchel had already flagged the altitude of the Azteca — 2,240 metres above sea level — as a “big disadvantage” that his squad could not physiologically adapt to in four days. The prospect of losing further preparation time, and of playing in hotter midday temperatures, was seen by the English camp as an unacceptable sporting handicap. British media noted that the Football Association was caught off guard by the reports, learning of the potential switch through Mexican outlets rather than official channels. Former England defender Gary Neville called the episode “disruptive” and questioned FIFA’s “willy nilly” approach, arguing it created a sporting integrity issue.

The reversal, confirmed by sources close to the discussions, came after both federations formally objected. Brazilian officials had also been monitoring the situation, as any change to the Mexico-England kick-off risked compressing the schedule with Brazil’s own last-16 tie against Norway in New York, which could have been pushed back by an hour. The episode is the latest weather-related disruption at a tournament already marked by lengthy delays: France’s group match against Iraq was suspended for over two hours due to lightning, and FIFA’s own regulations grant it broad discretion to reschedule matches for safety reasons. Yet the chaotic handling of the Mexico-England affair has left a sour taste, with Aguirre’s blunt language capturing a sense of powerlessness felt by teams on the ground.

With the schedule now settled, England will travel to Mexico City on Friday evening, keeping their hotel location secret after Ecuador’s squad was kept awake by noisy fans before their match. The winner of Sunday’s contest will face either Brazil or Norway in the quarter-finals in Miami.

Source divergence

Sport · 2 outlets · 1 language

9%Low

How sources tell the same facts differently.

How They Split

Neutral100%

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 1 languages

ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Sub-Saharan African pressSoutheast Asian press
Sub-Saharan African press/ Anglophone
DetachmentPragmatism

FIFA decided not to change the kickoff time for the England-Mexico match despite storm forecasts. The decision was made after discussions, and the game will proceed as originally scheduled. The report is factual and neutral.

Southeast Asian press
DetachmentPragmatism

FIFA canceled the plan to change the kickoff time for the England-Mexico match, which remains as scheduled. The match is described as crucial for both teams. The tone is measured but with a hint of importance.

This story appeared in

2 outlets · 1 language

Broaden your view

From Geopolitics & Politics

Iran Begins Week-Long Khamenei Funeral as Successor Stays Out of Sight

10 languages · 44 outlets

From Economy & Markets

Car Sales Accelerate in Emerging Markets as Smartphone Demand Stalls

4 languages · 10 outlets

From Technology

Alibaba bans Claude Code after hidden tracking code discovered

4 languages · 4 outlets

Read more