Shakira and Burna Boy warm up spectators in World Cup opening ceremony

MEXICO CITY – The 2026 FIFA World Cup, the first expanded 48-team edition of the global football tournament, kicked off Thursday with a star-studded opening ceremony at Mexico City’s iconic Estadio Azteca, where A-list performers energized a capacity crowd before the tournament’s opening match between co-host Mexico and South Africa. But the celebratory mood outside the historic stadium turned chaotic, as overcrowding and pre-existing security barriers sparked scuffles among thousands of fans gathered at the city’s central official fan zone.

Regarded as one of the most legendary football venues on the planet, Estadio Azteca – which hosted the World Cup final in both 1970 and 1986, and recently completed major renovations to accommodate this year’s tournament – welcomed 80,000 spectators for the opening ceremony. The event opened with choreographed dance routines centered around a massive replica of the FIFA World Cup Trophy, paired with dazzling fireworks displays that lit up the Mexico City night sky.

The ceremony’s highlight came when Colombian global pop icon Shakira and Nigerian Afro-fusion star Burna Boy took the stage to perform *Dai Dai*, the 2026 World Cup’s official tournament anthem, drawing thunderous roars from the standing crowd. Additional performances from Colombian reggaeton star J Balvin and world-renowned Italian tenor Andrea Bocelli ramped up excitement ahead of kickoff, with fans inside the stadium expressing nothing but enthusiasm for the historic event. “It’s already a party in Mexico,” 40-year-old attendee Ingrid Orozco told reporters. Nineteen-year-old fan Gustavo Ramírez echoed the sentiment, simply saying, “It’s amazing.”

This 2026 World Cup makes history as the first tournament co-hosted by three North American nations: Mexico, the United States, and Canada. Across the three countries, the tournament will stage a record 104 matches, with the final scheduled to take place July 19 at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey.

While the celebration inside Estadio Azteca went off without a hitch, chaos erupted just hours before kickoff at the official public fan zone in Mexico City’s central Zócalo plaza, when thousands of fans converged to watch the opening match on a giant outdoor screen. Access to the viewing area had already been restricted by heavy metal barriers erected in the days before the tournament to block protesting teachers from entering the plaza, creating major bottlenecks as crowds surged forward to get in.

City officials struggled to regain control of the crowded entrance, with one staff member shouting through a megaphone: “Stop pushing and shoving, there are children here, you’re like animals!” Some frustrated fans threw water bottles and yelled insults at law enforcement officers, though many continued to chant in support of Mexico’s national team amid the disorder. Twenty-five-year-old fan Javier Maciel summed up the widespread frustration, saying, “There could have been better organisation.”

Local government officials quickly took to social media to announce the Zócalo fan zone had reached full capacity, and urged thousands of arriving fans to relocate to alternate viewing plazas across the city. The unrest is tied to ongoing protests by Mexican teachers who have been demonstrating in the capital for weeks to demand higher wages. Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum had originally been scheduled to attend the opening match viewing at the Zócalo fan zone, but confirmed she was unlikely to appear after days of disruptive protests in the area.