Mexico at the World Cup 2026: Squad, Fixtures, Odds and Best SA Sportsbook
Mexico open the 2026 World Cup as joint hosts. They kick off the whole tournament against South Africa on 11/06/2026 at Estadio Azteca. Coach Javier Aguirre is back for a third stint. This is everything a South African bettor needs to know about Mexico in 2026.
Mexico at the World Cup 2026
Group A · FIFA World Cup 2026
How Mexico booked their place
Mexico did not have to qualify. As one of three hosts, they took an automatic slot alongside Canada and the United States. The other two hosts also went straight in.
That is the easy bit. The harder part is form. Mexico stumbled in the 2022 World Cup in Qatar and went out at the group stage for the first time since 1978. The federation reacted by bringing back Javier Aguirre in 2024. He took over for his third spell as El Tri boss.
Aguirre’s CONCACAF Gold Cup record has been the proof of progress. Mexico beat the United States in the 2025 Gold Cup final to lift the trophy. That win, on US soil, was the moment the home support started to believe again.
Group A breakdown
Group A pulls in four very different sides. Mexico are the hosts and the seeded team. South Africa qualified from CAF for the first time since 2010. South Korea bring Premier League experience. Czech Republic add European bite.
The group fixtures in SAST time:
| Date | Match | Venue |
|---|---|---|
| Thu 11/06, 21:00 SAST | Mexico v South Africa | Estadio Azteca |
| Fri 12/06, 04:00 SAST | South Korea v Czech Republic | Estadio BBVA |
| Fri 19/06, 03:00 SAST | Mexico v South Korea | Estadio Akron |
| Thu 18/06, 16:00 SAST | Czech Republic v South Africa | Mercedes-Benz Stadium |
| Thu 25/06, 03:00 SAST | Czech Republic v Mexico | Estadio Azteca |
| Thu 25/06, 03:00 SAST | South Africa v South Korea | Estadio BBVA |
Top two go through. The eight best third-placed teams across the 12 groups also advance, so any side on 4 points has a real shot.
Full team profiles: South Africa, South Korea, Czech Republic.
The squad: who to watch
Aguirre named a 26-player squad with a heavy slant towards Liga MX-based players. The full attacking unit will rotate around three forwards.
Roberto Alvarado (#25, age 27) is the wide creator. Quick over the first ten metres, sharp with the cutback. He plays his club football for Guadalajara and earned the trust of Aguirre during the Gold Cup run.
Germán Berterame (#17, age 27) is the new face up front. Argentinian by birth, naturalised Mexican in 2025, and the man Aguirre wants holding the line for the opener. He has scored 14 goals for Monterrey in the 2025-26 Liga MX season.
Armando González (#14, age 22) is the breakout name. Pacy, two-footed, and the local press tip him as a difference-maker off the bench when Mexico chase a late goal.
In midfield, captain Edson Álvarez links defence to attack. He spent the 2024-25 season at West Ham and signed for Fenerbahçe in summer 2025. Expect him to sit deep in the 4-3-3 Aguirre prefers.
How Mexico play under Aguirre
Aguirre is a pragmatist. He wants Mexico to keep the ball short, build through the half-spaces, and hit on the counter when the press lifts. The 4-3-3 shape is his default but he will switch to 3-5-2 against stronger sides.
The press triggers off the opposition centre-back’s first touch. If the ball moves slowly, Mexico push. If the ball moves quickly, Mexico drop into a mid-block and wait. That balance worked well in the 2025 Gold Cup. Whether it holds against tougher opposition in the knockouts is the open question.
Set pieces will be a big weapon. Mexico scored 7 of their 14 Gold Cup goals from dead-ball moves. That stat will travel to the World Cup.
Mexico’s World Cup record
Mexico have been to 17 World Cups, more than any country outside Europe and South America. The high point is the quarter-finals in 1970 and 1986, both as hosts. Since 1994, Mexico have made the Round of 16 seven times in a row, then missed out in Qatar in 2022.
2026 is their first home World Cup since 1986. They host nine matches across the three host nations, including the opener at Estadio Azteca and a likely Round of 16 game. The Estadio Azteca crowd holds 87,000. Local support is the single biggest factor working in Mexico’s favour.
Betting on Mexico from South Africa
Mexico’s outright odds sit in the 80/1 to 120/1 band on most South African sportsbooks. The market does not see them as winners. The market does see them as a side that can win their group and reach the Round of 16.
Three angles worth a look:
- Group A winner. Mexico are short-priced favourites at around 1.55 to 1.80 across SA books. Worth backing in a group bet builder rather than as a single.
- Mexico to win Group A and reach the Round of 16. A double, priced around 2.30. The Round of 32 format gives more slack, so this lands more often than the old straight Round of 16 bet.
- Berterame to score in the tournament. Anytime tournament scorer pricing for Berterame is around 1.65. He starts the opener at Azteca, where Mexico have not lost a competitive home game since 2019.
For SA-licensed pricing, check Gbets and YesPlay. Both run dedicated World Cup pages with Group A specials. Compare to Cloudbet if you want crypto-funded markets and deeper live betting on the opener.
How to watch Mexico in South Africa
SuperSport holds the South African pay-TV rights to the 2026 World Cup. SABC is set to broadcast a select run of matches on free-to-air, with the opener almost certainly included given Bafana are playing.
The Mexico v South Africa kick-off is at 21:00 SAST on a Thursday. Prime-time viewing for the South African market. Mexico v South Korea kicks off at 03:00 SAST. That one is for the dedicated only.
SuperSport streams the matches via DStv Stream and DStv Now. Mobile streaming over data is supported with no extra fee for current subscribers.
FAQ: Mexico at the 2026 World Cup
When does Mexico play their first match?
Mexico open the tournament against South Africa on Thursday 11/06/2026 at 21:00 SAST. The match is at Estadio Azteca in Mexico City. It is the opening fixture of the entire 2026 World Cup.
Who is Mexico’s manager for the 2026 World Cup?
Javier Aguirre took over as Mexico head coach in July 2024. This is his third spell in the role. He led Mexico to the 2025 Gold Cup title and is in charge for the home World Cup.
Has Mexico ever won the World Cup?
No. Mexico’s best result is the quarter-finals in 1970 and 1986, both times as hosts. Since 1994, Mexico made the Round of 16 in seven straight World Cups before missing out in 2022.
Where can I bet on Mexico from South Africa?
Use any sportsbook licensed by a South African provincial board. Our reviewed partners include Gbets, YesPlay, Pokerbet, Betshezi, and Cloudbet. Compare prices on Group A winner, Mexico to top the group, and individual scorer markets across two or three books before placing.
What is Mexico’s strongest XI for 2026?
Aguirre’s likely starting XI is a 4-3-3 with Edson Álvarez anchoring midfield, Germán Berterame leading the line, and Roberto Alvarado on the right. The back four is built around Johan Vásquez and César Montes in the middle. Memo Ochoa remains in goal if fit at age 40.
More on the World Cup
Group A rivals: South Africa · South Korea · Czech Republic
Other: Back to the World Cup 2026 hub · All football fixtures · SA sportsbook reviews