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Mexico federation loses appeal against Fifa fines for fans’ homophobic chant

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Mexico federation loses appeal against Fifa fines for fans’ homophobic chant

Mexico has campaigned to eradicate the chantWorld Cup opener features Mexico at the AztecaThe Mexican soccer federation on Tuesday lost its latest appeal against Fifa punishments for fans chanting an anti-gay slur at opponents’ players.The latest ruling from the Court of Arbitration for Sport (Cas) in a series of Mexico v Fifa appeal cases over more than 10 years comes as Mexico prepare to host South Africa in the World Cup opener on 11 June at Azteca Stadium, a venue where the chant is often heard.The chant, a one-word slur that means male prostitute in Spanish, usually occurs when the opposing goalkeeper is taking a goal kick.It went viral in the 2014 World Cup in Brazil and was heard again at the next editions in 2018 in Russia and 2022 in Qatar. Mexico fans have defied requests and education programs by the federation aiming to control the abuse.The latest case at Cas followed Fifa prosecutions of incidents at games in 2024 against Bolivia, Uruguay, Brazil and the United States. The chant was heard by anti-discrimination monitors who also will work for Fifa at the World Cup’s 104 games in Mexico, the US and Canada.Cas said its judges upheld Fifa-imposed fines totaling 140,000 Swiss francs ($178,000). They lifted a sanction of closing part of a stadium at a Fifa-organized game such as the World Cup.The court said its judges at a hearing in Miami in March weighed the Mexican federation mitigation that it had “put measures in place since 2015 to educate, prevent and eradicate the chant.”“They [the judges] observed that the conduct of the fans was collective and widespread, and not merely a one-off occurrence,” Cas said in a statement.Noting the “unique nature” of the challenge facing Mexican soccer officials, the court said the federation should not escape liability.Mexico will also host World Cup group-stage games against South Korea in Guadalajara and the Czech Republic at the Azteca.

Associated PressTue, 02 Jun 2026
Source: The Guardian
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Socceroos show resilience and spark but miss chances against Mexico in final audition for World Cup

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Socceroos show resilience and spark but miss chances against Mexico in final audition for World Cup

Mexico defeat Australia 1-0 in friendly ahead of World CupLoss adds to pressure on Tony Popovic to get squad selection rightAustralia may have lost their World Cup warm-up match to Mexico 1-0. But with just two weeks until their first match of the tournament against Turkey, the Socceroos appear to have found something more important: confidence.A second-half turnaround against Fifa’s 15th-ranked side almost secured a draw for the Socceroos, who had three good chances to equalise on Saturday night in California. Despite a conservative approach, Tony Popovic’s side showed resilience and increasing positivity as they took the game to the World Cup co-hosts and 78,479 mostly green-clad fans who filled the Rose Bowl Stadium.The defeat is a reminder, however, there will be little room for error at the World Cup for an Australian side featuring few elite talents. It also heightens pressure on Popovic to get the selection right for his squad, which is due to be announced on Monday.Against Mexico, there was no first Socceroos appearance for Cristian Volpato after the weekend shock of his switch of allegiance. The late call-up was left out of the squad, alongside forwards Brandon Borrello and Tete Yengi and goalkeeper Joe Gauci, adding intrigue as Popovic prepares to make his final four cuts.Defender Harry Souttar – who played the entire match – said he didn’t want to celebrate his own selection yet, and it will be cruel on whoever is left out. “There’ll be a few disappointed boys going to miss out on it, which is obviously a tough thing,” he told Paramount+. “It’s a real shame, but that’s football.”The game showed the importance to the Socceroos of Souttar and Irvine, veterans who had been under injury clouds ahead of the tournament but now look likely to be in the XI.Alongside Souttar, Popovic delivered a surprise on Sunday in selecting 18-year-old Lucas Herrington – who produced a mostly accomplished performance – on the left side of the back three, rather than the more experienced Cam Burgess. The coach’s decision to deploy the robust duo of Connor Metcalfe and Mathew Leckie in the attacking midfielder roles, leaving Nestory Irankunda on the bench, signalled a cautious approach.That played out in the first half as Australia consolidated their reputation – fair or not – as defensively minded wreckers. Mexico enjoyed three-quarters of possession early on, but were provided few genuine opportunities. The nature of the breakthrough was, therefore, a surprise and disappointment.Mexico’s goal came from a corner, a relatively feeble glancing header by Johan Vásquez after Aiden O’Neill couldn’t stretch for the nodded clearance. The ball squirmed through a crowd of bodies towards Mat Ryan’s back post, which it hit then rebounded back across the line. This was no thumping strike, no majestic piece of skill. This was just dismal.Australia might never be able to play the world’s best off the park through pass and move, or dribbling skill, but there is no reason why they can’t be one of the most robust outfits at set pieces. That goal highlighted how nothing can be taken for granted; how fine the margins will be for the Socceroos in North America.When the half-time whistle went, it was 11 shots to three; 396 passes to 132. Just four touches for Australia in the Mexico goalbox. Yet they went into the break having also had the half’s best chance.Popovic lamented Australia’s struggle to maintain possession under Mexico’s pressure and to convert chances. “The players just need to believe a little bit more,” he said. “You’re not going to get many chances in football. It’s the World Cup you’re preparing for – you don’t give them any chances. They didn’t have a clear chance, but they scored from the corner.”Alessandro Circati launched a long ball towards right back Jacob Italiano, but a Mexican defensive mixup left striker Mo Touré with an opportunity he should have taken. A half-clearance fell to the striker with the goalkeeper out of position, and the bouncing ball asked him to side foot it into the open goal. It was an act he would do a hundred times a week without trouble in training yet, slightly unbalanced, he hooked his lob to the left of the goal.But Touré quickly put it behind him in the second half and was central during the Socceroos’ best period. A Souttar header off a set piece fell to his swinging volley. Even if the Touré shot was blocked, the follow-up was hammered back in by Aiden O’Neill and well saved by Mexico’s substitute keeper Guillermo Ochoa. That was Australia’s first shot on target, and they were not done.Touré became a target on the counter, as early balls into the channels won the Socceroos field position and crucial set pieces. Souttar’s head was the target at the back post, and suddenly a formula for Australian success emerged. Touré and Souttar might have been the bookends for the revival, but they were supported by ambition in midfield, as the yellow shirts were able to progress from defence to attack with confidence.The best chances of the second half fell to substitutes Ajdin Hrustic and Kai Trewin, both creating one for the other. Both were the result of driving runs into the area in transition. Though neither was a clear one-on-one, they were legitimate openings in a match otherwise lacking and a sign the Socceroos won’t be Group D easy-beats.The Socceroos now travel to their World Cup training base in Oakland, ahead of their final pre-tournament friendly against Switzerland in San Diego next weekend. “Every day now it feels it’s just getting closer, it’s getting more real,” Souttar said. “A disappointing result tonight, but so many positives to take moving forward.”

Jack SnapeSun, 31 May 2026
Source: The Guardian
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Mexico hope a month of isolation can rekindle the magic of the 1986 World Cup

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Mexico hope a month of isolation can rekindle the magic of the 1986 World Cup

El Tri reached the quarter-finals the last time they hosted the tournament. They’re hoping old methods can revive the team after a disastrous outing in 2022It was January 1986 and the temperature at the peak of La Malinche, one of Mexico’s tallest mountains, had plummeted to a bone-chilling cold. A group of soccer players training for that year’s World Cup ran through a dense fog to the summit 14,600ft above sea level gasping in the thin air. Their Serbian coach, Bora Milutinović, had pushed his players to the limit, seeking not only to test their physical endurance but also hoping for a psychological breakthrough. Up there, the Mexico players suffered, shivered and cursed. But through hardship they became a family. That fabled image of survival on the mountain became the foundation for Mexico’s best-ever World Cup performance, the last time they played on home soil and one of only two times El Tri reached the tournament’s quarter-finals.Forty years later, the myth of La Malinche hangs over Mexico’s preparation for this summer’s tournament, which once again will be played on home turf. The team’s coach, Javier Aguirre, was one of Milutinović’s players at the 1986 World Cup and he has seemingly been inspired by the old belief that isolation and shared struggle can work miracles. At Aguirre’s urging, the Mexican Football Federation – just as it had in 1986 – took the controversial step of removing national team players from their clubs during the most decisive phase of the Liga MX playoffs. By the time the World Cup kicks off on 11 June, the players will have been sequestered together for 30 days.The departure of 12 players from Liga MX – first for a period of forced rest and then for training at Mexico City’s High-Performance Center – generated considerable discontent among the fans of clubs competing in the playoffs. The result: the tournament, which is supposed to be the highlight of the year, has become a lackluster affair.Chivas de Guadalajara, who traditionally only field Mexican players, lost five teammates to the national squad. Missing half of their starting lineup, the Red and Whites lost in the semi-finals to Cruz Azul, who only gave up one player, Érik Lira, to international duty. Cruz Azul went on to beat Pumas in a low-quality final.Former Mexico goalkeeper Félix Fernández, now an analyst for ClaroSports, voiced concerns that are shared by many fans in the country about Aguirre’s decision.“I think there’s no better way for a national team player to reach the World Cup than after playing in the [playoffs], because those are the most intense, most demanding matches,” Fernández says. “Yes, of course, there’s a risk of injury, but injuries can also happen in training.”But there are reasons why Aguirre and his staff made their decision. In 1985, Milutinović took the players away from their clubs for a full year. They toured the world, playing more than 20 friendlies in Asia, Africa, Europe and South America.Decades later, Milutinović still believes the decision was correct.“In my time, the only way we could accomplish anything was to be together,” the 81-year-old says over the phone from China, where he is travelling. “Thanks to that time spent together, we created a suitable environment where we were mentally prepared, and it was so effective that we played a very, very successful World Cup in ’86.”He says the team spent two weeks on La Malinche, climbing up and down the dormant volcano many times, including at night. Players in later interviews talked about being terrified of heights and crawling on all fours. A couple of players wandered off and got lost and the team had to rally together to find them. “That lesson we learned helped us create a positive atmosphere and have confidence in ourselves,” Milutinović says.He says that in 2026, a player spending a year away from a club is “impossible … times are different”. But he warns that “a month is nothing”.Part of Milutinović’s plan in 1986 was for Mexico to gain a wealth of experience on the global stage, something this year’s team won’t have time for.“Before the World Cup, we played 56, we had won [29] of them. There was confidence and everything … You play the game the way you train,” he says. “Every training session is a competition, a desire to be better, to compete, and above all, to enjoy it. Enjoy the game.”Critics such as Fernández worry the current players aren’t capable of absorbing a message of unity and joy similar to the one Milutinović preached back then.“Nowadays, the amounts of money [players] earn can easily detach them from reality,” Fernández says. “The camaraderie has been greatly diminished. Today’s footballer is constantly on his cell phone, watching TV series and movies. It’s not like before when you’d get together in a room with four or six of you to talk. This lack of interaction ends up affecting them on the field.”Mexico have played six times this year, but only half of those have come with their full-strength squad. Their Europe-based players were missing for their most recent match, last week’s 2-0 win over Ghana. But Ghana fielded a weakened team too, and their coach, Carlos Queiroz, didn’t even attend the game.Fernández and others also believe there are deeper problems that can’t be fixed with a month of extra training sessions. The roots of these deficiencies lie in top-level decisions made since the team’s failure at Qatar 2022, when El Tri crashed out in the group stage, their worst finish at a World Cup in four decades. The insularity of Mexican soccer means young players often stay at home rather than gain valuable experience in the top European leagues. The decision to end promotion and relegation in Liga MX also means a lack of jeopardy that can sharpen players’ edges.“The Mexican national team today doesn’t have the level to be among the top 17 in the world,” Fernández says. “Terrible decisions have been made, and nothing has been done. It never crossed their minds that Mexico was hitting rock bottom.”With the exception of the team’s two best players – Genoa captain Johan Vásquez and Fulham’s Raúl Jiménez – the squad is either in poor form or lacking match fitness. Milan’s Santiago Giménez is coming off a series of injuries and his scoring has dried up. Edson Álvarez (Fenerbahçe), Luis Chávez (Dynamo Moscow) and the inconsistent rookie Obed Vargas (Atlético Madrid) have all missed time at their respective clubs.Fernández says the lack of stars in their prime has led to an unusual phenomenon. Billboards on Mexico’s streets show the faces of former stars such as Rafael Márquez, now an assistant coach for El Tri, instead of members of the current squad.Milutinović, ever an optimist, believes Mexico’s passionate fans will ignite pride in the players. He saw how the country pulled together in the aftermath of Mexico’s devastating earthquake in 1985. “The fans and everything else had a huge influence on Mexico achieving that result in ’86,” he says.Milutinović also believes Mexico’s preparations for this World Cup could benefit some Liga MX teams. For example, the five Chivas players who missed the playoffs to join up with El Tri will come back with invaluable World Cup experience and make their club team even stronger.“For me, Chivas is the champion,” he says. “Working with young players is key. It leaves behind a squad with a future, in a World Cup environment that will serve them well.”For now, on the training pitches in Mexico City, the players are racing against time, under the guidance of Aguirre, to find the rhythm and mental strength they need to face their biggest challenge. Thirty days in a bubble to try to fix years of systemic problems. The outcome is uncertain, but if history is a guide, maybe coming together for an intense period will give the team the boost they need.Milutinović says he never told his players they had to win. He just told them they had to give everything of themselves and look out for each other. Before every game at the 1986 World Cup he repeated a mantra: “La Malinche, La Malinche, La Malinche”, evoking the mountain in front of them they needed to conquer. We will find out if this year’s team are up to a similar challenge in the coming weeks.

Raúl VilchisFri, 29 May 2026
Source: The Guardian
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