28 Mar
Sat
•7:00pm
Estadio Azteca • Mexico City
31 Mar
Tue
•8:00pm
Soldier Field Stadium • Chicago
11 Jun
Thu
•1:00pm
Estadio Azteca • Mexico City
18 Jun
Thu
•8:00pm
Estadio Akron • Zapopan
24 Jun
Wed
•8:00pm
Estadio Azteca • Mexico City
15 Jun
Mon
•6:00pm
Hard Rock Stadium • Miami
21 Jun
Sun
•12:00pm
Mercedes-Benz Stadium • Atlanta
26 Jun
Fri
•8:00pm
NRG Stadium • Houston
Hirving Lozano is the face of El Tri’s attacking DNA: a team that thrives on intensity, dares to take risks on the ball, stretches play out wide, combines in tight spaces and presses ferociously the moment they lose possession.
On the other side, Saudi Arabia stick to a very different script: compact block, disciplined lines and lethal transitions, the same blueprint that stunned Argentina at Qatar 2022.
Their most recent showdown dates back to that very World Cup: a 2–1 win for the Mexican side on the final day of the group stage, a result that wasn’t enough to go through, but that cranked up the heat on this rivalry.
Now, every 50–50 ball, every risky pass playing out from the back and any defensive lapse can tip the scales in the battle to qualify; in a World Cup group, dropping points in this clash could prove incredibly costly.
El Tri’s World Cup tradition stretches across multiple editions, constantly knocking on the door of the last 16 and built on a spine that plays in Europe’s top leagues, with names like Edson Álvarez and Santiago Giménez lining up alongside Lozano himself.
Saudi Arabia, meanwhile, return to the global spotlight with several campaigns under their belt since 1994 and with Salem Al-Dawsari as their attacking talisman, the standard-bearer of a generation that already knows how to bring down the favourites.
Don’t settle for the highlights: secure your tickets and enjoy a Mexico–Saudi Arabia group-stage showdown live, packed with unfinished business and with qualification hanging in the balance.