The Arizona Republic

In Mexico City, fans keep faith in national soccer team at World Cup

- José M. Romero

MEXICO CITY − Thousands packed the Plaza de la Republica, many dressed in the green home and off-white away jerseys of El Tri, the Mexican national soccer team's nickname. The line to get into the registrant­s-only official watch party of the FIFA World Cup stretched around the periphery of the outdoor space.

On one end of the downtown square, a giant screen showed Mexico's opening match of the World Cup from Qatar on Tuesday against Poland. At the other end were games, contests, an Adidas pop-up store and the Monumento a la Revolucíon, a tiled tower in honor of Mexican Revolution heroes from more than 100 years ago.

The onlookers take their soccer seriously. When the Mexican national anthem was played, most sang along with their countrymen and women inside the stadium in Qatar. And when the match kicked off, all of the socializin­g came to a quick stop to focus on the action.

The fans cheered good defensive plays, expressed exasperati­on at missed goal scoring chances, yelled and groaned when video replay was used to award Poland a penalty kick, and some even clapped at the final whistle, satisfied with a 0-0 draw. When goalkeeper Memo Ochoa stopped a penalty kick from Poland star Robert Lewandowsk­i in the second half, objects were thrown in the air and liquids from drinks splashed on elated Mexico supporters.

But that would be the only thing the crowd could truly be excited about, as the two teams played to a scoreless draw in the Group C opener for both.

Next up for Mexico, mighty Argentina on Saturday, toppled in a 2-1 upset to Saudi Arabia earlier in the week. The South Americans will be angry and eager to atone for the stunning loss, and Mexico is not in Argentina's class as far as talent on the roster.

"The Mexican fans are very passionate about soccer and they leave everything they have to do for a national team match, even more so when it's the World Cup," said Adrián Basilio Rodriguez, a reporter with Reforma, an independen­t news organizati­on based in Mexico City. "There is always the hope that the national team will exceed what it normally does in the World Cup, first because of the belief they have in the team and second due to the false expectatio­ns created by TV commentato­rs."

There was an air of uncertaint­y and resignatio­n about the team among Mexico City residents in the days leading up to the World Cup. Mexico, often the best team in the CONCACAF world soccer region (North America), typically battles it out with the U.S. team for regional supremacy in World Cup qualifying and major tournament­s. But the team lost three of its most recent five matches prior to facing Poland.

"There had been some doubts about the lineup decisions from (head coach Gerardo Martino, but (Tuesday) they played well. The perception will change a little going into the game against Argentina," said TUDN TV reporter Rodrigo Celorio.

For Qatar 2022 regional qualifying, Canada was the top finisher, Mexico second and a young American team third.

"In this World Cup in Qatar, expectatio­ns are a little lower because Mexico lost games to the U.S. and other countries and many people have not liked the lineups from the head coach," Rodriguez said. "But with the big save from (Tuesday) from goalkeeper Guillermo Ochoa against Robert Lewandowsk­i, things changed."

There's no ignoring the passion of Mexican soccer fans. It's there no matter where El Tri plays, from Glendale's State Farm Stadium almost every year to Qatar, to on a giant screen at the official FIFA Fan Festival, where Mexico City gathered

publicly Tuesday and will do so for every World Cup match going forward.

Only a handful of cities around the world are hosting the official FIFA-sanctioned events.

One man sold fake World Cup trophies. Others hawked bootleg jerseys, though seemingly everyone already had one or a club jersey for a player on the national team. Fans dressed as an Aztec warrior, cartoon characters and a clown. Some wore sombreros and lucha libre masks. Everyone was hyped following a pregame show studio rendition of "Mexico Lindo y Querido," a patriotic song everyone knew.

"El... Chu-cky ... Lo-ZA-no!" they sang in unison, in praise of Mexico forward Hirving "Chucky" Lozano, who played

well against Poland.

But many fans apparently ignored the Mexican soccer federation's crackdown on the use of a homophobic slur when the opposing team's goalkeeper lets a goal kick fly. And the hatred and disrespect remains for the archrival U.S. team, as the American national anthem was muted at the fan festival prior to the U.S. game against Wales on Monday afternoon, only to have the Wales anthem cranked up like that of all of the other teams.

Ochoa was the hero of an otherwise deflating morning for Mexican fans who came expecting a win over Poland. And the specter of an Argentina team that somehow lost its first World Cup match loomed.

Argentina, led by six-time FIFA World Player of the Year Lionel Messi, entered the World Cup third in FIFA's national men's team rankings. Mexico was No. 13.

"That one is do or die. It's a bad one. Forget about it. (Argentina) must claim their supremacy back," said soccer fan Wayne Bombo, a native of the African nation of Gabon who lives in Mexico.

Should Mexico defeat Argentina, the party will move from the Plaza de la Republica to the Angel de la Independen­cia statue in the middle of the city's most recognizab­le thoroughfa­re, the Paseo de la Reforma. Traffic will be slowed in a city with a great deal of it at all times.

"Me, in my 33 years of living, I think this is the first time that there isn't so much excitement for the national team," said Mexico City resident Rafael Escandón. "They played well, they attacked and if they can beat Argentina they have a chance to win the group."

 ?? AP ?? A Mexican soccer fan dressed as a clown joins others watching their team's World Cup Group C match against Poland, played in Doha, Qatar, on a screen set up for fans on Tuesday at the Revolution Monument in Mexico City.
AP A Mexican soccer fan dressed as a clown joins others watching their team's World Cup Group C match against Poland, played in Doha, Qatar, on a screen set up for fans on Tuesday at the Revolution Monument in Mexico City.
 ?? AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Mexican workers and fans watch the World Cup Group C match between Mexico and Poland on a television on Tuesday at La Merced market in Mexico City.
AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Mexican workers and fans watch the World Cup Group C match between Mexico and Poland on a television on Tuesday at La Merced market in Mexico City.

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