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
31 Mar
Tue
•7:45pm
Wembley Stadium • London
14 Jun
Sun
•3:00pm
AT&T Stadium • Arlington
20 Jun
Sat
•10:00pm
Estadio BBVA Bancomer • Monterrey
25 Jun
Thu
•6:00pm
AT&T Stadium • Arlington
Hirving Lozano embodies an El Tri side that stays true to its DNA: quick passing on the ground, rapid one-twos, overlapping full-backs, and wingers who constantly look to take on their marker. Japan arrives as the most refined version of modern Asian football: coordinated pressing, tactical discipline and a ferocious intensity that already pushed European giants to the limit with statement wins at Qatar 2022.
It’s a showdown between two fearless teams that attack as a unit, refuse to sit back and demand full focus from the first whistle to the last. In a group where a single slip could decide who goes through, this Mexico–Japan is played at full throttle from the very first 50–50 ball.
The North American side, a regular in the last 16 for decades but stunned by an early exit in the group stage at Qatar 2022, kicks off a new era backed by the flair of Hirving Lozano, the ruthless finishing of Santiago Giménez and the authority of Edson Álvarez in the middle of the park.
The Japanese team comes into this clash after one of the standout campaigns of the last World Cup, with victories over European heavyweights and a place in the last 16, driven by the skill of Takefusa Kubo, the decisive bursts of Kaoru Mitoma and the tireless work of Daichi Kamada. Don’t settle for watching it on TV: lock in your tickets and feel every moment of a contest loaded with intensity, talent and all-out attacking football live from the stands.