Mexico is facing potential FIFA punishment after a shocking chant overshadowed preparations for a possible World Cup clash with England. The co-hosts have been one of the surprise packages of the tournament so far, most recently cruising to a 2-0 win over Ecuador to book their place in the Round of 16, where they will face either DR Congo or the Three Lions.
El Tri are the first nation since Italy in 1990 to win their opening four matches of a major international tournament without conceding a goal. They achieved the feat after victories over South Africa, Korea and the Czech Republic in the group stage, before seeing off Ecuador in the knockout rounds. It also marks their first World Cup knockout-stage victory in 40 years.
The jubilant scenes across Mexico on Monday night reflected not only the significance of that achievement, but also the growing belief that this team can go even further. Confidence is understandably high given they have lost just twice in their last 88 competitive matches at the Azteca Stadium, the venue for their next fixture.
Mexico Fans’ Shocking Chant vs Ecuador Rears Its Ugly Head
However, while the celebrations were largely good-natured, sections of the home support have since come under fire for allegedly directing ‘disgraceful’ chants at an Ecuadorian player. The incident has sparked controversy and could now land Mexico in hot water with FIFA.
The chant, the one-word slur ‘puto’ that literally means male prostitute in Spanish, usually occurs when the opposing goalkeeper is taking a goal kick. It has reared its ugly head for the fourth straight tournament after it went viral at the 2014 World Cup in Brazil and was heard again at the next editions in 2018 in Russia and 2022 in Qatar. Watch below:
As per the Daily Mail, Mexico fans have once again ignored requests and education programs by the Mexican football federation aiming to control the abuse. Just before the tournament kicked off in Estadio Azteca, Mexican soccer officials had launched a campaign to deter the chant.
Titled ‘La Ola Sí, El Grito No,’ the campaign uses members of Mexico’s 1986 World Cup team to encourage fans to do the wave but not the chant. But that seems to have fallen on deaf ears, as fans have been chanting the slur since their opening game of the tournament and it came to a head yesterday.
FIFA Punishment Could Be on its Way for Mexico
Just before the kick-off of this year’s tournament, Mexico had been sanctioned for the all-too-familiar homophobic slur. The Court of Arbitration for Sport’s latest ruling in a series of Mexico vs. FIFA appeal cases came over more than 10 years after the World Cup in Brazil.
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 have also been working for FIFA at the World Cup’s 104 games in Mexico, the USA and Canada.
CAS said its judges upheld FIFA-imposed fines totallling 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. But some have argued that fans are better at policing this behaviour than FIFA.
“On the one hand, FIFA fines aren’t working,” The Athletic’s Matt Slater wrote on X. “But, on the other, we can’t just let some Mexican fans keep screaming an anti-gay slur each time the opposing goalie boots it. Self-policing by fans is the best way to fix this…now would be a good time to start.”