18 Jun
Thu
•8:00pm
Estadio Akron • Zapopan
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
11 Jun
Thu
•8:00pm
Estadio Akron • Zapopan
18 Jun
Thu
•8:00pm
Estadio Akron • Zapopan
24 Jun
Wed
•8:00pm
Estadio BBVA Bancomer • Monterrey
Mexico is back home. At Akron Stadium in Guadalajara, El Tri leans on what has always defined them at World Cups: quality on the ball, adventurous full-backs, constant movement between the lines and a crowd that roars every time the team wins it back and breaks forward.
South Korea arrive with their trademark high-energy football, coordinated pressing and lightning-fast transitions – the same style that at Qatar 2022 let them come from behind against Portugal and punch their ticket to the last 16.
The matchup comes loaded with history: at France 1998 Mexico beat South Korea 3–1, and at Russia 2018 they repeated with a 2–1 win in the group stage. Now the context is even more demanding: the 2026 World Cup group stage, more games but the same tiny margin for error.
One early goal, a poorly defended counter or a corner kick can flip the group on its head. Experiencing it live, with Akron packed, the stands right on top of the pitch and World Cup fever all over Guadalajara, turns every game into something you simply can’t compare to watching on TV.
In Qatar 2022, Mexico missed out on the last 16 for the first time since 1994, despite beating Saudi Arabia on the final matchday. They come in desperate to set the record straight with a squad that blends experience and top talent from Europe and Liga MX.
South Korea put together a group stage to remember: a draw with Uruguay, a wild game against Ghana and a comeback win over Portugal to clinch qualification before falling to Brazil in the last 16. Son Heung-min is still their attacking talisman, surrounded by teammates who battle every week in Europe’s top leagues.
Mexico vs South Korea in Guadalajara is a head‑on clash between wounded hosts and an Asian side that already knows how to bring down giants. Lock in your tickets and witness it live.
Akron Stadium holds around 46,000–48,000 fans, with steep stands, no running track and a real “European stadium” feel: you’re practically right on top of the touchline. The lower sidelines are the equivalent of a central main stand in Madrid or Lisbon; the ends are where the loudest supporters pack in, and the upper tiers give you the perfect panoramic view to read every tactical move.
At Qatar 2022, group-stage tickets for international fans ranged, depending on category, from around €60–70 for the cheapest seats to about €200–220 for the top categories.
As a ballpark based on those past ranges, you can expect roughly €50–80 in the upper tiers, €80–130 behind the goals and in the corners, €130–200 along the mid-level sidelines and €200–230 for central seats on the halfway line. Final prices will always depend on the official category, demand and when you buy, but this gives you a solid guide so you don’t miss out on Mexico vs South Korea at the Akron.