On June 11, 2026, at 3:00 PM Eastern Time, Estadio Azteca in Mexico City fell silent for one breath — and then erupted. The 2026 World Cup Opening Ceremony unfolded in a stadium that has witnessed more soccer history than any other venue on Earth, before a global audience watching across the planet.
This was not just another opening ceremony. It launched the first World Cup to feature 48 nations — the first hosted across three countries at once, and the first to welcome a new generation of debutants — Cape Verde, Curaçao, Jordan, and Uzbekistan — onto the world's biggest stage.
Themed around papel picado and folkloric tradition and produced by Balich Wonder Studio, the show was a love letter to Mexico. Rock legends Maná had 80,000 fans singing "Oye Mi Amor," before Danny Ocean, Belinda, Los Ángeles Azules, Lila Downs, and J Balvin lit up the pitch. Then Colombian superstar Shakira and Nigerian star Burna Boy closed it out with "Dai Dai," the official anthem of the tournament. The three mascots — Maple the Moose (Canada), Zayu the Jaguar (Mexico), and Clutch the Bald Eagle (USA) — joined a celebration of a continent hosting the world.
Then the soccer began — and Mexico delivered, beating South Africa 2-0 to thrill the home crowd on a night that produced a record three red cards.