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South Africa coach Hugo Broos has challenged his players to ignore the expected roar of the crowd when they face co‑hosts Mexico in their World Cup opener.
Broos, 74, will return to the Estadio Azteca with a mix of emotion and determination as he leads South Africa into a tough Group A assignment in Mexico City.
The former Belgium international recalls the noise he experienced at the Azteca during the 1986 finals, when he played in Belgium’s opener against the hosts.
Broos sees Thursday’s match as pivotal for South Africa’s chances of advancing beyond the group stage.
“There will be a big crowd and there will not be so much South African support,” Broos said. “So that is a big help for them (Mexico). They will have 85,000 Mexicans shouting and singing. But we have to focus on our game. And if we can do that, if we are not too influenced by the noise of 85,000 Mexicans, then we can have a good game.”
He believes Mexico are the team to beat in Group A.
“I think they’ve won nearly all of their last 10 games,” Broos said of “El Tri”. “So they’ll be a team with confidence…they’re the best team in the group. So tomorrow it will be a very tough game. We need to be at our best level, but I can assure you our team is ready to fight for every metre and every ball.”
Broos also expressed reservations about the expanded 48‑team format, citing the demanding travel schedule that includes matches in Atlanta and Monterrey.
“It’s a bit too big when you play with 48 countries,” he said. “Forty years ago it was a World Cup in Mexico, but now it is modern times, and we have to adapt. It’s more exhausting than the previous World Cup, when you are with fewer countries but we have to accept it.”
Mexico have appeared in seven World Cup opening matches but have never won one—a statistic that coach Javier Aguirre said he was determined to overturn.
“We have to break the statistic,” Aguirre said at his pre‑match press conference. “I didn’t know that fact; I’m going to share it with the players. It will be another source of motivation.”
Aguirre, 67, will relive the experience of playing a World Cup on home soil 40 years after his own participation as a player in 1986.
“Since I arrived 22 months ago, I have had no greater emotion than experiencing a World Cup at home again,” he said.
Vanguard News
The post South Africa brace for Azteca test against Mexico in World Cup opener appeared first on Vanguard News.

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