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World Cup 2026 Group A guide: Mexico favorites as South Korea wait

Photo by Agustin Cuevas/Getty Images
Photo by Agustin Cuevas/Getty Images

Mexico begin their 2026 FIFA World Cup campaign against South Africa in Mexico City on June 11, with South Korea and Czechia completing a Group A that looks more awkward than comfortable for the co-hosts.

The co-hosts begin the tournament under familiar scrutiny. Mexico have twice reached the World Cup quarter-finals on home soil, in 1970 and 1986, and this group gives Javier Aguirre’s side another chance to build momentum in front of their own supporters.

The format is different this time. The expanded 48-team tournament sends the top two sides in every group into the Round of 32, along with the eight best third-place finishers.

That gives Group A a wider margin for movement. Mexico start as the strongest side on paper, but South Korea, Czechia and South Africa each have a clear route to keep their tournament alive.

Mexico

Photo by Omar Vega/Getty Images
Photo by Omar Vega/Getty Images

Mexico enter Group A with the biggest expectation and the strongest case to finish top. They are ranked 15th by FIFA in the supplied tournament guide, qualified automatically as hosts, and open the tournament against South Africa.

Their matches are South Africa in Mexico City on June 11, South Korea in Guadalajara on June 18, and Czechia back in Mexico City on June 24.

That schedule gives Mexico two group matches in the capital. It also means every performance will be judged against the pressure of home advantage.

Mexico’s best World Cup results came as hosts in 1970 and 1986, when they reached the quarter-finals. That history is useful, but it also raises the standard for Javier Aguirre’s side.

Raúl Jiménez, Edson Álvarez, Guillermo Ochoa and Gilberto Mora are the key players. Jiménez gives them centre-forward pedigree, Álvarez gives them control, Ochoa brings vast tournament experience and Mora adds youthful invention.

The expectation is clear. Mexico should win Group A, but they cannot treat it as routine. If they fail to beat South Africa, the South Korea match immediately becomes uncomfortable.

South Africa

South Africa are ranked 60th by FIFA in the supplied tournament guide and arrive as the lowest-ranked team in the group. That makes them outsiders, but not irrelevant.

Their matches are Mexico in Mexico City on June 11, Czechia in Atlanta on June 18, and South Korea in Monterrey on June 24.

That is a demanding route, but the order gives them a clear target. If South Africa can stay competitive against Mexico, the Czechia match becomes the one that could define their tournament.

South Africa have not reached the World Cup knockout stage before. The 48-team format gives them a more realistic chance to change that.

Mbekezeli Mbokazi, Lyle Foster and Ronwen Williams are the key names. Mbokazi gives them defensive promise, Foster is the main scoring threat and Williams brings captaincy and penalty-box authority.

South Africa are not the team most likely to escape Group A. They are, however, exactly the sort of side that can turn one disciplined performance into a historic opportunity.

South Korea

South Korea are the team Mexico should respect most. They are ranked 25th by FIFA in the supplied tournament guide and have a stronger tournament profile than a simple second-place prediction suggests.

Their matches are Czechia in Guadalajara on June 11, Mexico in Guadalajara on June 18, and South Africa in Monterrey on June 24.

The opener against Czechia is vital. It may decide which side becomes Mexico’s main challenger before the second round of fixtures even begins.

South Korea’s best World Cup result was fourth place in 2002, when they co-hosted the tournament with Japan. They have not matched that run since, but their tournament continuity matters in a group like this.

Son Heung-min, Kim Min-jae and Lee Kang-in make them dangerous in different ways. Son remains the headline player, Kim gives them defensive authority and Lee offers craft between the lines.

This is why Mexico cannot coast. South Korea have enough quality to win the group if Mexico start slowly or lose control of the midfield battle on June 18.

Czechia

Czechia are ranked 41st by FIFA in the supplied tournament guide and are the awkward opponent in Group A. They do not carry Mexico’s pressure or South Korea’s profile, but they have the tools to make the group tighter.

Their matches are South Korea in Guadalajara on June 11, South Africa in Atlanta on June 18, and Mexico in Mexico City on June 24.

That first match is crucial. A win over South Korea would change the shape of Group A immediately.

As Czechia, their only previous World Cup appearance came in 2006, when they exited in the group stage. This squad has a chance to reset the country’s modern World Cup story.

Patrik Schick, Pavel Šulc and Tomáš Souček are the key players. Schick is the obvious finishing threat, Šulc adds attacking support and Souček gives them experience, height and midfield presence.

That matters in this group. Czechia do not need to dominate possession to hurt teams. They need territory, discipline and one clean delivery.

Mexico remain the right pick to win Group A. The ranking, schedule and home advantage all point in that direction.

But the better reading is that Group A is not safe. South Korea are too strong to dismiss, Czechia are too awkward to overlook and South Africa have enough of a route through the format to make every match count.

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