Mexico welcome Czech Republic to Estadio Azteca on 25 June 2026 for a Group A fixture that matters very differently to each side. Having already secured a knockout stage berth with two wins, Mexico are chasing a perfect group stage record and some real momentum before the last 16, whereas Czech Republic sit on one point after a draw and a defeat and need a result here or their tournament is effectively over.
Miroslav Koubek and Javier Aguirre have no competitive history between them. Koubek, appointed in December 2025, has shown a willingness to adjust his shape based on the opponent, while Aguirre, in his third stint in charge since July 2024, has brought back a disciplined edge that has clearly lifted the mood among Mexico supporters.

Mexico arrive in excellent shape, having beaten South Korea and South Africa in the group stage before comfortable friendly wins over Serbia and Australia. The altitude at Azteca adds a layer of difficulty that visiting sides rarely account for fully and Czech Republic's recent performances have done little to suggest they will be the exception. They have shown more resilience than quality in this tournament, suffering a narrow loss to South Korea and grinding out a draw with South Africa in performances that exposed their vulnerability to quick attacks. Their run through the European playoffs, including penalty shootout wins over Ireland and Denmark, showed they can absorb pressure when it matters.
Czech Republic have no fresh suspensions, though Jan Kuchta remains doubtful with an ankle problem and Adam Hložek, returning from a long term calf issue, could come in further forward. Koubek is likely to name Kovář in goal behind a back three of Hranáč, Chaloupek and Krejčí, with Coufal and Zelený as wing backs, Souček and Sojka anchoring midfield and Šulc, Provod and Schick leading the attack. Mexico have a largely fit group despite pre tournament injuries to Henry Martín, Luis Ángel Malagón and Rodrigo Huescas that forced some reshuffling but Álvarez is the spine of this squad and those absences have reshuffled the attacking options without touching the engine room. Aguirre will likely set up a front line designed to exploit the space in behind Czech wing backs, with Giménez and Vega central to that plan.
Koubek has favoured a 3-4-2-1 that drops into a compact five when not in possession, with Coufal and Zelený as the primary outlets while Souček screens the centre. The system suits quick vertical transitions and deliveries for Schick to attack crosses and flick ons from the wing backs, though it can look stretched if Coufal and Zelený are pinned back. Mexico under Aguirre press high early and use their full backs high alongside Vega to stretch Czech Republic's back three across the width. The sharpest individual contest is probably Schick against Mexico's centre backs in the air, while Souček versus Álvarez is the midfield duel that shapes everything, one built to win the ball, the other to stop it being used.
These sides don't meet often and there is nothing in their slim history to read into. Mexico beat Czechoslovakia 3-1 at the 1962 World Cup and Czech Republic won a 2-1 friendly in 2000, which leaves current form and home advantage as the only things that really matter here.

Schick's movement to attack crosses and flick ons from Coufal and Zelený, combined with Czech Republic's organised shape, makes set pieces a real threat for Mexico to manage. Mexico's legs should hold up better in the final twenty minutes, given that Czech Republic will have played three games at altitude by this point but none at 2,240 metres.
Mexico 2-1 Czech Republic is the call. Mexico are through, rested and playing at an altitude Czech Republic have visibly struggled with, the conditions favour the hosts before a ball is kicked. Schick's threat on the counter and Czech Republic's defensive organisation should keep it close until the altitude starts telling in the final quarter.

Ryan Baldi
Football Writer
Ryan Baldi is a professional football writer with years of experience and has been featured by respected outlets such as the BBC, The Guardian, Sky Sports, DAZN, FourFourTwo, ESPN, Yahoo Sport and Football365. He has also written several books including Arsène Who?.
