World Cup

World Cup 2026 opening ceremony ahead of Mexico vs South Africa live: Shakira, Burna Boy | artists, music, fans, soccer

FIFA’s showpiece tournament is back, and you can follow all the build up to the musical show and beautiful game.

Quién es Burna Boy, el cantante que se presentará junto a Shakira en la inauguración del Mundial 2026 en México

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2026 World Cup opening ceremony countdown

Fans are part of the show

FIFA told fans to arrive early, as they're part of the show at the 2026 World Cup opener.

This year's, fans attending the World Cup on opening day will actively help create the opening ceremony. FIFA is rolling out a new “fan-centric” pre-match format in Mexico City, designed to turn the stadium into one shared, choreographed experience rather than a traditional pre-game show.

The ceremony is set to begin long before the teams walk out. Inside the stadium, fans will be woven into the spectacle through coordinated visuals, large-scale flag displays, music, and on-field activations that blur the line between audience and performance.

Top 5 best FIFA World Cup Opening Ceremonies of all time

In no specific order...

🇧🇷 1. Brazil 2014 (São Paulo)

The modern benchmark for spectacle. The ceremony mixed soccer, carnival energy, and global pop power, headlined by Jennifer Lopez, Pitbull, and Claudia Leitte performing “We Are One (Ole Ola)”. Massive choreography, LED staging, and stadium-wide choreography made this feel like a Super Bowl-level production. It set the tone for FIFA's modern entertainment era.

🇿🇦 2. South Africa 2010 (Johannesburg)

Emotionally iconic. The first World Cup ever held in Africa brought a deeply cultural, music-driven ceremony filled with drums, dance, and vuvuzela energy. It was less about celebrity and more about identity, celebrating the continent's long-awaited moment on soccer’s biggest stage. That said, the tournament’s opening era also ended up being defined by Shakira’s “Waka Waka (This Time for Africa)”, which became the defining soundtrack of 2010 and one of the most successful World Cup anthems ever released, performed across key ceremony moments and instantly tied to the imagery of South Africa’s historic hosting.

🇰🇷🇯🇵 3. Korea/Japan 2002 (Seoul)

A turning point in global production scale. The ceremony leaned heavily into synchronized stadium choreography, giant flags, and futuristic staging. It reflected the co-hosted nature of the tournament and the rising globalization of soccer culture in the early 2000s.

🇫🇷 4. France 1998 (Paris / Saint-Denis)

A more classic but hugely influential ceremony. France '98 balanced elegance and mass participation, with schoolchildren, dancers, and orchestral elements filling the Stade de France. It felt like the moment the modern World Cup truly became a global entertainment product.

🇷🇺 5. Russia 2018 (Moscow)

Compact but globally broadcast to billions, this ceremony is remembered for Robbie Williams opening the show with “Let Me Entertain You” and Aida Garifullina’s operatic performance. It had a polished, broadcast-friendly feel and marked the peak of FIFA’s hybrid pop + classical staging approach.

Mexico City’s World Cup drone show lights up the sky

Mexico City's skyline has already started to feel like part of the 2026 World Cup spectacle, with multiple drone formations spotted in rehearsals above the city in the days leading up to the opening ceremony. Early test shows featured hundreds of synchronized drones forming soccer-themed visuals, including the World Cup trophy, FIFA branding, and team-inspired patterns, sparking viral clips across social media and fueling speculation about how the technology will be used during the official ceremony.

While FIFA has not fully detailed the live opening-night production, reports and footage from recent nights suggest drones will play a key visual role alongside music and live performances, potentially replacing or complementing traditional fireworks. The displays are part of a push across host cities to modernize opening celebrations, blending cultural storytelling with large-scale aerial technology as Mexico sets the tone for the tournament’s global kickoff.

How the opening ceremony will likely unfold

You may have noticed my colleague Cal pointed out earlier that there will be several additional artists performing at the Opening Ceremony aside from Shakira and Burna Boy. But how will the show be structured?

While the full running order hasn't been officially released, expect the Mexico City ceremony to play out more like a story-driven showcase than a traditional concert. Early segments will likely spotlight Mexican culture, with artists like Lila Downs and Alejandro Fernández setting the tone, followed by high-energy crowd moments from groups like Los Ángeles Azules and Maná.

From there, the show will likely shift into a more global mix, bringing in stars like J Balvin, Tyla, and Danny Ocean, before building toward the main event.

The finale is obviously going to center on Shakira and Burna Boy performing the official song “Dai Dai”, the moment we're all anticipating. You know...besides the games themselves of course.

Who is Burna Boy?

Shakira isn't the only one performing the 2026 World Cup anthem today. With her will be Burna Boy, who is featured on “Dai Dai”.

Burna Boy,  born Damini Ebunoluwa Ogulu, is a Grammy-winning Nigerian superstar and one of the biggest global ambassadors of Afrobeats. Known for blending African rhythms with hip-hop, dancehall, and pop, he broke into the international mainstream with hits like “Ye” and albums such as “African Giant” and “Twice As Tall.”

His music often mixes infectious grooves with socially conscious themes, helping push Afrobeats into the global spotlight over the past decade. Now, he's bringing that worldwide sound to soccer’s biggest stage.

Why DO soccer players spit so much?

Here's a drinking game you didn't know you needed. Have you ever noticed how often soccer players spit during a game? Well, you will now.

It seems excessive, and that's because, well...it is. Soccer players love drama, what can we say? Our colleague Roddy takes a look at the science behind this phenomenon. Fascinating stuff. I apologize for pointing it out and shattering that glass, but if I had to see it, then so do you. But hey, have some fun with it and see how many you count throughout this tournament, starting with Mexico and South Africa today. 

Mariachis, handmade flags, and surprises

Mexico is already setting the tone for the 2026 World Cup, even before kickoff. As the first teams arrived, they were greeted with unforgettable gestures that quickly went viral on social media, from traditional norteño hats presented to Japan's squad to a full mariachi welcome for South Africa.

But the most striking detail may the display in Jalisco, where Mexican artisans have handwoven the flags of every participating nation. Obviously, we come to the World Cup for the beautiful game. But Mexico is reminding us that we stay for the culture, connection, and the moments that bring the tournament to life before a ball is even kicked.

Which players does Shakira’s World Cup 2026 song Dai Dai mention? And who is ‘El Pibe’?

In a short while, you're going to be hearing that performance of Dai Dai and I wanted you to be prepared to sing along to the important part. No, not the catchy melody encapsulating motivational phrases in various languages.

That's the easy bit.

I need you to focus on the part when the Shakira rattles off the names of the legendary players of the Beautiful Game. 

"Pelé, Maradona, Maldini, Romário, Cristiano... Ronaldo;

“El Pibe, Iniesta, Beckham y Kaká; Messi, Mbappé, Salah"

In that, there is a reference to “El Pibe,” a nickname that instantly rings bells for soccer fans of a certain age. For newer viewers, you can dig into the attached article for more information.

It's exactly the kind of detail World Cup obsessives love. Casual listeners hear a catchy song. Hardcore fans suddenly find themselves Googling references and debating which players made the cut.

Not a bad way to build excitement just before kickoff, don't you think?

Shakira: the unofficial 'Queen of the World Cup'

Some artists perform at a World Cup.

Some become part of World Cup history.

Then there's Shakira, who has somehow managed to do both for nearly two decades.

As she prepares to take center stage at the Azteca ahead of Mexico's opener against South Africa, it's worth remembering that this isn't her first World Cup rodeo. In fact, if World Cup songs had a Mount Rushmore, Shakira would probably have several faces on it.

For millions of fans, she will forever be associated with 2010 and Waka Waka (This Time for Africa). The song became more than a tournament anthem. It became the soundtrack of an entire summer, blasting from stadium speakers, car radios, bars and every television commercial known to humanity. Sixteen years later, people still know the chorus. That's not a World Cup song anymore. That's cultural immortality almost like the two aforementioned icons.

Her relationship with the tournament actually stretches even further. She performed Hips Don't Lie during the 2006 World Cup festivities, delivered La La La (Brazil 2014) four years later, and now returns for a fourth World Cup cycle with Dai Dai, the official song of the 2026 tournament, created alongside Burna Boy. (Scroll below for the video).

That's a remarkable achievement when you think about it. Players age out of World Cups. Coaches come and go. Entire generations of supporters arrive and leave. Somehow Shakira remains part of the soundtrack.

And, as you should know by now, she's not simply making a guest appearance. FIFA has placed her front and center of this opening ceremony in Mexico City that we're building up, where we'll get Dai Dai with Burna Boy before the first ball of the tournament is kicked. The song is designed to blend Latin and African influences, reflecting both the global nature of soccer and the unique cultural mix that has always defined Shakira's music.

The funny thing is that every World Cup produces new stars on the field. Few performers manage to survive multiple generations of the tournament itself.

Yet here we are in 2026, and once again the World Cup is beginning with Shakira.

Some traditions are simply too good to retire. “Let's go!”

The Mexican Wave '86

A trip back to Mexico 1986 for the wave that captured the imagination.

Vuvuzelas relived

OK, here's the sounds of those things.

South Africa's vuvuzelas and the Mexican Wave

Every World Cup leaves something behind.

Sometimes it's a legendary goal. Sometimes it's a heartbreaking miss. Sometimes it's a piece of soccer culture that becomes so famous it outlives the tournament itself.

Take the vuvuzela.

The plastic horn became the unofficial soundtrack of the 2010 World Cup in South Africa. For an entire month, televisions around the world sounded like they were broadcasting from inside a giant beehive. Players complained. Commentators complained. Viewers definitely complained. Yet somehow the vuvuzela became inseparable from that tournament. Mention South Africa 2010 and many fans still hear the noise before they remember the scores.

Dare I say, I now have a certain affection for that sound.

Then there's the Mexican Wave.

Unlike the vuvuzela, the Wave wasn't born at a World Cup, but it exploded onto the global stage during the 1986 tournament in Mexico. As one section of the crowd rises and sits before the next follows suit, the effect rolls around a stadium like a living ripple. Simple? Absolutely. Effective? Every single time. Although watch out for those Scotland fans who sometimes raise their kilts for a post-watershed wave!!

Together, they represent two very different sides of soccer fandom. One is loud enough to rattle your television speakers. The other requires thousands of strangers to coordinate for no reason other than collective joy.

One thing is certain: with South Africa and Mexico meeting again on opening day, don't be surprised if both make an appearance somewhere along the way.

And in a few days, the iconic memory of 2026 may be starting to take shape.

What happens backstage at a World Cup ceremony?

While fans count down to the show, there's another countdown happening behind the scenes.

Dancers are checking marks. Performers are running through last-minute rehearsals. Production crews are staring at clipboards with expressions usually associated with air-traffic controllers.

Months of planning eventually come down to a few precious minutes.

The funny thing is that if everything works perfectly, viewers barely notice the effort.

That's usually how you know a live event went well.

Ceremony sneak peak

...and here's a little glimpse inside the preparations.

A few hours from now, the stadium will be deafening. Right now, though, there's a different kind of energy around the Azteca.

Workers are making final checks. Television crews are rehearsing stand-ups they'll deliver a dozen times before kickoff. Vendors are setting up for what could be one of the busiest days of their lives.

Outside the stadium, supporters are already arriving for photos in front of one of soccer's most iconic venues.

The World Cup doesn't suddenly begin at the opening ceremony. It starts long before that.

It starts when the first fan arrives.

Today, nearly 90,000 more are expected to follow screaming for their favorites artists: some with a ball, others with a mic.

Hola Señor Azteca

I've talked quite a bit already about the stadium that will be opening this year's tournament, but haven't shared any imagery of it. Maybe you've never seen it before.

Let's remedy that immediately...

This is the protocol for suspending a match due to severe weather at the 2026 World Cup

When the weather doesn't play ball

You can spend months preparing to face Lionel Messi.

You can build an entire tactical plan around stopping Kylian Mbappé.

You can train for altitude, humidity and penalty shootouts.

What you can't do is tell a thunderstorm to wait until full time.

There is a growing realization that weather could become one of the tournament's most influential players. Most fans have heard about concerns over extreme heat, but lightning might prove even more disruptive.

Here's the surprising part: a storm doesn't even have to be over the stadium.

Under US safety regulations, matches can be suspended if lightning is detected within eight miles of the venue. One flash. Thirty-minute delay. Another flash? The clock starts all over again.

Imagine the scenes during a decisive group-stage game. Tens of thousands of fans waiting under shelter. Millions watching at home. Players trying to stay warm. Coaches desperately checking weather radar instead of opposition tactics.

And if one of the simultaneous final group matches is delayed while the other continues? Things could get very interesting very quickly.

I broke down exactly how FIFA's lightning protocols work in the attached article.

Music or soccer? What are you here for?

At some point today, remember, the music will stop.

The fireworks will fade.

The celebrities will leave the stage.

The giant countdown clocks will hit zero.

And then something wonderfully simple happens.

Twenty-two players walk onto a field.

One ball gets placed in the centre circle.

The noise becomes deafening.

And after years of planning, billions spent, thousands of articles written and countless predictions made, the World Cup finally becomes a soccer tournament again.

Everything before kickoff is anticipation.

Everything after kickoff is history waiting to happen.

But my question to you is whether or not you'll still be following, or are you just here for the pre-game show? There's a comments box for a reason...

The most iconic World Cup kits ever: From USA 94 denim stars to Nigeria’s viral masterpiece

Talking of World Cups of the past, are you one of those people fascinated by the assortment of kits that are on show? I certainly am, and so, it would appear, is my colleague Jen.

Check out the attached article where she looks back on some of that “global fashion phenomena” over the years.

Why are Mexico and South Africa opening World Cup 2026?

If you've watched World Cups for long enough, you might remember a very different tradition.

For decades, the defending champions were given the honor of kicking off the tournament. France opened the 2002 World Cup. Brazil opened in 1998. Germany opened in 1994. The holders got first billing, first spotlight and the first chance to make a statement.

Then FIFA changed the script.

Since the 2006 World Cup, the opening match has belonged to the host nation rather than the defending champion. The change came after FIFA ended automatic qualification for the reigning champions, meaning title holders would have to earn their place like everyone else. From that point on, it made far more sense for the hosts to launch the tournament in front of their own fans.

That's why today's curtain-raiser belongs to Mexico.

The hosts will walk out at the Azteca with the eyes of the soccer world upon them, continuing a tradition that has now lasted two decades. Germany started things in 2006. South Africa followed in 2010. Brazil did it in 2014. Russia in 2018. Qatar in 2022. Now it's Mexico's turn.

It's a small rule change that many fans barely noticed when it happened.

But it completely changed who gets the first kick, the first roar from the crowd and the first chance to write themselves into World Cup history.

The ghost of 2010

Mention Mexico and South Africa in the same sentence and many soccer fans immediately think of one image.

Siphiwe Tshabalala's thunderbolt in Johannesburg. The goal that launched the 2010 World Cup.

The goal that launched a month of noise, colour and vuvuzelas (remember those annoying plastic trumpets?!). 

Sixteen years later, the teams meet again to open another tournament.

Different players.

Different stadium.

Different continent-wide World Cup.

Yet somehow we've got this neat story circling back to the same fixture. As a sportswriter, I just love symmetry.

FIFA probably isn't complaining either... but did you know that the rules for who plays in the opening game have changed?

The prediction model that’s never wrong: Why you shouldn’t bet against this country winning the World Cup

You can always tell when a World Cup is about to start.

Suddenly everybody has a prediction. Every former player has a bracket. Every television network has a dark horse.

And then there are the supporters, each convinced their team has finally secretly solved the [weak wing play / lack of goals / suspect goalkeeper] that was holding them back all these years.

And for a brief, beautiful moment, everyone might be right.

This is the stage of the tournament where optimism is undefeated.

Nobody has been eliminated.

Nobody has suffered heartbreak.

Nobody has spent three hours arguing with a referee decision on social media.

Give it time, though. It's coming to most of us...

And if you want a prediction model that knows its stuff, check out the attached story that our Will put reported on.

The three-country World Cup experiment

One of the most fascinating things about this World Cup is that nobody has ever attempted something on this scale before.

Three host nations.

Sixteen host cities.

An entire continent involved in staging the tournament. 

Mexico gets the opening day spotlight.

Canada gets its own opening celebrations tomorrow.

Then the United States follows with its own launch event as the tournament spreads across North America. 

For fans, it means a World Cup that feels less like a tournament in one country and more like a month-long continental festival.

The logistical planners probably have a different word for it. And we'll no doubt all look back as domestic season return in the coming months and reflect on how well it turned out.

Shakira's South African impact

While Colombian, and helping to open up the 2026 extravaganza in Mexico, it's worth remembering that Shakira also gave us this iconic track back in that South Africa tournament in 2010.

Relive it now.

South Africa's long road back

It's a little weird, given how busy life can be, but I find that World Cups have a way of compressing time.

The last South African men's team to play in a World Cup opener did so in 2010.

That doesn't sound that long ago until someone reminds you that smartphones were still relatively new, streaming was in its infancy and a large chunk of the players taking the field today were just young kids. 

For South Africa, simply returning to the tournament represents a major achievement.

Now comes the difficult part.

Their first assignment is a host nation playing in front of more than 80,000 supporters in one of the sport's most intimidating stadiums.

Not exactly easing into the tournament.

But World Cups aren't supposed to be easy.

That's why we watch.

The opening ceremony Is more than a concert

Every World Cup opening ceremony faces the same challenge.

How do you represent an entire country in less than an hour?

It's impossible, of course.

But that doesn't stop anyone from trying.

Mexico's ceremony is expected to showcase the country's culture, music and traditions before the first ball is kicked, while FIFA has assembled a star-studded lineup for the occasion – as shared below – with Shakira and Burna Boy headlining. 

For some fans – quick shout out to my daughters who'll likely turn off when the actual sport begins – the ceremony is essential viewing.

For others, it's simply the thing standing between them and kickoff.

Both groups will be watching.

What's Mexico's World Cup opener history?

Some World Cup facts sound completely made up.

Here's one.

Mexico has never won a World Cup opening match.

Not once.

Despite appearing in numerous tournaments and despite hosting before, El Tri enter today's game still looking for that elusive first opening-day victory. 

Which means the pressure isn't only about starting the tournament well: it's about ending a statistic.

The kind of statistic that gets mentioned every 15 minutes on television broadcasts. The kind of statistic that follows a team around like an annoying relative at a family barbecue.

South Africa, meanwhile, will happily volunteer to extend that streak.

The hosts carry the expectation.

The visitors carry the freedom.

That combination has produced plenty of surprises throughout World Cup history.

The World Cup gets bigger than ever

Going back to the theme about size, and whether it matters, this tournament is going to feel different.

Not because the trophy changed.

Not because the rules changed (although maybe a little).

Because the scale changed.

The 2026 World Cup is the biggest in history, featuring 48 teams and a staggering 104 matches spread across North America. That's nearly 50% more teams than many fans grew up watching. 

There are more countries dreaming.

More supporters travelling.

More storylines waiting to emerge.

And almost certainly more debates about the format from people who haven't stopped talking about the format for the last two years.

By the time the final arrives in July, many millions of fans will have watched games in Mexico, Canada and the United States. For today, though, all roads lead to Mexico City.

Will Memo Ochoa start for Mexico in the World Cup? A look into El Tri’s goalkeepers

Every World Cup has certain traditions.

Brazil wearing yellow.

England discussing penalties.

And Guillermo Ochoa suddenly pretending to be the greatest goalkeeper on Earth.

The veteran Mexican keeper has built one of the most remarkable World Cup reputations of any player in modern soccer. No matter what happens during club seasons, World Cups seem to unlock a different version of Ochoa. And he's back.

Now the question is whether he can once again find himself in Mexico's plans.

If you've followed World Cups for the last two decades, you already know why fans are fascinated by the possibility.

Our Paul had a look at the chances of him being part of the tournament opener.

All 48 rosters for World Cup 2026: national teams, players, groups, opponents...

How many players are at the 2026 World Cup? It's a question that has been doing the round and the answer aids Donald Trump's continued claim about this being the “biggest ever”.

Well, he's right to say that. When you increase the number of teams involved from 32 to 48, the facts are clear. There are 1,248 players represented across those nations... assuming he doesn't deport anyone else!

48 nations await the start

As you'll have already noted, I'll be building up to the action by jumping between music and soccer. It's the perfect mix!

In case you are in any doubt about the rest of the nations involved this tournament, and their respective groups, here's a handy graphic.

Dai Dai

OK, here's a little something to get you in the mood...

2026 World Cup Opening Ceremony: Schedule, TV, artists, and how to watch the performances online

In addition to headlining the halftime show at the World Cup final – a lot is going to happen before July 19 – Shakira will take to the stage at today's opening ceremony in Mexico City.

The Colombian superstar and Burna Boy are set to perform the rather catchy “Dai Dai,” the official song of the 2026 FIFA World Cup.

Shakira and Burna Boy will be joined by several other artists at Estadio Ciudad de México for the opening celebration, which gets underway at 1:30 p.m. ET, 90 minutes before Mexico vs South Africa kicks off. 

Confirmed performers in Mexico

Alejandro Fernández

Belinda

Burna Boy

Danny Ocean

J Balvin

Lila Downs

Los Ángeles Azules

Maná

Shakira

Tyla

Why the Azteca still matters

Modern soccer has plenty of shiny new stadiums, like at Real Madrid and Tottenham. Retractable roofs. Giant video boards. Luxury suites the size of small apartments.

And then there's the Azteca.

The stadium doesn't need to tell you how important it is. Its history does that for it.

As I said, this afternoon the venue becomes the first ever to host three World Cup opening matches, adding another remarkable milestone to a stadium already overflowing with football mythology. 

Fans arriving today aren't just walking into a sporting venue. They're walking into one of the most important locations in soccer history.

The altitude adds another layer to the challenge. At roughly 7,200 feet above sea level, visiting teams quickly discover that breathing can become an unexpected opponent. Mexico knows these conditions well. South Africa has spent extra time preparing for them. Even so, preparation and reality don't always have the same opinion. 

The Azteca has a habit of making ordinary games feel historic. The opening game of a World Cup barely needs the help.

The greatest show on Earth

You may have heard that line at your passing circus but don't be believing that shouty man with the hat and tights. This is the GOAT of sporting shows!

For the next few hours, and then for the next month, soccer will take over the planet. Office productivity will not so mysteriously decline. Sleep schedules will be sacrificed. People who haven't watched a game since the last World Cup will suddenly become experts on pressing systems and midfield triangles. It happens every four years, and honestly, I think it's part of the charm.

Today it all begins in Mexico City, where the legendary Estadio Azteca becomes the first stadium in history to host matches in three different World Cups. Pelé played here. Maradona played here. Countless soccer dreams have either been born or shattered here. Today, another chapter gets added to the story. 

The opening match sees Mexico face South Africa, a fixture that carries a strange sense of déjà vu. The last time these two nations met at a World Cup, it was also the opening game of the tournament. That was Johannesburg in 2010. Sixteen years later, they're doing it all over again, only now the stage belongs to Mexico. 

Before the soccer comes the spectacle. Before the tactics, the nerves and the drama comes the music, the colour and the noise. This is World Cup opening day, and subtlety was never invited.

World Cup 2026 opening ceremony: welcome

Hello and welcome to AS USA's World Cup 2026 live blog where I'll be taking you from now right the way through to the opening ceremony, before handing you over to my colleagues ahead of the first whistle of the tournament.

Picture this: Shakira's voice echoing through Azteca, Burna Boy's beats setting hearts racing, and 87,000 fans ready to write history. Mexico vs South Africa is the headline, but this is your front-row seat to every note, every kick, and every story.

Buckle up – this isn’t just a musical show and a game; it’s the start of the month we’ve all been waiting for!

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