The Azteca Stadium looms. A concrete colossus, scarred by decades of footballing history. But the chatter in the corridors isn't about tactics or ticket sales.
It's about security. The British team is here. They are not cheering.
They are mapping exits, checking comms, running drills. I have eyes on the ground. The atmosphere is tense.
Not from the fans, they haven't arrived yet. This is institutional tension. The Home Office has a strong presence.
MI5 too, I am told. They are working with Mexican federales, sharing intelligence on threat streams. Is this a dry run for a potential UK bid?
Or is there a specific threat? Neither side will say. But the body language speaks volumes.
One British security source mutters: "It's not the game we're worried about. It's the spaces around it."
They fear a soft target attack. A bombing outside the turnstiles, a vehicle ramming a crowd. The Mexicans are implementing a layered cordon.
Armed police, snipers, drone jammers. But the British team is watching for weaknesses. They are testing response times.
They have already flagged a gap in the CCTV coverage near the metro exit. The local organisers are taking notes. The political backdrop matters.
Mexico wants to show it can host safely. Britain wants to be seen as a reliable security partner. Downing Street is watching this closely.
A successful deployment could strengthen the case for a joint UK-Ireland World Cup bid. A failure would be a disaster for both. The clock is ticking.
The first match is days away. The British team will not relax until the final whistle. Neither will I.








