LONDON. A group of British researchers has formally requested an official review of the widely cited record for the largest Mexican wave at a sporting event. The challenge, led by Dr. Alistair Finch of the University of Oxford’s Institute for Social Dynamics, centres on methodological inconsistencies in the original measurement from the 2018 World Cup match in Moscow.
The record, currently held by a stadium crowd in Russia, was certified by Guinness World Records based on video analysis and witness statements. However, Dr. Finch’s team argues that the wave’s propagation speed and amplitude deviate from known crowd dynamics models. Their paper, published in the Journal of Sports Analytics, suggests the wave may have been artificially augmented by pre-planned sections of the crowd, a practice known as “wave farming.”
“A genuine Mexican wave arises spontaneously from a localised group and propagates outward with consistent velocity,” Dr. Finch said. “Our analysis of the broadcast footage shows anomalies: the wave’s cycle time was remarkably uniform across all sectors, and its amplitude did not decay as expected over distance. This is statistically improbable for an uncoordinated crowd.”
The researchers used frame-by-frame analysis and crowd density mapping to estimate that the wave involved approximately 78,000 participants, falling short of the claimed 82,000. They also note that the official count included individuals who may have been responding to the wave’s visual stimulus rather than actively participating, inflating the figure.
Guinness World Records has responded cautiously, stating that it is “reviewing the evidence” and will issue a statement in due course. The Russian Football Union declined to comment, referring inquiries to the event’s organising committee, which has not yet responded.
The challenge has implications beyond trivia. “Crowd behaviour is a serious field of study,” Dr. Finch said. “Accurate records help us model evacuation dynamics, protest movements, and even market sentiment. If this record is flawed, it misrepresents our understanding of collective human action.”
The British researchers have called for an independent panel, including experts from the European Crowd Science Network, to verify the record. If upheld, the current record stands. If overturned, the new record would likely fall to a stadium in Mexico City for a 2016 football match, with an estimated 75,000 participants.
As of this report, no official verification has been scheduled.








