The Azteca Stadium, that concrete cauldron of sporting passion, is once again in the news. Not for a Diego Maradona goal or a wave of sombreros, but for something far more mundane: security upgrades. And who has come to praise them? British engineers. The very men who gave us the Victorian sewer system and the safety regulations that make our football grounds feel like a nursing home. One can almost hear the ghost of Edward Gibbon tutting from his sarcophagus.
Let us set the scene. Mexico City, 2023. The Azteca, a relic of the 1968 Olympics and the 1970 and 1986 World Cups, is being retrofitted for 2026. The world's pundits, those eternal Cassandras, wring their hands about cartels, earthquakes, and altitude. Enter the British engineers, with their hard hats and risk assessments, declaring the upgrades ‘world-class’. One wonders if they have forgotten the fall of Tenochtitlan.
But I digress. The real story here is not the turnstiles or the CCTV. It is the desperate attempt to impose order on chaos. The Azteca is a monument to a nation that has always danced with the abyss. It sits in a city built on a drained lake, prone to sinking, a metaphor for Mexico itself. And now we are told that British know-how will make it safe for the hordes of global football tourism. How quaint.
Compare this to Rome, where the Colosseum hosted spectacles of violence for a populace that was daily fed bread and circuses. The Azteca has hosted its own gladiators: Maradona's ‘Hand of God’, the giant screens flashing ‘JUSTICE’ after the 1985 earthquake. But now we seek to sanitise it. To make it a gladiator arena without the blood. A theme park.
Why is this important? Because we live in an age of decadence. We obsess over safety while our societies crumble. The British engineers are the new Roman architects, building walls to keep out the barbarians. But the barbarians are inside the gates. They are the cartels, the poverty, the inequality. They are the very people who will pour into this stadium, screaming for a goal, escaping a reality that no turnstile can filter.
And what of national identity? Mexico is a country that wears its danger like a badge of honour. Its music, its food, its art all draw from a well of suffering and resilience. To coat the Azteca in antiseptic British security is to neuter a part of the soul. A bit like turning the ruins of Pompeii into a shopping centre.
But let us be fair. The engineers are doing their job. They are implementing measures to prevent a disaster. Perhaps I am being too harsh. Perhaps the modern world requires this. After all, we no longer burn heretics at the stake. We fine them for not wearing seatbelts. Progress, they call it.
In the end, the Azteca will host the World Cup. The matches will be safe. British engineers will go home with swollen bank accounts and polite references. And Mexico will continue to be Mexico: glorious, messy, and utterly beyond the control of any clipboard.
But do not mistake my cynicism for defeat. I merely point out the irony. The Azteca was built by men who did not need British engineers to tell them how to move stone. It has survived earthquakes, riots, and the occasional volcanic eruption of emotion. It will survive the World Cup. The question is: will we survive our own obsession with safety?









