In BriefThis World Cup will feature a pre-match ritual the FIFA boss has described as a "moment of unity".The tournament will be played over 104 matches, the most ever in a World Cup.This year's edition of the FIFA World Cup is promising to be bigger than ever, in terms of the number of teams, matches, hosts and the spectacle at the matches themselves.On Matchday 1, co-hosts Mexico will play South Africa for the first match of the tournament in Mexico City on 11 June local time, which will be 5 am on Friday June 12 for Australian viewers on the East Coast.Mexico, Canada and the United States will co-host the World Cup with 104 matches being held across 16 cities.Colombian singer-songwriter Shakira, who opened and closed the 2010 World Cup in South Africa with the official anthem Waka Waka, will return to the World Cup stage in collaboration with Nigerian songwriter Burna Boy for the opening ceremony prior to the Mexico match.The duo will perform the anthem for this year, Dai Dai, which means "let's go" in Italian, somewhat of an irony because the Italian did not qualify.News that makes senseYour trusted source for staying up-to-date with the world around you. Get free daily news updates and analysis, straight to your inbox.The 90-minute opening ceremony, which will be held at Mexico City Stadium, also features Alejandro Fernández, Belinda, Danny Ocean, Ja Balvin and others.Match 1 will be followed by South Korea v Czechia in Guadalajara at midday AEST.Standing in a circleThe tournament will feature an expanded 48-team field for the first time in its history, making it the biggest World Cup ever staged.While there will be traditional pre-match rituals such as handshakes, team photos of the starting line-ups and the coin toss, the World Cup this year will feature a key difference before games.All the FIFA World Cup 2026 coverage on our World Cup pageHow to watch the FIFA World Cup 2026 on SBSWatch all 104 matches of the FIFA World Cup 2026 at our On Demand hubInstead of the 11 players of the starting team and the refereeing team lining up near the sideline for the national anthems, every player of each team's 26-man squad plus the referees will line the centre circle for the anthems. "Having all players and referees face each other in the centre circle during the national anthems will create a moment of unity, pride and emotion that truly belongs to the teams and to everyone in the stadium," FIFA President Gianni Infantino said."The FIFA World Cup is about every player and every fan, and this new pre-match ceremony reflects that."But for some human rights advocates, the concept of unity sits at odds with the US' immigration crackdown. This week, the US barred a FIFA referee from Somalia from entering the country to officiate in the tournament.Since US President Donald Trump started his second term in January, his administration has operated a wide-ranging immigration crackdown, with authorities seeking to deport migrants without legal status in the country."Our call to the US government and FIFA is that while these games are happening, there should be a halt on arbitrary arrests [by the] ICE [United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement] agency," campaigner for Amnesty International Australia Zaki Haidari said. "People should have the right of feeling free and feeling protected while they participate in these games."Hows to watch the FIFA World CupSBS is broadcasting every match live and on demand. The opening matches on Friday 12 June are: * Mexico v South Africa, 5am AEST * South Korea v Czechia, 12pm AESTYou can watch all 104 matches of the FIFA World Cup 2026™ live, free and exclusive on SBS, SBS VICELAND and SBS On Demand.FIFA World Cup 2026™ at SBS On Demand: get match ready.For the latest from SBS News, download our app and subscribe to our newsletter.
Shakira, a new ritual and the biggest-ever tournament: What's coming on World Cup day one
The first match of the largest World Cup in history will be Mexico v South Africa.










