Ecuador’s national team arrived at their Mexico City hotel at 8:20 p.m. on June 29, more than three hours later than planned, after a nine-hour slog from Columbus, Ohio. The team is set to face Mexico in a round-of-32 World Cup match at the Estadio Azteca on June 30, and the travel disruptions have sparked a formal complaint from Ecuador’s football federation.
What happened on the ground
The original plan was straightforward: fly from Columbus to Mexico City, check in by 5 p.m., get a full night’s rest, and prepare for one of the most hostile venues in world football. Instead, flight issues and a prolonged airport transfer turned a routine trip into an ordeal.
Coach Sebastián Beccacece publicly downplayed the fatigue factor, framing the situation as just another challenge in tournament football. But his comments also pointedly referenced the difficulties of playing at altitude. The Estadio Azteca sits roughly 7,200 feet above sea level, a factor that has historically punished visiting teams who arrive without adequate acclimatization time.
The problems didn’t stop at the airport. Organized groups of Mexican supporters gathered outside Ecuador’s hotel, deploying horns and sustained noise specifically designed to disrupt the players’ sleep.












