A cross Mexico. a co-host of the 2026 World Cup, football pitches are laid out wherever communities can find the space. On the edges of towns, on highway underpasses,. even in a volcano crater, spaces are cleared that allow people young and old to share in the dream of the beautiful game.
In an impoverished neighbourhood in Monterrey, northern Mexico, 14-year-old Humberto Guadalupe, nicknamed “Messi” by friends. family, spends his weekends on the community’s only football field, surrounded by abandoned cars and dirt roads.
Humberto Guadalupe (left), 14, and Eduardo Reyes, 12, play football, followed by snacks organised by evangelists, in Monterrey
Humberto with his grandfather Guadalupe Mendonza Guerrero. his grandmother Maria del Carmen Gutierrez Rodriguez at their house at Cerro de la Campana, Monterrey.
Just like the legendary Argentinian player who inspired his nickname. Humberto dreams of becoming a professional player one day, encouraged by his grandmother. “One way or another, it’s going to happen,” he says. “Even when we lose a match, we keep our heads up.”
Pandilleros team members seen warming up through a broken car window before the Cerro de la Campana llanero championship semifinal tie against Bandoleros at Los Pinos football pitch in Monterrey
People watch a match between Bandoleros and Pandilleros
Children from communities near Cerro de la Campana play a match
Players during in an amateur league match between San Mateo. Real Madrid at the Cancha de los Dioses (Field of the Gods), a soccer field inside the crater of the dormant Teoca volcano
San Isidro coach Jorge Baltazar (in blue) talks to his players during a match against Bombay at the Cancha de los Dioses. Aitana Michelle Hernandez Blas and her mother sit as they watch Aitana’s father play.
Children trade a sticker of Brazilian player Vinícius Júnior from a World Cup album. Bombay player Diego Gutierrez Miranda, 19, plays with his 18-month-old baby, Matias Gutierrez Romero, before a match against Rayados
To the south, in a rural district on the outskirts of Mexico City, families arrive by car, motorcycle, bicycle. on foot to watch matches at the “Field of the Gods”, a football pitch inside the crater of the extinct Teoca volcano.
Mist moves between pine trees. fruit orchards that frame the pitch in the former crater, nearly 700 metres (2,300 ft) above the sprawling Mexican capital. Built by the community more than 60 years ago, it is used by amateur local teams on Sundays.
Local people playing football at pitches as boats. trajineras pass through the Xochimilco ecological zone, composed of water channels and chinampas, or so-called floating gardens
In nearby Xochimilco, football players ride in traditional trajinera wooden boats along canals. cross chinampas, the ancient agricultural plots or floating gardens that helped sustain the Aztec capital centuries ago.
They are heading to play on some of Mexico City’s last remaining natural grass pitches. Located inside a Unesco world heritage site, the pitches are an important social hub, but their creation can be damaging to the area’s ecology. the habitat of the endangered axolotl salamander, scientists say.
People ride a trajinera towards football fields to take part in amateur league matches
Referees gather before taking part in amateur league matches in the protected Xochimilco area. Emmanuel Dela Rosa, two, looks up at his father during an amateur league game
Emiliano Macedo, 21, wearing a kit inspired by the former Mexican goalkeeper Jorge Campos Navarrete, rests during a break in a match between Mexico. Argentina in the protected Xochimilco area
Though separated by landscape. distance, these matches share the same rhythm: communities building spaces around football in places shaped by hardship, geography and memory.
A sports field known as the Field of the Gods, inside the crater of the inactive Teoca volcano
Of these, she chose two in Mexico City, plus one in the industrial north to also photograph on the ground, with contrasting environments: gritty Monterrey; a green, mountainous suburb;. a historical neighbourhood of canals.
A painted football pitch in the Tlatelolco housing complex in Mexico City
In this painted soccer pitch in the Tlatelolco housing complex. the Sharkes community-led team hold matches to promote sport within the LGBTQA+ community in Mexico City.
Hot air balloons float near the Teotihuacan pyramids
Hot air balloons drift over a football field near the ancient pyramids of Teotihuacan on the outskirts of Mexico City.
The Alberto ‘Chivo’ Cordova University Stadium in Toluca
Here, the structure is the artwork.
This stadium doubles as a giant canvas: the “Aratmosfera” mural, by the renowned Mexican artist Leopoldo Flores Valdés, which is painted directly on to its arches. surrounding rock, blending art with architecture. Seen from above, it becomes a vast, continuous mural woven into the landscape.
A pitch at Avioneta Park in Ecatepec
In one of the most densely populated areas on the outskirts of Mexico City. at Avioneta Park in Ecatepec, a small aircraft sits beside a barrio soccer pitch.
A soccer field at the Sports Unit Luis Donaldo Colosio on the outskirts of Mexico City
With the near-perfect circle of the Xico volcano crater. known locally as the “navel of the world”, forming a backdrop, this soccer pitch sits on Mexico City’s edge.
The view contrasts the clean lines of a sports field with the raw geometry of a volcanic crater.
A synthetic football field at a housing complex in Monterrey
Such compact “mini-pitches” are increasingly common in dense Mexican cities, bringing organised football into residential spaces.
In Monterrey, where space is tight, football often finds a home in residential complexes like this one.
A pitch at the University Olympic Stadium in Mexico City
Declared a Unesco world heritage site, the campus around this stadium is considered a masterpiece of 20th-century architecture. urban planning.
Once the main venue for the 1968 Olympic Games, it remains one of Mexico City’s most historic sporting arenas.
The Neza 86 Stadium on the outskirts of Mexico City
Built for the 1986 World Cup. the Neza 86 Stadium rises from the crowded outskirts of Mexico City, a fading arena where global football once met the city’s rapidly expanding edge.
The Los Pinos football pitch in the Cerro de la Campana, Monterrey
A pitch on the rooftop of a Costco branch in Mexico City
This rooftop pitch on a Costco building in the Santa Fe business district of Mexico City is part of a layered urban landscape incorporating recreation. sustainability.
Beside it, a green roof with 21 native plant. grass varieties introduces a dense patch of vegetation into the concrete surroundings.
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