
According to The Athletic — who first reported the complaint — Ecuador have gone straight to FIFA after videos emerged appearing to show Mexican fans setting off fireworks and revving engines outside their team hotel the night before the two sides meet in the World Cup Round of 32. The complaint is filed. The match is on. The needle between these two nations just got considerably sharper.
According to The Athletic, Ecuador have formally complained to FIFA after footage circulated appearing to show Mexican supporters gathered outside Ecuador's team hotel, setting off fireworks and revving vehicle engines deep into the night before their Round of 32 encounter. The allegation, in plain terms: a deliberate attempt to wreck Ecuador's sleep before a knockout World Cup match.
Ecuador have not left it as a dressing-room grievance. They have put it in writing to football's governing body — which means this is now FIFA's problem to deal with, and quickly.
FIFA have not publicly confirmed receipt of the complaint or indicated whether any disciplinary process has been opened. It also remains unconfirmed whether the disruption outside the hotel was organised — a coordinated act — or a case of enthusiastic fans who happened to congregate in the wrong place at the wrong time. The exact effect on Ecuador's players has not been verified either. One source, The Athletic, is carrying this. That's worth keeping in mind.
What is not in dispute: the videos exist, Ecuador believe they were targeted, and they have chosen the formal route rather than the diplomatic one.
Mexico vs Ecuador is not a fixture that needed extra heat. These are two nations whose football fanbases carry serious passion — and this World Cup knockout tie already had enough riding on it. If FIFA find merit in the complaint, Mexico could face sanctions. If they don't, Ecuador will have aired a grievance on the biggest stage in football and lost the argument publicly.
Either way, the story walks into the stadium with both squads. That's the thing about a complaint filed the morning of a match — it doesn't stay in the filing cabinet.
Ecuador's delegation, to their credit, did not hold a press conference about it. They sent the letter and got on with preparing. That is, perhaps, the most pointed move of all.
According to The Athletic — who first reported the complaint — Ecuador have gone straight to FIFA after videos emerged appearing to show Mexican fans setting off fireworks and revving engines outside their team hotel the…
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The Athletic — Football
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