
This Summer, Four Teams Enter. Watch Group A Like It's a Reality TV Season Premiere.
Mexico owns the house. South Africa's been gone 16 years. South Korea's captain says this is his last one. Czech Republic lost to the Faroe Islands and somehow got here anyway. Group A is the season premiere nobody asked for but everybody's watching. #MatchRewritten

This summer. Four teams enter. Two come out. The rest... go home.
Welcome to Group A. The season premiere of a show nobody asked for but everybody's watching.
Meet the cast
MEXICO — The conflicted host
He owns the house. He planned the party for years. He has a 83,000-seat stadium in Mexico City that has hosted more iconic moments than your entire extended family combined. 1 And yet — every time the cameras really matter, he chokes in the round of 16. Seven consecutive times. Like clockwork. 2
This season, Mexico is playing on home turf, screaming fans in Azteca, the literal opening match of the entire tournament on June 11. The pressure is so thick you could cut it with a VAR monitor. El Tri is either about to break the curse in front of the biggest crowd on earth — or have the most emotionally devastating group stage exit in their own backyard.
The show loves him. The audience wants to root for him. He just cannot get out of his own way.
SOUTH AFRICA — The unexpected comeback story
She was here in 2010. She was the host, the darling, Shakira was singing about her. The whole world knew her name. Then she disappeared for 16 years.
Bafana Bafana — "The Boys, The Boys" — is back at a World Cup for the first time since hosting in 2010, their first successful qualifying campaign since 2002. 3 They arrived ranked 61st in the world. In three previous World Cup appearances — 1998, 2002, 2010 — they have never once made it past the group stage.

Their coach, Belgian Hugo Broos, has announced this will be his last tournament before retiring. A man who played in the 1986 World Cup himself, who took this team to third place at the 2023 Africa Cup of Nations — their best continental finish in 23 years — coaching his final act on the biggest stage. 3
The opening match is Mexico vs South Africa. On June 11, in front of 83,000 people in Mexico City.
She walked into the season finale party of someone else's show and immediately became the most interesting person in the room.
SOUTH KOREA — The veteran who refuses to leave
He has been here 11 consecutive times. Eleven. In a row. He's been to every single World Cup since 1986. He knows the system. He reads defenses before they form. His captain — Son Heung-min, who moved to Los Angeles in 2025 and led qualifying with 10 goals — has said this will be his final World Cup. 4
Son is doing the thing where you announce retirement and everybody cries and you have to produce or it becomes the story that consumes everything.
Their coach, Hong Myung-Bo, was the heroic captain of the 2002 team that finished fourth on home soil — and then was the coach of the 2014 team that finished with zero wins in Brazil and resigned in disgrace. 4 He came back for a second act.
This cast member has seen everything, been everywhere, and the writers clearly set up a redemption arc nobody knows how to end.

CZECH REPUBLIC — The one who wasn't even supposed to be here
First time back at a World Cup in 20 years. 5 And they almost didn't make it.
During qualifying, they lost to the Faroe Islands. The Faroe Islands. Population: 55,000 people. Their coach was fired. 6 Then their replacement, 74-year-old Miroslav Koubek — who spent decades coaching in the lower Czech leagues while also working as an insurance broker — came in and somehow won two consecutive penalty shootouts in the playoffs. First Ireland. Then Denmark. 6

Their captain, Ladislav Krejci (Wolverhampton), scored in both playoff matches. Their star, Patrik Schick (Bayer Leverkusen), put up 16 Bundesliga goals this season. Their midfielder Tomas Soucek was stripped of the captaincy because the team didn't thank the fans after a 6-0 win. 6 The Faroe Islands loss set off a chain of events so chaotic, so soap-opera, that it almost writes itself.
They are playing two group games in Mexico at altitude — roughly 2,000 meters above sea level — while based in Dallas. Their coach has a tattoo he got when he won the Czech title. He was an insurance broker.
This is the cast member you wrote off in episode one who somehow keeps surviving eliminations.
The fixtures at a glance
| Date | Match | Venue |
|---|---|---|
| June 11 | Mexico vs South Africa | Estadio Azteca, Mexico City |
| June 11 | South Korea vs Czech Republic | Estadio Guadalajara |
| June 18 | Mexico vs South Korea | Estadio Guadalajara |
| June 18 | Czech Republic vs South Africa | Mercedes-Benz Stadium, Atlanta |
| June 24 | Czech Republic vs Mexico | Estadio Azteca, Mexico City |
| June 24 | South Africa vs South Korea | Estadio Monterrey |
The dynamics nobody is talking about (but should be)
The group's hidden tension isn't just about who advances. It's about the pecking order — and how three teams have genuine reason to believe they can nick second place.
South Korea is ranked 22nd globally, easily the strongest team on paper after Mexico. 4 They open against Czech Republic on June 11 in Guadalajara — a match where both teams desperately want a fast start before facing Mexico. If Czech Republic pulls something in that opener (they have won penalty shootouts against tougher opponents), the group unravels immediately.
South Africa vs Czech Republic (June 18 in Atlanta) is the "underdogs staring each other down in the parking lot" match. Whoever wins that one is genuinely in the conversation for second place. 1
And then there's the closing matchday drama: Czech Republic vs Mexico in Mexico City, and South Africa vs South Korea simultaneously. Both pairs of teams playing their final group game knowing exactly what they need. If Mexico is already through, El Tri fans get to enjoy the party. If not, Estadio Azteca becomes the most anxious building on the planet.
The rivalries, assembled for your convenience
| Mexico | South Africa | South Korea | Czech Republic | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| vs Mexico | — | Opening match: can Bafana break the curse too? | Mexico will want to finally advance here | Must not lose in the Azteca on MD3 |
| vs South Africa | Favorite, but the pressure | — | The match that really decides 3rd place | The actual elimination fight |
| vs South Korea | Group favorite vs the most experienced | Underdog, Son in final WC | — | Survival game from day one |
| vs Czech Republic | Final group game at home | Legitimate knockout match | MD1 tone-setter: who starts fast? | — |
How it ends (probably)
Mexico gets out. They play the entire group on home soil and in stadiums with roaring crowds. The emotional gravity of the tournament is built around them making it — and they're better than South Africa and Czech Republic on paper.
South Korea is most likely to take second. Son's farewell tour has narrative energy. The squad has experienced Europe-based players and a coach who wants his redemption story. 22nd in the world is not an accident.
But the real question nobody is asking: what if South Africa beats Mexico on June 11 to open the tournament?
What if Bafana Bafana — 16-year absences, ranked 61st, with a retiring Belgian coach and players mostly from South African club football — stuns the host nation in the very first match of the entire 2026 World Cup?
The show would never be the same. 1
New episodes June 11. Only on Earth. #MatchRewritten
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