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Homophobic chant surfaces again in Mexico stadiums as issue looms for World Cup

By CARLOS RODRIGUEZYahoo Sports

MEXICO CITY (AP) — After a few months in which it was heard only sporadically at local tournaments across Mexico, a homophobic chant has resurfaced strongly in recent weeks in what could be a prelude to what will happen at the 2026 World Cup . The slur has been an unwelcome feature at matches involving Mexico and its fervent fans for two decades, though it is not limited to El Tri. It has drawn widespread condemnation and sanctions, and punishments by FIFA could very well be levied during the World Cup, which would be an embarrassment to co-host Mexico.

FIFA has partnered with the Fare Network to send observers to all World Cup games to listen for discrimination in chants and banners across all countries and cultures. Soccer’s governing bodies have struggled for decades to eliminate racial abuse despite heavy fines, stadium closures, points deductions, halted matches and bans for both fans and players who break the rules. European and Latin American nations have been repeatedly fined and Mexico currently has appeals against FIFA punishment over a 2024 match against the U.

S. pending before the Court of Arbitration for Sport. The chant, a one-word slur that literally means male prostitute in Spanish, usually occurs when the opposing goalkeeper takes a goal kick.

It went viral in the 2014 World Cup in Brazil and was heard again in Russia during the 2018 World Cup and four years later in Qatar. Stopping the chant has proven hard for Mexico Initially, Mexican soccer federation officials argued that the chant wasn’t aimed at gay people and that the word had different connotations in Mexican culture, but prior to the 2018 World Cup launched social media campaigns that did not succeed. In Russia, the chant was heard during a match against Germany and Mexico was penalized by FIFA: For the first time in its history, El Tri played World Cup qualifying matches behind closed doors at Azteca stadium in Mexico City.

Despite the punishments, Mexico fans yelled the slur again at Qatar 2022 during matches against Poland and Saudi Arabia. “Sustained efforts have been made for years to eradicate this type of expression, with awareness campaigns and measures in stadiums, and while there has been progress, we are aware that isolated incidents still persist,” Mexican Federation President Ivar Sisniega told The Associated Press. The federation and the Liga MX, Mexico's top league, have simply asked fans before matches not to do it.

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