The FIFA World Cup 2026 is officially underway, and if the opening matches were fireworks, Mexico just lit the fuse with a full-on lucha libre explosion.
While other host cities are busy with polite chants and neatly organized fan zones, Mexico City turned the streets into a living, breathing wrestling ring, complete with masks, flags, and one fearless fan who decided the best way to celebrate was a high-flying dive straight into chaos.
FIFA World Cup 2026: Funny Video as South Korean Woman Slams Three Mexicans on Street
It started innocently enough for Mexico standards. After El Tri's solid 2-0 opening win over South Africa, fans spilled onto Paseo de la Reforma in a sea of green jerseys, waving massive tricolores and turning the boulevard into one giant party. Then three legends in iconic luchador masks, think El Santo and Dr.
Wagner Jr., the real OGs of Mexican wrestling, not the usual Rey Mysterio mix-up, decided to stage an impromptu match right in the middle of the road.
You know, just normal World Cup stuff: grown men in shiny masks play-wrestling on asphalt while hundreds cheer like it's the main event at Arena Mexico.
Enter a woman in a black crop top who took one look at the pile of luchadores and said, "Hold my cerveza. She sprinted in like a pro, launched herself airborne, and landed smack in the middle of the human heap with perfect commitment.
Meksika’da Rey Mysterio kostümüyle güreş yapan 3 adamın gören Güney Koreli bir kadın, dayanamayarak adamların üzerine böyle atladı 🤣🤣🤣
Dünya Kupasının en eğlenceli ülkesi açık ara farkla Meksika! 🇲🇽 pic.twitter.com/CvF0vRUtKM
- Serkan Tanyildizi (@srkntnyldz) June 13, 2026
One viral clip later, and the internet collectively declared Mexico the undisputed champion of "most fun country at the tournament.
This isn't just a funny video, it's peak Mexican World Cup energy. While other nations might celebrate with fireworks or group hugs, Mexico blends fútbol, lucha libre, and pure alegrÍa into one glorious, slightly dangerous spectacle. No one got hurt (thankfully), a sombrero even made a cameo on the ground like a discarded championship belt, and the whole thing felt like a love letter to Mexico's unbeatable party spirit.
As the tournament heats up, with Mexico facing South Korea, expect more of this. Street parties. Masked madness. Random citizens turning into instant legends.









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