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Mexicans chase a world record wave - but is the trend even Mexican?

June 7, 2026 International Source: BBC World

Mexicans chase a world record wave - but is the trend even Mexican?
Thousands lined the streets in Mexico City on Saturday as they attempted to set the world record for largest human wave. As Mexicans chase a world record wave - is the trend even Mexican? Mexico City attempts record-breaking wave Copyright current_year BBC. All rights reserved. The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites. Read about our approach to external linking. Copyright current_year BBC. All rights reserved. The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites. Read about our approach to external linking. Crowds of people raise their hands up in an attempt to break the Guinness World Record for the world’s largest Mexican wave Mexicans chase a world record wave - but is the trend even Mexican? People participate in an attempt to break the Guinness World Record for the world’s largest “Mexican wave” It's a tradition repeated in stadiums across the world, with crowds of spectators rising up in a rippling roar. The largest wave so far, according to Guinness World Records, was at a Nascar racing event in the American state of Tennessee in 2008, when 157,574 people joined a wave that swept around the stadium. Now, as part of the countdown to the World Cup, Mexico City is attempting to surpass that mark. The chosen location was not a stadium, but an urban setting ideal for spreading a visible, continuous wave: the emblematic Paseo de la Reforma, an iconic arterial road inspired by European boulevards. On Saturday, thousands gathered along the avenue and, after several practice runs, made their record attempt. "Mexico, Mexico!" crowds shouted as they threw their arms in the air, many dressed in the bright green jersey of the Mexican national team. Guinness officials are now analysing the effort to determine whether a new world record has been set. Thousands of people lined a major street in Mexico City on Saturday A drone view of a huge crowd of people on a street lined with trees in an urban setting, with a golden statue in the foreground The city is a fitting venue: it was here, 40 years ago, that this unique form of collective expression first captured global attention. Since then, the phenomenon has become closely associated with Mexico. But many believe George Henderson - or Krazy George - from the US deserves credit for initiating and directing the first ever wave, which is known as the Mexican wave outside North America. He believes this took place at a baseball game in California in 1981 between the Oakland Athletics and the New York Yankees. Krazy George believes the wave actually started in the US in 1981, and that he was a key part of it An elderly man with long white hair wears a red-and-white sports shirt and bashes a drum he is holding in his left hand, whilst smiling and looking up at a crowd in a sports stadium. "The Oakland A's had already lost two away games," he remembers. "In the third inning I thought about trying something no one had seen before. I found three sections and started explaining what I wanted." The first two attempts failed, but on the third try the wave went all the way around the stadium. And on the fourth, he managed to create a continuous wave. Because the game was televised, fans of other sports adopted it. But it was at the Fifa World Cup in 1986 in Mexico that it was broadcast to an enormous global audience - and so became a global phenomenon. How many people does it take to kick off a wave? The Fifa World Cup in 1986 was where the Mexican wave became internationally famous - much like the Argentinian football team that won that year The Argentinian captain, Diego Maradona, is held up on the shoulders of fans as he holds the World Cup in his hands and celebrates winning the tournament in 1986 inside a packed stadium. There are people taking pictures of him. In the background we see thousands of people in the stands and a glimpse of the football pitch. Fifteen years later, the phenomenon caught the curiosity of a scientist from the statistical and biological physics group at the Hungarian Academy of Sciences in Budapest. "The reason we became interested in stadium waves is that, apparently, people very often behave like particles," physicist Illes Farkas told the NPR network. Together with two colleagues, Tamas Vicsek and Dirk Helbing, he set out to determine the rules that produce the wave. For their research, published in the journal Nature in 2002, the team discovered that a typical human wave travels clockwise and moves at a speed of about 12 metres - or 20 seats - per second. A person whose face we cannot see wears a blue baseball cap and holds aloft a mobile phone with the words 'do the wave' on it. There is a blurry photo in the background of someone smiling. This appears to be a sports stadium full of people. How many people does it take to start a wave? In large stadiums, only 25 to 35 people. The mathematical model they built to explain this behaviour wasn't new; it was the same one used to describe the spread of a forest fire or the propagation of an electrical signal through heart tissue. The wave may be universally considered a symbol of collective euphoria - but it can also represent a loss of interest on the part of spectators. It can suggest a demand for action from the players, and a way of getting something out of the match, Chris Hunt, the author of World Cup Stories, told the BBC. "When a match drags and nothing interesting is happening on the pitch, fans feel it's a way to make the most of the money they paid for their tickets," he explained. If the match is a draw in the final minutes of a World Cup final, there will be no wave. If it's a friendly where the home team is winning emphatically, then there probably will be. An electric green banner that reads: "More on FIFA World Cup 2026" PLAN: How to follow the tournament on the BBC Swifties worldwide are looking for clues about the superstar's nuptials to American football star Travis Kelce. Final bids from cities are submitted in August with a shortlist announced in the autumn. The Duke and Duchess of Sussex share a picture of their daughter Lilibet, calling her "our dream girl". Teachers demanding higher pay have been demonstrating for several days and threaten to disrupt the tournament if their demands are not met. The gunman visited the archaeological site repeatedly and appeared to act alone. Mexico City set a Guinness record for the largest football training session as 9,500 participants filled the capital’s Zocalo square ahead of World Cup. About 8.2 million people participated in the first drill of the year, achieving an average evacuation time of 1 minute and 52 seconds. Local police said the man was not injured in the crash in Mexico City on 9 December.