The air above Mexico City, at an altitude of over 2,600 meters, carries a story etched not in stone, but in the vibrant green of a football pitch. This isn’t just any field; it lies cradled within the ancient, silent embrace of an extinct volcano, known to locals as El Teoca. Here, amidst the lush vegetation, a unique testament to community spirit and tradition unfolds every Sunday, as teams from various towns and neighborhoods of Xochimilco gather for a match.
A Community’s Unyielding Spirit in El Teoca
The narrative of El Teoca’s football pitch transcends its extraordinary location. It’s a tale woven through decades of communal organization, a steadfast refusal to yield control of their cherished space. Joel Becerril, a league representative, encapsulates this sentiment: “The hill is communal, the hill belongs to the town, and that’s how we like it. We want to hold a tournament, and it’s independent; we don’t ask anyone for permission.”
Becerril’s father was among those who, more than 70 years ago, transformed a cornfield into this very pitch. Neighbors, with their own hands and the raw materials of the land, erected the first goalposts from tree trunks. Since then, the community has consistently rebuffed external projects that threatened their autonomy. A recent proposal for floodlights, for instance, was rejected to protect the local fauna – rabbits, squirrels, opossums, cacomixtles, and armadillos – that call the crater home. “What we try to do is preserve it, so the fauna doesn’t leave,” Becerril emphasizes.
The World Cup’s Unintended Spotlight
This singular blend of landscape, history, and communal governance has garnered attention in the lead-up to the 2026 World Cup. Promotional activities, including a filming session with Mesoamerican ballplayers – a sport with over 3,000 years of history – have brought new eyes to El Teoca. Juan Luis Zapata, a practitioner of this pre-Hispanic discipline, notes, “We want to take advantage of all the promotion the World Cup is getting to promote the ball game.”
Many participants, like Jorge Torres, a ball game instructor from Azcapotzalco, experienced El Teoca for the first time during a visit related to a global marathon event. Torres admits, “I didn’t know there was actually a league here. It surprises me that people still follow it, visit it, and that there’s a community keeping it alive.”
While curiosity seekers are growing, the league’s administrators assert that these visits do not translate into financial benefits. The pitch’s upkeep remains the responsibility of the community, which organizes work parties and funds improvements through league resources, steadfastly avoiding commitments with external entities. “The league here is autonomous,” states the person in charge.
More Than a Game: A Sense of Belonging
For those who play weekly at El Teoca, the value of the place extends far beyond recordings or recent publicity. Emmanuel Torres, a team member for over seven years, believes the pitch embodies the communal spirit of football, a stark contrast to the perceived social divisions of the 2026 World Cup. “Here, people have a very deep sense of belonging; it’s a place of great tradition… it’s a pitch that has its mystique, it makes you feel like you belong here,” he explains.
This profound connection is passed down through generations, according to Gabriel Rosas, who has played on this pitch since childhood. “It belongs to the town, to all of us,” Rosas affirms, recalling how veteran players guided him when he first started. A tradition he now seeks to share with younger generations.
El Teoca is more than a football pitch; it is a living monument to community resilience, a vibrant heart beating within the ancient contours of a volcano, a place where the love of the game and the bond of community intertwine, creating a legacy that defies time and external pressures.
Source: https://es-us.noticias.yahoo.com/deportes/cancha-f%C3%BAtbol-resiste-antiguo-volc%C3%A1n-204100248.html