Frustrated fans react to sold-out Fanki tickets for Mexico vs. Portugal amid website glitches and irregularity suspicions.
Frustrated fans react to sold-out Fanki tickets for Mexico vs. Portugal amid website glitches and irregularity suspicions.
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Fanki Ticket Sales for Mexico vs. Portugal Sell Out Amid Glitches and Irregularity Suspicions

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Following the initial pre-sale suspension due to technical failures, Fanki's ticket sales for the March 2026 Mexico vs. Portugal friendly resumed and sold out rapidly, fueling fan frustration and calls for investigation into potential irregularities.

The ticket sales saga for the Mexico vs. Portugal friendly on March 28, 2026, at the renovated Estadio Banorte in Mexico City—a key World Cup prep event—continued with more chaos on Fanki's platform. After suspending the Banorte cardholder pre-sale on December 10 due to server overloads and 'fake queues' (as previously reported), Fanki resumed it on December 11. It sold out in under two hours amid persistent issues: virtual queues that stalled or regressed, 503 errors, and loading failures. Some fans managed purchases around 9:30 a.m.

General sales launched December 13 at 9:00 a.m. and exhausted in just over three hours, despite over 1 million attempts. Fans noted discrepancies, like queues indicating available tickets suddenly showing 'sold out.' Tickets quickly surfaced on resale sites at markups, prompting demands for Profeco scrutiny.

Fanki, a Colombian firm operating via the recently established Bitsports México (linked to Bitsports Digital LCC, with no clear public registration in Mexico or the U.S.), holds the exclusive concession from Femexfut. Partners include Alejandro Irarragorri of Grupo Orlegi (Santos and Atlas owner, recently probed for tax issues). Prices spanned 500 to 9,000 pesos for digital QR tickets. Fanki cited 'record demand' but faces online backlash, memes, and complaints; they direct queries to social media.

Hva folk sier

Fans on X report intense frustration with Fanki's technical failures, endless virtual queues, and rapid sell-out of Mexico vs. Portugal tickets, raising suspicions of irregularities and reseller advantages. Profeco demands transparency from the platform. Some express excitement over the sold-out event featuring Cristiano Ronaldo despite the chaos.

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News illustration of Mexico-Portugal 0-0 draw at reopened Estadio Banorte, featuring fan tragedy, protests, and crowd issues.
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Mexico 0-0 Portugal in goalless Estadio Banorte reopening match marred by fan death

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Mexico held Portugal to a 0-0 draw in the March 28 friendly that reopened the remodeled Estadio Banorte (formerly Azteca), testing upgrades for its five 2026 World Cup matches, including the opener. As previewed in prior coverage of preparations and Cristiano Ronaldo's absence, the event saw a 27-year-old fan's fatal fall from a suite, nearby protests over missing persons, homophobic chants, and operational issues like digital entry delays.

The March 28 friendly between Mexico and Portugal marked the reopening of Estadio Banorte (formerly Azteca) after a $300 million remodel for the 2026 World Cup. Cristiano Ronaldo missed the match due to injury but soon resumed training, sparking online memes. The event drew protests, extended public transport, and featured a cashless payment system.

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Following confirmation despite earlier security concerns, Mexico faces Portugal in a World Cup 2026 preparation friendly on Saturday, March 28, at 7:00 p.m. central Mexico time at Banorte Stadium (formerly Azteca) in Mexico City. The match marks the venue's reopening, highlighting Mexico's newcomers like Álvaro Fidalgo and returnee Guillermo Ochoa, while Portugal arrives without injured Cristiano Ronaldo.

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