Following Canadaâs 3-0 home loss to Mexico on Friday night, some Canadians are terrified about what awaits the team at Estadio Azteca in Tuesday nightâs rematch (10:30 pm ET, TSN/RDS in Canada, FS1 in US).
Tesho Akindele is not one of those Canadians.
âWe control our own destiny,â Akindele told MLSsoccer.com by phone from Mexico City on Monday. âThatâs the mentality. Everybodyâs saying, âLook, weâre in a great spot, we have one of the best teams that Canada Soccer has ever had, and weâre pretty confident right now.â
Such talk seems incongruent with much of the lore about what visiting teams face at the Azteca â playing at altitude in front of upwards of 100,000 rabid Mexican fans. But in his first trip to Mexico as part of the Canadian team, Akindele so far only has positive things to say.
âWeâre staying at a great hotel, foodâs been great, there was a bunch of press at the airport taking pictures of us,â the FC Dallas man said. âEven a bunch of regular people at the airport wanted pictures. Thereâs been absolutely no problems here.â
Of course, taking selfies at the airport with Mexican fans is one thing (Akindele estimates he took five of them), but playing in front of them at the Azteca is another. The Canadian players have been doing special breathing exercises with the teamâs medical staff to help prepare for playing at an elevation of over 7,000 feet; otherwise, Akindele says heâs trying to treat it like any other game.
âPeople have told me itâs an intimidating atmosphere with the stadium and the fans, but Iâm not going to be sitting here worrying, worst-case scenario, how intimidating it might be,â he said. âWeâll see, when the time comes; I think weâll all be able to deal with it.â
But even if Canada can deal with the altitude and the home crowd, thereâs still the matter of El Tri, who asserted themselves in Fridayâs lopsided victory at Vancouverâs BC Place. Akindele suspects his team will play more conservatively on Tuesday, after attempting to go âtoe-to-toeâ with Mexico last time.
âWe need to bend, not break, because weâre going to have to absorb some pressure,â he said. âThey might have the edge in possession and the edge in chances, but we need to be able to absorb that, and then when we do get our chances â âcause I guarantee, weâre going to get a couple of chances â we just need to finish them.â
A lack of finishing hurt Canada on Friday, when both Junior Hoilett and Cyle Larin squandered excellent scoring opportunities in the early going. But Akindele, a fellow attack-minded player, believes his teammates will be able to fully shrug those off.
âWeâve all scored a lot of goals and weâve all missed a lot of chances [in our careers],â he said. âAt this point, we understand itâs just part of the game.â
Whether Canadaâs revised approach can earn them an unlikely result at the Azteca remains to be seen. But for fans worrying that a loss would doom Canadaâs hopes of advancing to the Hexagonal stage, Akindele is preaching a message of calm.
âNo matter what happens in this game, our destiny is still in our hands,â he said. âWeâre obviously coming out with the mindset that we need to get a result, but no matter what happens, we still hold the cards in our hands. We can still get to the Hex.â




