Mexicans chase a world record wave - but is the trend even Mexican?
3 days agoShareSaveAdd as preferred on Google Dalia VenturaBBC News Mundo Mexico City attempts record-breaking 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 . 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. Reuters Thousands of people lined a major street in Mexico City on Saturday 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 "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. "The place was going crazy," he says. 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.
Original story by BBC Americas • View original source
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