The Azteca Stadium has witnessed some of the biggest moments in World Cup history and it's in this imposing arena the All Whites hope they can keep their World Cup dreams alive.
Estadio Azteca was built in 1966 in time for the 1968 Olympics. It hosted Pele's last international in 1970, a brilliant performance when Brazil beat Italy 4-1 in the World Cup final, and saw Diego Maradona at his best and worst when he scored twice (one was the Hand of God goal, the other voted Goal of the Century by Fifa) against England in 1986.
When filled to its capacity of 105,000, it is a bubbling cauldron of noise, colour and smog. It's steeply banked seats are imposing and, sitting at 2200m, it's a lung-bursting experience for visiting players.
It's why it's been a fortress for Mexico for so long. They remained unbeaten there in World Cup qualifiers until 2001 and their 2-1 defeat to Honduras last month was only their second in more than 70 qualifiers throughout history.
The aura of it has dissipated slightly in recent times - Mexico emerged with only one win and three goals in five matches there during the Hexagonal - and the All Whites have to believe a result or narrow defeat is possible in the first leg. The two teams will meet again in Wellington on November 20.