
Sunday night in downtown Phoenix, Chase Field traded baseball caps for cowboy hats as Fuerza Regida rolled their This Is Our Dream stadium tour into town and promptly turned the ballpark into a massive corridos singalong. The five-piece group tore through a career-spanning set that blended older favorites with newer tracks, wrapping it all in a big-budget production that stretched late into the night. Fans packed both the field and the upper bowl, giving the show the feel of a street party scaled up to stadium size.
According to The Arizona Republic, DJ Dynamiqo kicked things off at 7:57 p.m., setting the tone before the band officially hit the stage at 8:21 p.m. Frontman Jesús "JOP" Ortiz Paz opened with "Marlboro Rojo," later accepted a Mexican flag from the crowd during "Ansiedad" and ultimately came back for an encore of "Rosones" after fans loudly demanded more. The group did not clear the stage until around 11 p.m., with a setlist that pulled from songs released between 2018 and 2025 and featured moments where band members tossed roses to fans pressed up near the stage.
On the ticketing side, Chase Field's own event listing shows the July 12 performance as no longer available, a straightforward indicator that seats sold through the venue were gone, according to the Arizona Diamondbacks. Pollstar and tour listings describe the run as a nine-city stadium trek that already includes Petco Park, Oracle Park and Allegiant Stadium, highlighting how quickly the band has vaulted from club stages to the big leagues.
Stadium-size Production
The show leaned into spectacle. Giant LED screens blasted out visuals, fire effects punctuated key moments and an extended catwalk cut deep into the crowd, pulling the band closer to fans scattered across the field. Thousands of light-up wristbands handed out at the gates helped turn the stands into a pulsing sea of color, according to The Arizona Republic. In one of the night’s more theatrical touches, a 1991 Chevrolet 454 SS pickup truck appeared as part of a time-travel storyline that unfolded across the evening’s visuals, adding a cinematic twist to the corridos-heavy set.
What It Means For Phoenix
The tour’s stop in Phoenix lands as another marker of regional Mexican music’s surge into the mainstream, and a clear sign of just how strong the appetite is for large-scale Latin shows in the Valley. Pollstar has spotlighted the tour’s ambitious routing and size, while Phoenix New Times lists the July date among Chase Field’s biggest bookings of the year, underscoring how downtown Phoenix continues to compete for marquee stadium concerts.
For fans who missed out on primary tickets, secondary markets still reflect strong demand. For those inside Chase Field on Sunday, the night played more like a hometown victory lap than just another tour stop. With Phoenix now in the rearview mirror, Fuerza Regida heads on to the next stadium, leaving behind one more sold-out night etched into the city’s summer concert season.









