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Mexico end knockout hoodoo with win over Ecuador

Thursday, 2 July 2026


MEXICO CITY, July 01 (Reuters): Mexico ended a 40-year wait for a World Cup knockout victory as first-half goals from Julian Quinones and Raul Jimenez secured a 2-0 win over Ecuador on Wednesday (BST), sending the co-hosts into the last 16 amid euphoric scenes at a rocking Azteca Stadium.
The round of 32 victory was Mexico's first in the knockout stages of a World Cup since beating Bulgaria on home soil in 1986. They have booked a meeting with England or the Democratic Republic of Congo in the next round, with the co-hosts returning to the Azteca for the stadium's final match of the tournament.
"A really good first half and in the second half we managed to stay calm behind the ball," said Mexico coach Javier Aguirre. "Judging by the atmosphere and how happy everyone is, I'm convinced there's a real bond between the fans and the team."
Kickoff was delayed by an hour due to thunderstorms but the weather did little to dampen an atmosphere that surpassed even Mexico's tournament opener, with over 80,000 fans turning the venue into a sea of green long before the opening whistle.
Mexico fed off that energy from the outset and nearly took an early lead when Raul Jimenez peeled away to meet Luis Romo's inviting cross, only to stoop a header narrowly wide.
Teenager Gilberto Mora then came within inches of producing one of the goals of the tournament, whipping a fierce effort from a tight angle just beyond Hernan Galindez's far post.
Ecuador weathered the early pressure and almost stunned the home crowd when Gonzalo Plata launched a swift counter-attack that ended with John Yeboah skipping past his marker before drilling an angled effort against the outside of the post.
Mexico's breakthrough arrived in the 22nd minute though and sparked deafening celebrations around the Azteca.
Roberto Alvarado picked out Quinones with a perfectly weighted pass through Ecuador's high press and the Colombian-born forward shrugged off Willian Pacho before opening his body and unleashing a thunderous finish into the top corner for his third goal of the tournament.
Mexico doubled their advantage nine minutes later after Ecuador cheaply surrendered possession on the edge of their own penalty area. Jimenez started the move himself, exchanged passes with Quinones and rifled a first-time strike into the top corner for his 47th international goal, moving within five of Javier Hernandez's all-time Mexico scoring record. The hosts looked transformed by their two-goal cushion, playing with confidence and intensity as Ecuador struggled to contain waves of green-shirted attacks roared on by the crowd.
Ecuador showed signs of life before the break and almost pulled one back when Yeboah cut inside and unleashed a rising drive that forced Raul Rangel into an excellent diving save, but Mexico went into halftime firmly in control after producing arguably their most complete 45 minutes of the tournament.
TEAM'S RALLYING CRY
The second half began with thousands of Mexico supporters chanting "Y si sí?" ("What if?"), a slogan that has become the team's rallying cry during the tournament as belief spread through the packed Azteca that this could finally be the year the hosts ended their long knockout drought.