World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
Mexican fans waited 40 years to win a match in the World Cup knockout stage. One million people flooded the Paseo de la Reforma. Two of them never made it home alive.
Mexican fans waited 40 years to finally win a World Cup knockout match. One million people flooded the Paseo de la Reforma. Two of them never made it home.
Late on the night of June 30, at the Azteca Stadium. Mexico vs. Ecuador, Round of 32. A thunderstorm had just pushed the kickoff back an hour, and the air was thick with the restlessness of a sweltering day. In the 22nd minute, Julián Quiñones scored. In the 31st minute, Raúl Jiménez added another. 2-0. Ecuador's Piero Hincapié received a red card late in the match, and any doubt was erased. When the final whistle blew, Mexico City erupted.
Since their home World Cup in 1986, the team had not won a single knockout match. 40 years. After the 1986 home World Cup, Mexico had won 0 knockout games. That glass ceiling was shattered tonight with a 2-0 victory.
Then the celebration turned into a tragedy.
The Mexico City health department confirmed: a 19-year-old woman and a 44-year-old man died of asphyxiation in a crowd crush near the Monumento a la Independencia. French media RMC Sport and L'Équipe reported the two were from the same family. The cause of death was suffocation. Once crowd density passed a critical threshold, chest cavities were locked tight by the surrounding bodies, making it impossible for lungs to expand.
Over one million people gathered around the Paseo de la Reforma and the monument. When crowd density becomes critical, hundreds of thousands of people turn into a fluid. Pressure transmitted from the back to the front, leaving those at the front with nowhere to go. According to witnesses cited by French media, the trigger was a firework—after it went off, panic spread, people pushed, and control was lost. As of this report, Mexico City authorities have not confirmed whether the firework was part of the official celebration or a flare brought by fans.
The delay of the match itself was an invisible variable. The thunderstorm postponed the original 9 PM kickoff, leaving fans on the streets for several more hours. That delayed hour caused a direct spike in alcohol consumption on the streets. 40 years of anxiety mixed with tequila exploded at the final whistle.
During the group stage match between Mexico and the Czech Republic, 800,000 people flooded Mexico City streets. Authorities had preemptively activated the "Ley Seca" (dry law), banning the sale of alcoholic beverages across the city. For this knockout match, the crowd swelled from 800,000 to one million—a 25% increase. Whether corresponding control measures were in place has no clear answer in public reports.
Mayor Clara Brugada's government installed 39 giant screens across the city for fans to watch the World Cup. 39 screens meant 39 crowd anchors. At the final whistle, hundreds of thousands surged simultaneously from the screens toward the Monumento a la Reforma, and the existing evacuation plans failed to contain the panic triggered by the firework. Before the match, Brugada had urged the public on social media to stay safe. Afterward, she praised the celebration as "historic." The first knockout win in 40 years, four wins with zero goals conceded. The "historic significance" Brugada spoke of ultimately came at the cost of two lives.
Coach Javier Aguirre said at the pre-match press conference on June 29: "The fans have become the team's '12th man.'" When one million people simultaneously packed the Paseo de la Reforma, the metaphor of the "12th man" turned into a physical reality that crushed people to death.
Mexico advanced to the Round of 16 with four wins and zero goals conceded. Their next opponent is either England or the Democratic Republic of the Congo. On the competitive side, the statistics are clean and impressive. Off the field, the ledger tells a different story: a gathering of one million people, two deaths. Local media report a third, unconfirmed death. The loss of control was not limited to the capital; Guadalajara and Monterrey were also swept up in celebrations of millions. Authorities have launched an investigation into the tragedy.
One million, two, and another number waiting to be confirmed.