World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
On June 11, the World Cup opener saw Mexico face South Africa. The opponents received two red cards throughout the match, and Mexico won 2 0 without breaking a sweat. In such garbage time, a coach who understood the game's unspoken rules would have long substituted in the 40 year old veteran goalkeeper to pad his appearance tally. Aguirre didn't take that bait. Guillermo Ochoa, wearing a substitute's vest, sat on the bench, letting it grow cold. Five days later, against South Korea, it was 1 0, and still zero minutes.
On June 11, the World Cup opener featured Mexico against South Africa. The opponents received two red cards, and Mexico won 2-0 without breaking a sweat. In such blowout time, a more socially savvy coach would have long substituted in the 40-year-old goalkeeper to pad his appearance count. Aguirre didn't take that bait. Guillermo Ochoa sat in his substitute vest, keeping the bench ice-cold. Five days later against South Korea, 1-0, still zero minutes.
Two matches, zero minutes. This was his sixth World Cup.
By June 25 at the Azteca Stadium, in the final group match against the Czech Republic. ESPN and the New York Post had already set the narrative: give Ochoa a start, let him bid a dignified farewell. Aguirre pretended not to hear. Ochoa endured 78 minutes on the bench before the substitution board went up. He touched the ball a few times, listened to the waves of cheers from the Azteca. 13 minutes, plus a bit of stoppage time.
With just those 13 minutes, he squeezed himself into a very small club: the third player in football history to be selected for six World Cup squads. The first two were Messi and Ronaldo, both of whom played in all six. Ochoa didn't play a single minute in his first two World Cups; the first time he actually put on a jersey and stood on World Cup grass was after 2014. He remains the only one in the goalkeeper position.
That night, Mexico slaughtered the Czech Republic 3-0, with Chávez, Quiñones, and Fidalgo each scoring one. They won all three group matches, conceded no goals, and finished top of the group. In Mexico's 18 World Cup appearances, this was the first time they won all three group games without conceding a single goal.
The team simply didn't need him to be the savior. That's the cruelest undertone.
Ochoa achieved legendary status in Mexican football not through his club résumé, but through three matches.
On June 17, 2014, group stage against host Brazil. 0-0, Ochoa made six saves. Neymar's sure goal from the edge of the six-yard box was swatted away by Ochoa's entire body, smacking the ball off the goal line. Neymar himself laughed, that bitter "how the hell did he save that" smile. The nickname "Memo" that night began to overflow from Mexico's borders, becoming a globally recognized term.
Four years later at the Russia World Cup, the opponent was reigning champion Germany. Nine saves, the highest single-match total within 90 minutes in that World Cup. Kroos's dipping free kick aimed for the corner; Ochoa's fingertip grazed it, and the ball crashed off the crossbar and flew away. The Germans' entire tactical board was broken by that pair of hands.
In 2022 in Qatar, Lewandowski stood over the penalty spot. The ball was denied at the goal. Two saves in the match, named Man of the Match.
Three tournaments, three top-tier opponents, three precise detonations. In FIFA's exclusive interview on June 10 this year, Ochoa himself pointed to these three matches: "Three matches that changed my life." Shutting out Brazil, beating Germany, saving Lewandowski's penalty.
Take off the rose-tinted glasses, and you'll find a stark truth. At the club level, he started from América in Mexico, bounced through France, Spain, Belgium, Italy, Portugal, Cyprus. Seven countries, a cabinet full of jerseys. Never touched a top club; the only decent trophy was a Belgian Cup he picked up in 2018 with Standard Liège.
The national team kept a different ledger: 153 caps, six CONCACAF Gold Cup titles. The quadrennial World Cup was his enshrinement platform, while the long, mediocre league seasons in between were just training grounds to maintain his form.
No one wants to mention 2006 and 2010. Two World Cups, zero appearances. He watched his teammates play from the bench, wearing out the plastic chair without ever getting a single minute. It wasn't until 2014 that he was thrust into the fire line, and those six saves rescued his career and propped up a nation's football pride. From water boy to national icon, he endured eight years.
On April 30, 2026, he announced he would hang up his gloves after this tournament. His exact words were ruthless: "I can't understand my career without the national team... I don't see the point in keeping on playing." Unable to imagine a career without the national team; when the national team's time ends, playing football loses its meaning.
He said it cleanly, leaving no room for himself to retreat.
But in those 13 minutes at the Azteca, he didn't even make a decent save. He didn't need to. Mexico scored six goals in the group stage without conceding a single one. As Group A winners, they advanced to the Round of 16 to be played on June 30 at the Azteca.
He stood in front of his own goal in the No. 13 jersey, the evening breeze from the Azteca blowing over him. The 20-year-old who endured the cold bench in 2006 was now the 40-year-old set to retire in 2026.
Tonight, Mexico plays the Round of 16. Aguirre will most likely keep him on the bench again.