World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
Three group matches, nine points, six goals scored, zero goals conceded.
Three group matches, nine points, six goals scored, zero conceded.
Mexico won Group A with a perfect record, a first in their history. The last time they didn't concede a single goal in the group stage was 1970. Fifty-six years. The 87,000 seats at the Estadio Azteca watched this team tear up the old record books.
Possession is the most deceptive stat of this World Cup. Against the Czech Republic, Mexico had 49% possession. Against South Korea, 40%. Looking at those numbers, you'd think they were pinned down and getting battered. But the scoreboard doesn't lie: 49% possession yielded 11 shots, 5 on target, and 3 goals. The Czechs had 52% possession, 13 shots, but only 1 on target, and ended with a big fat zero. The team that caressed the ball like prayer beads lost; the team that gave it away went home smiling.
Javier Aguirre said after the match that the players "abandoned selfishness and individualism to fight for the team." This phrase is all too common in football, usually a coach's flimsy excuse to mask tactical impotence after a loss. But Aguirre has a real ledger to back it up: a 26-man squad, with 25 players seeing game time. Across three group matches, they were just one player short of a full squad rotation. Twenty-five men played, three wins, zero goals conceded. You can't brew a clean sheet with locker room鸡汤; this is a hard-earned stat built by 25 lives.
Julián Quiñones is the sharpest cog in this machine. A naturalized player of Colombian origin, he scored two goals in three group matches, making him the team's top scorer. Álvaro Fidalgo, a Spaniard, scored in the 94th minute of stoppage time against the Czech Republic. Two outsiders, wearing the Mexican jersey, fought until they cramped up in the Azteca. Aguirre specifically named these two, saying they have a sense of belonging to Mexico. Naturalized players fighting for the host nation in a home World Cup sounds a bit ironic. The veteran coach doesn't care which country is printed on the birth certificate; he only looks at who is willing to sweat for this shirt.
Mateo Chávez probably understands the weight of the word "belonging" better than most.
June 24th, Estadio Azteca, 55th minute. This young man, who plays for AZ Alkmaar in the Netherlands, scored his first World Cup goal. In the stands, his family celebrated shirtless, even crazier than he was. Chávez said after the match: "This goal will stay with me for life. My family was more excited than me, even celebrating shirtless."
His father, Paulo César "Tilón" Chávez, was also called up to the national team back in the day and scored his only career goal in the Azteca. In 1998, coach Manuel Lapuente cut him from the final World Cup squad. Tilón never played in a World Cup in his life. Twenty-eight years later, his son did on the same patch of grass what his father never had the chance to do. Don't talk about abstract legacy. This is intergenerational debt repayment, precise down to the coordinates of the pitch. Chávez said the goal would stay with him for life. The words aren't fancy, but this family waited twenty-eight years to hear them.
Another name that made the Azteca fall silent for two seconds is Gilberto Mora. Aged 17 years and 240 days, he came off the bench to become Mexico's youngest-ever World Cup player, and the eighth 17-year-old to play in the tournament's history. He then started a match at 17 years and 253 days, adding another record as the youngest starter in the team's history. Most players his age are still fighting for a spot on the first-team bench in the reserves; this kid was already playing a World Cup in front of 87,000 people. Aguirre said he is "fearless." Fearlessness at seventeen is mostly because he doesn't yet know how heavy the World Cup is.
Guillermo Ochoa, making his sixth World Cup appearance with the team, came off the bench in the 77th minute against the Czech Republic and played the remainder of the match. This is very likely the last World Cup match of his career. Aguirre called him a "legend" in the press conference.
The old man didn't just celebrate in the press conference. He mentioned Czech midfielder Tomáš Souček. In the 85th minute of the match, the West Ham United midfielder twisted his ankle while pressing Ochoa, tearing ligaments, and was stretchered off the Azteca. Same match, same patch of grass: the winner celebrates history, the loser is carried off. Aguirre also offered condolences to French coach Didier Deschamps, whose mother had just passed away. The winner's whiskey is always tinged with a bit of a colleague's bitterness.
67-year-old Aguirre himself is standing on the threshold of farewell. He stepped onto the World Cup stage as a player in 1986, was an assistant coach in 1994, and led the team as head coach in 2002, 2010, and 2026. Five World Cups, the winningest coach in Mexican World Cup history. After securing a perfect group stage record, he has confirmed he will step down after the tournament. A reporter asked about his future plans, and the old man said he "misses a glass of whiskey on the rocks."
In 1986, Aguirre played in the home World Cup as a player, and Mexico was eliminated in the quarter-finals. Forty years later, he sat on the coaching bench watching the team beat Ecuador 2-0 in the Round of 32. Quiñones opened the scoring in the 9th minute, and Jiménez sealed the win in the 66th minute. This was Mexico's first knockout stage victory at a World Cup since 1986.
Aguirre called this victory "the greatest achievement of his coaching career," saying it surpassed previous wins over Brazil and Italy. A 67-year-old man who has beaten giants puts a 2-0 knockout win above those. He also mentioned sending scouts to watch England and Congo, casually noted that the birth of his third grandson brought grandchild luck, and then circled back to the whiskey.
Mexico has four clean sheets. Next up is either England or Congo. The Azteca is still waiting. And Aguirre has already confirmed that after this World Cup, he's gone.