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SportSunday, July 5, 2026

Mexico and England renew old rivalry as Azteca hosts seismic last-16 clash

A buoyant Mexico side, yet to concede in the tournament, faces a struggling but star-studded England for a place in the World Cup quarter-finals.

On a sweltering Sunday evening at the Estadio Azteca, a nation holds its breath: Mexico, riding a wave of four consecutive World Cup victories without conceding, steps onto the hallowed turf to face England in the last 16. For the host nation, the encounter is freighted with history — the only times they have reached the quarter-finals were on home soil, in 1970 and 1986 — and the weight of four decades of painful last-16 exits.

The mood in the Mexican camp, according to local media, is one of grounded belief. Coach Javier Aguirre has restored a collective identity built on defensive rigour and attacking verve, exemplified by the 2-0 dismissal of Ecuador in the previous round. Young midfielder Gilberto Mora, 17, has caught the eye, while the forward pair of Julián Quiñones and Raúl Jiménez has provided a cutting edge. Aguirre himself has spoken of needing “a near-perfect match” against an England side he describes as “top in the world”, but one that has laboured to find its rhythm under Thomas Tuchel.

England’s progress has been more cumbersome. A narrow 2-1 win over DR Congo, rescued by Harry Kane’s late double, masked an unconvincing group stage. British analysts point to a team searching for fluency: Jude Bellingham and Declan Rice are yet to dominate midfield, and Tuchel has rotated his wide options, with Anthony Gordon tipped to start. The high altitude of Mexico City — nearly 2,200 metres — looms as a physical challenge, while the febrile atmosphere, stoked by the British embassy’s plea for calm amid reports of hostility, adds psychological pressure.

The stakes transcend mere advancement. For Mexico, victory would exorcise a generational trauma that stretches from the penalty shoot-out heartbreak against West Germany in 1986 to the controversial defeat by the Netherlands in 2014. For England, it is another test of their capacity to convert talent into tournament success, having fallen short in the last two European Championship finals. The winner will face either Brazil or Norway in the quarter-finals, a tantalising prospect that sharpens the edge on what promises to be a confrontation of styles, pride and national yearning.

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Upd. 12:50 PM2 languages · 7 outlets
7 outlets|2 languages|2 min read
Sunday, July 5, 2026

Mexico and England renew old rivalry as Azteca hosts seismic last-16 clash

A buoyant Mexico side, yet to concede in the tournament, faces a struggling but star-studded England for a place in the World Cup quarter-finals.

On a sweltering Sunday evening at the Estadio Azteca, a nation holds its breath: Mexico, riding a wave of four consecutive World Cup victories without conceding, steps onto the hallowed turf to face England in the last 16. For the host nation, the encounter is freighted with history — the only times they have reached the quarter-finals were on home soil, in 1970 and 1986 — and the weight of four decades of painful last-16 exits.

The mood in the Mexican camp, according to local media, is one of grounded belief. Coach Javier Aguirre has restored a collective identity built on defensive rigour and attacking verve, exemplified by the 2-0 dismissal of Ecuador in the previous round. Young midfielder Gilberto Mora, 17, has caught the eye, while the forward pair of Julián Quiñones and Raúl Jiménez has provided a cutting edge. Aguirre himself has spoken of needing “a near-perfect match” against an England side he describes as “top in the world”, but one that has laboured to find its rhythm under Thomas Tuchel.

England’s progress has been more cumbersome. A narrow 2-1 win over DR Congo, rescued by Harry Kane’s late double, masked an unconvincing group stage. British analysts point to a team searching for fluency: Jude Bellingham and Declan Rice are yet to dominate midfield, and Tuchel has rotated his wide options, with Anthony Gordon tipped to start. The high altitude of Mexico City — nearly 2,200 metres — looms as a physical challenge, while the febrile atmosphere, stoked by the British embassy’s plea for calm amid reports of hostility, adds psychological pressure.

The stakes transcend mere advancement. For Mexico, victory would exorcise a generational trauma that stretches from the penalty shoot-out heartbreak against West Germany in 1986 to the controversial defeat by the Netherlands in 2014. For England, it is another test of their capacity to convert talent into tournament success, having fallen short in the last two European Championship finals. The winner will face either Brazil or Norway in the quarter-finals, a tantalising prospect that sharpens the edge on what promises to be a confrontation of styles, pride and national yearning.

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