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SportSunday, June 28, 2026

Uruguay’s World Cup Exit Turns Bitter as Bielsa Tells Squad: ‘You Left Me Alone’

A group-stage elimination, internal revolt and a cancelled charter flight lay bare the collapse of Marcelo Bielsa’s Uruguay project.

Uruguay’s 2026 World Cup ended not with a defiant stand but with a tame 1-0 defeat to Spain in Guadalajara, a result that left the two-time champions bottom of Group H with two points and no route into the expanded knockout rounds. Álex Baena’s softly struck winner, which squirmed under the body of veteran goalkeeper Fernando Muslera, was the decisive blow, but the damage had been done earlier: a 1-1 draw with Saudi Arabia and a 2-2 stalemate against debutants Cape Verde had already drained the campaign of momentum. The early exit, Uruguay’s second consecutive group-stage elimination, was sealed when they could not even claim a place among the eight best third-placed sides.

Behind the on-field failures, a dressing-room rupture had been building for months. Before the squad dispersed from their Playa del Carmen base, Bielsa gathered the players and, according to multiple accounts in the South American press, directed his frustration at the senior figures. “Me dejaron solo” — you left me alone — he told them, a phrase that instantly ricocheted through Uruguayan and Argentine media. The confrontation was the culmination of a cycle in which the coach’s methods were openly challenged. In the days before the Spain match, a delegation led by Federico Valverde, Rodrigo Bentancur and Sergio Rochet had asked Bielsa to reduce training intensity and adopt a more cautious, counter-attacking approach. The Argentine’s response, reported by Montevideo’s El Espectador, was a 48-minute monologue in which he reminded the players they had already tried to force him out after the public falling-out with Luis Suárez, and claimed he had “built the careers” of some squad members.

The institutional reaction was swift and, viewed from outside, pointed. The Uruguayan Football Association (AUF) informed the delegation that the charter flight originally used to bring the 150-strong party to Mexico would not be available for the return. In a statement, the AUF insisted a charter had never been planned for the journey home because the departure point was unknown, and that the reduced group would travel on commercial flights — the “fastest and most efficient” option. Yet the decision was widely interpreted in European and Asian outlets as a deliberate snub, a psychological sanction for a squad that had fallen far short of expectations. Bielsa himself offered a bleak self-assessment: “We played to get seven points and got two. That is the result of my management.” He added that he left “nothing” to Uruguayan football, because any contribution without results would never take root.

The fallout now shifts to Montevideo, where Bielsa has called a press conference for Tuesday at the Estadio Centenario. The event, to be streamed by the AUF, is expected to formalise his departure, though his exit was reportedly agreed before the tournament. Meanwhile, the players will scatter on commercial flights to their clubs across Europe and South America, a logistical coda that, for many in the region, symbolises the ignominy of the campaign. Former Argentina international Jorge Burruchaga, speaking on Buenos Aires-based radio, branded the Uruguayans “pechos fríos” — cold-hearted — and asked why they only wept after the final whistle rather than fighting during the match. The next chapter of Uruguayan football will begin with a coach’s farewell and a federation’s inquest into how a team that once stood third in South American qualifying unravelled so completely.

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 1 languages

32%
ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Japanese-Korean pressContinental European press
Japanese-Korean press
DetachmentPragmatism

Following Uruguay's early World Cup exit, the federation reportedly canceled the chartered flight for the team, leaving players to take commercial flights home. The logistical move suggested an implicit penalty for the disappointing performance.

Continental European press/ Mediterranean
IronySkepticism

The defeat against Spain marked the sunset for Uruguay, amidst goalkeeper blunders, hard fouls, and internal conspiracies. Bielsa, described as authoritarian, departs without leaving anything to La Celeste, which fails to advance past the group stage for the second consecutive World Cup.

Broaden your view

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Upd. 02:28 AM1 language · 3 outlets
3 outlets|1 language|3 min read
Sunday, June 28, 2026

Uruguay’s World Cup Exit Turns Bitter as Bielsa Tells Squad: ‘You Left Me Alone’

A group-stage elimination, internal revolt and a cancelled charter flight lay bare the collapse of Marcelo Bielsa’s Uruguay project.

Uruguay’s 2026 World Cup ended not with a defiant stand but with a tame 1-0 defeat to Spain in Guadalajara, a result that left the two-time champions bottom of Group H with two points and no route into the expanded knockout rounds. Álex Baena’s softly struck winner, which squirmed under the body of veteran goalkeeper Fernando Muslera, was the decisive blow, but the damage had been done earlier: a 1-1 draw with Saudi Arabia and a 2-2 stalemate against debutants Cape Verde had already drained the campaign of momentum. The early exit, Uruguay’s second consecutive group-stage elimination, was sealed when they could not even claim a place among the eight best third-placed sides.

Behind the on-field failures, a dressing-room rupture had been building for months. Before the squad dispersed from their Playa del Carmen base, Bielsa gathered the players and, according to multiple accounts in the South American press, directed his frustration at the senior figures. “Me dejaron solo” — you left me alone — he told them, a phrase that instantly ricocheted through Uruguayan and Argentine media. The confrontation was the culmination of a cycle in which the coach’s methods were openly challenged. In the days before the Spain match, a delegation led by Federico Valverde, Rodrigo Bentancur and Sergio Rochet had asked Bielsa to reduce training intensity and adopt a more cautious, counter-attacking approach. The Argentine’s response, reported by Montevideo’s El Espectador, was a 48-minute monologue in which he reminded the players they had already tried to force him out after the public falling-out with Luis Suárez, and claimed he had “built the careers” of some squad members.

The institutional reaction was swift and, viewed from outside, pointed. The Uruguayan Football Association (AUF) informed the delegation that the charter flight originally used to bring the 150-strong party to Mexico would not be available for the return. In a statement, the AUF insisted a charter had never been planned for the journey home because the departure point was unknown, and that the reduced group would travel on commercial flights — the “fastest and most efficient” option. Yet the decision was widely interpreted in European and Asian outlets as a deliberate snub, a psychological sanction for a squad that had fallen far short of expectations. Bielsa himself offered a bleak self-assessment: “We played to get seven points and got two. That is the result of my management.” He added that he left “nothing” to Uruguayan football, because any contribution without results would never take root.

The fallout now shifts to Montevideo, where Bielsa has called a press conference for Tuesday at the Estadio Centenario. The event, to be streamed by the AUF, is expected to formalise his departure, though his exit was reportedly agreed before the tournament. Meanwhile, the players will scatter on commercial flights to their clubs across Europe and South America, a logistical coda that, for many in the region, symbolises the ignominy of the campaign. Former Argentina international Jorge Burruchaga, speaking on Buenos Aires-based radio, branded the Uruguayans “pechos fríos” — cold-hearted — and asked why they only wept after the final whistle rather than fighting during the match. The next chapter of Uruguayan football will begin with a coach’s farewell and a federation’s inquest into how a team that once stood third in South American qualifying unravelled so completely.

Source divergence

Sport · 3 outlets · 1 language

32%Medium

How sources tell the same facts differently.

How They Split

Neutral20%
Critical80%

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 1 languages

ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Japanese-Korean pressContinental European press
Japanese-Korean press
DetachmentPragmatism

Following Uruguay's early World Cup exit, the federation reportedly canceled the chartered flight for the team, leaving players to take commercial flights home. The logistical move suggested an implicit penalty for the disappointing performance.

Continental European press/ Mediterranean
IronySkepticism

The defeat against Spain marked the sunset for Uruguay, amidst goalkeeper blunders, hard fouls, and internal conspiracies. Bielsa, described as authoritarian, departs without leaving anything to La Celeste, which fails to advance past the group stage for the second consecutive World Cup.

This story appeared in

3 outlets · 1 language

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