Mexico Snap 40-Year Knockout Curse After Beating Ecuador
Mexico Snap 40-Year Knockout Curse After Beating Ecuador
Mexico ended a 40-year wait for a knockout-stage victory at the FIFA World Cup by defeating Ecuador 2-0 to book their place in the Round of 16 of the 2026 tournament.
Playing in front of a passionate home crowd at the Estadio Azteca on Tuesday night, the co-hosts produced an impressive display as first-half goals from Julián Quiñones and Raúl Jiménez sealed a comfortable win. The result also marked Mexico’s fourth consecutive clean sheet of the tournament, underlining their defensive resilience.
Kick-off was delayed by an hour due to severe thunderstorms in Mexico City, but the disruption had little impact on Mexico, who came flying out of the blocks.
The hosts dominated the early exchanges and broke the deadlock in the 22nd minute when Quiñones finished brilliantly from inside the penalty area, curling his effort into the top corner.
Less than 10 minutes later, Mexico doubled their advantage. Quiñones turned provider, linking up with Jiménez before the striker calmly slotted past Ecuador goalkeeper Hernán Galíndez to make it 2-0.
Ecuador found it difficult to break down Mexico’s well-organised defence in the opening half. Their best opportunity came through John Yeboah, but goalkeeper Raúl Rangel produced a fine save to preserve Mexico’s lead.
The South Americans improved after the interval and controlled more possession, but they struggled to create meaningful chances as Mexico remained disciplined at the back.
Following the historic victory, Mexico head coach Javier Aguirre praised the home supporters for inspiring the team.
“The connection we have with the fans is a driving force,” Aguirre said, acknowledging the crucial role played by the Mexican crowd.
The veteran manager, who also led Mexico at the 2002 and 2010 World Cups, described the result as one of the greatest moments of his coaching career.
“I’ve had some great victories, but none like today’s because it’s at home, with our own people,” he said.
Ecuador manager Sebastián Beccacece admitted his team were second best before halftime.
“We were outplayed in the first half,” he said.
Although Ecuador improved after the break, Beccacece admitted they lacked the finishing touch needed to mount a comeback.
“We responded better in the second half, but we couldn’t find the goal that would have changed the momentum,” he added.
Ecuador’s disappointing evening ended on an even worse note when Arsenal defender Piero Hincapié was shown a red card following a VAR review for an off-the-ball incident involving Mexico striker Santiago Giménez.
Despite the elimination, Beccacece expressed pride in his squad’s efforts throughout the competition.
“I’m grateful to all the players and to the country for this journey and this adventure together,” he said.
Mexico will now face either England or the Democratic Republic of the Congo in the Round of 16 as they continue their bid for a memorable World Cup campaign on home soil.
Looking ahead, Aguirre insisted his side must raise their level even further to stay in the tournament.
“We’ll have to play an almost perfect match if we want to keep progressing,” he said.










