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BackMexico Secures Knockout Stage Berth at 2026 World Cup with Win Over South Korea
Mexico Secures Knockout Stage Berth at 2026 World Cup with Win Over South Korea
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Guardian Sport19.06.2026Sport4 dk okuma

Mexico Secures Knockout Stage Berth at 2026 World Cup with Win Over South Korea

L'essentiel

  • Mexico became the first team to reach the knockout stage of the 2026 World Cup after a 1-0 victory over South Korea.
  • A goalkeeping error gifted Mexico the only goal, highlighting a lack of creative edge from both sides.
  • The win sets up potential future matchups and raises questions about both teams' potential in the tournament.

Résumé généré par IA

Pourquoi c'est important

Mexico and South Korea have a close relationship, with a free trade agreement in progress and a history of Korean migration to Mexico. Their goodwill was notably demonstrated during the 2018 World Cup when South Korea's win over Germany helped Mexico advance.

Taille de police

It wasn’t pretty, distinguished by little other than its black v lilac colour scheme, but Mexico became the first side at the 2026 World Cup to secure their place in the knockout stage. If they and England both top their groups, the path is open for an apocalyptic meeting at the Azteca in the last 16. The question for Mexico and South Korea after their opening wins was whether they had been good or their opponents bad, and this offered a fairly clear answer: neither is over-blessed with creative edge.

The only goal came after 50 minutes and was a gift from South Korea. Kim Seung-gyu, the goalkeeper, came to claim a looping header, but did so over the top of Lee Ki-hyuk, jarring his elbow on the defender’s head and spilling the ball for Luis Romo, who hooked in his fifth international goal on his 64th appearance. Romo was one of three changes made from Mexico’s line-up for the opener, coming in for Álvaro Fidalgo as Javier Aguirre resisted the popular demand to give a start to the 17-year-old Gilberto Mora. A remarkable double save from Raúl Rangel in the closing minutes preserved the lead as he got down to parry Cho Gue-sung’s header and had the core strength to twist and gather Yang Hyun-jun’s sliced follow-up.

This was the first time Mexico had ever played a World Cup game in Guadalajara, yet still there were a number of empty spaces. It was nothing like as empty as it had been in South Korea’s win over Czechia last week, but plastic seats were visible in clear patches, particularly in the corporate tier that runs round the centre of this stadium like the cream in a Victoria sponge.

This is not the old 71,000-capacity Estadio Jalisco, where Gordon Banks kept out Pelé’s header in 1970 and the France forward Bruno Bellone, in whose garden Grace Kelly died, scored in the shoot-out in the 1986 quarter-final against Brazil with a penalty that hit the post and bounced in off the head of the goalkeeper Carlos. This rather is the Estadio Akron, about 15 miles west of the Jalisco, which opened in 2010. The outside covered in turf, it rises unshowily from a flat plain to the west of the city of Zapopan, which borders Guadalajara, like the sort of venue an ambitious hobbit might erect on an industrial park on the fringes of the Shire’s green belt.

Both sides lacked the urgency of their opening fixtures, perhaps as a result of the format. With a win already on the board, a draw as good as secured their progress, unless both were to lose their final group games and all four sides in the group ended on four points. There was little risk or adventure from either side. The crowd seemed broadly accepting – more patient certainly than the fans at the Azteca who, demanding more, had booed in Mexico’s opening game when they led 1-0 against 10 men – but eight minutes before half-time they too had had enough and an extended spell of South Korean passing provoked furious whistles. Not that it made much difference.

South Korea and Mexico have a close relationship and, for the first half at least, the game was played in that spirit. Work began on a free trade agreement between the nations in 2012; although that is yet to be concluded, South Korea is now Mexico’s sixth-largest trade partner globally. Korean migration to Mexico began in 1905 when a ship called the Ilford brought 1,033 passengers across the Pacific, the majority subsequently settling on the Yucatán Peninsular. There’s a Friendship Pavilion donated by the South Korean government in the seniors garden in Chapultepec Park in Mexico City.

What sealed the spirit of goodwill, though, was what happened during the 2018 World Cup, when South Korea, having already been eliminated, beat Germany 2-0 in Kazan so that Mexico went through to the last 16. Fans gathered outside the South Korean embassy in Mexico City and, when the ambassador came out, he was carried shoulder-high along the street by a crowd chanting, “¡Coreano, hermano, ya eres Mexicano!” – “Korean, brother, now you’re Mexican!”

But friendliness goes only so far, and if a team is going to present a goal on a platter, as Kim did, Mexico were never going to reject the gift. Kim did later make a fine close-range block from Raúl Jiménez, but nobody is going to remember that.

South Korea’s preparations had been disrupted when video emerged of two people, assumed to be journalists, making disparaging comments about Son Heung-min’s abbreviated term of military service. In protest, players refused to perform media duties two days before the game. Son himself struggled again. He is only 33 but looks older, struggling to cope with Mexico’s offside trap, and unable to dislodge the ball from between his feet when a chance presented itself. He was substituted soon after.

A win against South Africa in their final game would still take South Korea through, and a draw may be enough, but it’s hard to see this limited side going much further. Mexico, meanwhile, may have won two out of two, but so far they’ve shown little beyond a functional competence.

À surveiller

Perspective IA — des possibilités, pas des certitudes

  • Mexico and England may meet in the last 16 if both top their groups.

    Possible · En quelques semaines

  • South Korea needs a result against South Africa to advance.

    Très probable · En quelques jours

Questions ouvertes

  • Will Mexico and England top their groups?
  • How far can these limited teams progress?

Sujets liés

This article was originally published by Guardian Sport.

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