Mexico’s World Cup run ended in the most painful possible setting Sunday night, with El Tri losing 3-2 to England at Estadio Azteca after a wild Round of 16 match that nearly turned into another home-city comeback.
England advanced to the quarterfinals, where it will face Norway. Mexico was left with the ache of a familiar World Cup exit, this time in front of its own people, in its most symbolic stadium, after a tournament that had briefly made the old ceiling feel breakable.
For Mexico, this was supposed to be the night when the Azteca became more than a stage. It was supposed to be a weapon. The crowd was deafening, the rain came down before kickoff, and the match was delayed by one hour because of thunderstorms around the stadium. When play finally began, Mexico looked alive, aggressive and fully aware of what was at stake.
Then came Jude Bellingham.
England’s midfielder changed the match in two minutes, scoring in the 36th and 38th minutes to stun the Azteca and give England a 2-0 lead. Mexico had started with more energy and pushed England back early, but the gap between control and damage was brutal. England did not need long stretches of possession. It needed Bellingham, and he punished Mexico with the coldness of a star who has carried England throughout the tournament.
Mexico did not fold. Julián Quiñones pulled one back before halftime, giving El Tri life and turning the second half into a test of nerve for both teams. The goal shifted the mood from shock to belief. The Azteca roared again, and England suddenly looked less comfortable in a match that was becoming more emotional by the minute.
The game changed again in the 54th minute, when Jarell Quansah was sent off after a VAR review, leaving England with 10 men. For Mexico, the moment looked like an opening. For England, it became a survival test.
Instead, England found the next goal. Harry Kane converted a penalty in the 60th minute to make it 3-1, a scoreline that felt harsh on Mexico but showed the difference in the decisive moments. El Tri had energy, pressure and the crowd. England had the finishing.
Raúl Jiménez answered from the penalty spot in the 69th minute, cutting the lead to 3-2 and setting up a frantic final stretch. Mexico pushed deep into stoppage time, throwing numbers forward as England retreated and Jordan Pickford helped protect the lead. The final whistle landed heavily. Players dropped to the grass. The crowd, so loud for so long, was left staring at another exit.
The loss hurts even more because Mexico had built real momentum. El Tri won Group A, beat Ecuador 2-0 in the Round of 32, and carried the best home-field story of the tournament into the last 16. This was not a timid exit. Mexico fought, scored twice and forced England to suffer. But it was still an exit.
Here in Latin America, the result adds to a rough turn in the knockout rounds. Paraguay was eliminated by France on Saturday, Brazil fell to Norway earlier Sunday, and now Mexico is out after one of the most dramatic matches of the tournament. The region’s hopes now lean heavily on Argentina and Colombia, who still have Round of 16 matches to play.
For England, this was the kind of victory that can reshape a tournament. It survived the altitude, the delay, the crowd, a red card and a late Mexican surge. Bellingham gave England the lead, Kane gave it breathing room, and the defense held on when the match became chaotic.
For Mexico, the night will be remembered differently. It will be remembered as the World Cup co-host that came close, made the Azteca shake, and still could not find the final push into the quarterfinals.
The performance had pride in it. The result had none of the comfort.





