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Mexico vs England
FIFA World Cup·6 Jul 2026
Full-time
Round of 16
Quinones 42' Jimenez 69' (P)
Bellingham 36' Bellingham 38' Kane 60' (P)
(P) = Penalty45' = Minute scored
Estadio Azteca

Bellingham Double, Kane Penalty Propel Ten-Man England Past Mexico Into Quarters

Frederic Lumiere
Frederic Lumiere
4 min read·74 reads
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Mexico 2 - 3 England: Bellingham double powers ten-man England through

Match narrative

England eliminated co-hosts Mexico with a 3-2 win at Estadio Azteca tonight, booking Thomas Tuchel’s side a quarter-final place despite spending more than 40 minutes with ten men. Declan Rice’s yellow card in the opening minute hinted at the volatility to come, yet the visitors established control through Jude Bellingham’s relentless running from central midfield.

Bellingham struck first in the 36th minute, arriving to meet Bukayo Saka’s assist. Two minutes later Harry Kane slipped a pass into the same channel and Bellingham converted again, handing England a 2-0 cushion. Mexico, spurred on by the crowd, hit back in the 42nd minute when Julián Quiñones found the net, keeping Javier Aguirre’s 4-3-3 alive before half-time.

The match flipped in the 54th minute when Jarell Quansah saw red for a serious foul on Jesús Gallardo. Tuchel reacted instantly, sending on John Stones for Saka in the 57th minute to restore the back four. Even with ten men England struck next: the referee pointed to the spot in the 60th minute and Kane converted the penalty for 3-1.

Aguirre answered with a double substitution at 61 minutes, introducing Santiago Giménez and Brian Gutiérrez. Their pressure told when Raúl Jiménez dispatched a penalty in the 69th minute after Gutiérrez drew the foul, trimming the deficit to one. Tension spiked as Jorge Sánchez collected a yellow card in the 71st minute and Nico O’Reilly followed in the 72nd minute before Tuchel replaced him with Djed Spence on 74 minutes. Dan Burn’s arrival for Elliot Anderson in the 75th minute added height for defending Mexico’s aerial bombardment.

Mexico funneled wave after wave of crosses, forcing England deep. Álvaro Fidalgo entered for Sánchez in the 79th minute to sharpen delivery, while Guillermo Martínez replaced Quiñones in the 81st minute as Mexico chased extra power in the box. Kane made way for Morgan Rogers at 90 minutes to burn time. Stoppage-time bookings for Johan Vásquez and Jordan Henderson at 90+8 minutes underlined the edge as England clung on through eight added minutes.

Tactical focus

Tuchel’s 4-2-3-1 relied on Bellingham as the carrier between the lines. He justified the trust with three efforts on target, two goals, and ten duels won from sixteen. Before his withdrawal Saka had combined diligence out of possession with the pass for the opener. Anthony Gordon’s work rate was essential once England dropped to 4-4-1: he contested 21 duels, won ten, drew four fouls, and his dribble precipitated the decisive penalty decision. Elliot Anderson gave balance as the second pivot, registering five tackles across 75 minutes before Burn’s height took over.

Aguirre’s 4-3-3 overwhelmed possession, finishing with 67 percent of the ball, 20 shots, and 12 corners. Erik Lira recycled relentlessly in midfield, while Roberto Alvarado and Quiñones tried to pin back England’s full-backs. Yet Mexico’s shot map betrayed their problem: only five attempts on target, Jordan Pickford dealing with all but the penalties. Edson Álvarez’s introduction at half-time improved their counter-press, but England’s deep block, anchored by Stones and Marc Guéhi, repelled most of the late deliveries.

Expect Tuchel to review the right-back slot after Quansah’s dismissal, yet his in-game management held firm, rotating Spence and Burn to lock the flanks and trusting Bellingham to carry England up the pitch whenever the chance came.

Key statistics

  • Possession: Mexico 67 percent, England 33 percent
  • Total shots: Mexico 20, England 6
  • Shots on target: Mexico 5, England 5
  • Corner kicks: Mexico 12, England 2
  • Cards: Quansah sent off at 54 minutes; six yellow cards (four in regulation time, two in stoppage time)
  • Expected goals: Mexico 1.87, England 1.55

What it means

England are into the quarter-finals and will learn their opponent once the remaining Round of 16 ties conclude. Tuchel’s task this week is reinforcing a reshuffled back line and managing Kane’s workload after a 90-minute shift in Mexico City’s altitude. For Mexico and Aguirre the exit stings after a perfect group stage, their 2026 co-host run ending at the first knockout hurdle. For more on the teams still alive in this bracket, read the build-up to Argentina vs Egypt.

Frederic Lumiere

Written by

Frederic Lumiere

Football journalist and analyst

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