Man, it hurts to write this one.
The atmosphere inside Estadio Azteca was absolutely electric—over 80,000 fans screaming, waving flags, and believing that this was finally the year El Tri broke the “fifth-game” curse. Instead, we watched a 3-2 thriller end in absolute devastation.
But let’s bypass the surface drama and look directly at what really killed Mexico’s momentum: Javier Aguirre’s decision-making in the final stretch.
We need to talk about why our star man, Julián Quiñones, was pulled off the pitch when the game was completely on the line.
The Quiñones vs. Jiménez Dilemma
Let’s be real Julián Quiñones has been the absolute spark plug of this tournament run. Heading into this match, he already had four goal involvements. He even single-handedly kept Mexico alive in the first half of this game, firing home a crucial goal in the 42nd minute right after Jude Bellingham put England up 2-0 with a lightning-fast brace.
Quiñones was confident, physical, and clearly had the English defenders on their heels.
Yet, as the clock ticked down, Aguirre continued to put his chips on Raúl Jiménez. Don’t get me wrong—Jiménez did his job when he coolly converted that 68th-minute penalty to pull it back to 3-2. But then, in the 80th minute, Aguirre made the call that had every fan in the stadium throwing their hands up: he took Quiñones off completely, replacing him with Guillermo Martínez.
Why bet the entire farm on Jiménez and sub out your most dynamic player when you have a man advantage? Remember, England’s Jarell Quansah had been sent off in the 54th minute. Mexico had the extra man, they had the momentum, and instead of leaving the red-hot Quiñones out there to terrorize a depleted English backline, Aguirre went for a traditional target-man approach. It completely neutralized the dynamic, fluid attacking movement that got Mexico to the Round of 16 in the first place.
Did Mexico Get Comfortable, or is England Just Better?
It’s a mix of both.
- The Clean Sheet Trap: Mexico went into this match without having conceded a single goal in their first four games of the tournament—a defensive feat we hadn’t seen since 1994. That kind of success can breed a dangerous sense of security. When Bellingham shredded that record with two goals in 98 seconds, El Tri looked genuinely shocked.
- The Ten-Man Paradox: Once Quansah got red-carded, Mexico looked like they assumed the comeback was a mathematical certainty. They dominated possession, but it lacked edge.
- England’s Elite Resilience: Say what you want about the Three Lions, but managing to win at the Azteca while playing with 10 men for nearly the entire second half takes world-class discipline. They didn’t panic when the crowd got loud, and Jordan Pickford made the stops when they mattered most.
The Bottom Line
Aguirre’s player-first, highly disciplined culture did wonders to unite this squad. But in tournament football, loyalty to veterans shouldn’t override raw, in-form production. Leaving a peaking Quiñones on the pitch to exploit an exhausted, 10-man England squad felt like the obvious play. Aguirre got cute with the tactics, and it cost El Tri a spot in the quarterfinals.















