England survived a tense finale at the Azteca to beat Mexico 3-2 and reach the World Cup quarter-finals, despite playing the final 36 minutes with 10 players. Jude Bellingham struck twice before Harry Kane converted a second-half penalty, setting up a last-eight clash with Norway after a chaotic tie defined by clinical finishing, a red card and two spot-kicks.
The match kicked off an hour late because of thunderstorms above the stadium, adding to an already charged atmosphere at one of world football’s loudest venues. Mexico poured forward throughout and registered 20 attempts, but Jordan Pickford produced several key saves, while England’s defence blocked repeatedly during a frantic closing spell.
The Azteca had been a difficult venue for visiting
sides at World Cups, with Mexico unbeaten in 10 tournament games there before this knockout tie. England also carried historic scars from the stadium, having lost 2-1 to Argentina in the 1986 quarter-finals, a match remembered for Diego Maradona’s "hand of God" goal, yet this squad managed to change that narrative.
Bellingham’s influence shaped the night on both sides of the ball and also rewrote part of England’s World Cup record book. The midfielder scored twice by the 38th minute, becoming the second-fastest England player to reach a brace in a World Cup match, behind Gary Lineker’s double against Poland in 1986, which was completed by the 14th minute.
Mexico began on the front foot and created the first major chance after 15 minutes, when Raul Jimenez dived to meet Roberto Alvarado’s cross, only for Pickford to tip the header wide with an outstretched hand. That escape jolted England, who started to find space on transitions and looked to Bukayo Saka on the right flank.
The breakthrough arrived in the 36th minute as Saka drove into space on a rapid counter and delivered a teasing cross to the far post, where Bellingham arrived unmarked to nod past Raul Rangel. Just 98 seconds later, England regained the ball in midfield, Bellingham exchanged passes with Kane and finished a close-range tap-in to give England a 2-0 lead.
Mexico responded almost at once, punishing hesitant defending from a set-piece four minutes later. England failed to clear Alvarado’s free-kick, the ball dropped loose inside the box and Julian Quinones reacted quickest, driving a sharp volley high into the net. The goal energised Mexico and changed the tone of the closing stages of the half.
England World Cup quarter-finals: Mexico pressure and Pickford landmark
Before the interval, Mexico pinned England back. Jimenez scuffed a half-volley wide, then forced another stretching stop from Pickford with a glancing header, while Bellingham tracked back to hook clear from under the crossbar as Cesar Montes threatened from close range. England reached the break still in front but under increasing pressure and struggling to control the ball for long spells.
Pickford’s display came on a milestone outing, as this match marked the goalkeeper’s 17th World Cup appearance, equalling Peter Shilton’s all-time England record. Across the 90 minutes Pickford faced five shots on target and stayed composed during long spells of Mexican pressure, especially after England were reduced to 10 players and dropped deeper.
England World Cup quarter-finals: key moments, goals and cards
England actually started the second half strongly despite Mexico’s momentum. Nico O’Reilly drove low from the edge of the area and the shot flicked off Bellingham’s boot, wrong-footing Rangel before striking the base of the right post. That near miss hinted England might regain control, but the contest turned sharply within minutes.
In the 54th minute, Jarell Quansah slid in for a challenge and initially won the ball, yet the follow-through caught Jesus Gallardo on the shin. After a VAR review, the referee upgraded the decision to a straight red card. England had to reshape with a player fewer, dropping their line deeper while trying to slow Mexico’s tempo.
England World Cup quarter-finals: penalties, Quinones record and Kane milestone
Being short-handed did not stop England from stretching the lead again. On the hour mark, Anthony Gordon chased Kane’s flick-on and reached the ball before Rangel, drawing a penalty as the goalkeeper made contact. Kane sent the spot-kick confidently into the corner from 12 yards to restore a two-goal cushion and briefly quieten the home crowd.
Mexico were handed a route back into the contest in the 69th minute. Brian Gutierrez nipped ahead of Kane to reach a loose ball inside the box and, following another VAR review, the referee awarded a penalty at the other end. Jimenez stepped up and struck low beyond a wrong-footed Pickford, making it 3-2 and setting up a tense finish.
Quinones’ first-half strike also carried major personal significance. No player has scored more World Cup goals for Mexico than Quinones, whose tally of four now matches Luis Hernandez and Javier Hernandez. Quinones also became the first Mexican player to find the net in three consecutive appearances at the World Cup finals, confirming star status for the forward.
Kane’s successful penalty moved the captain into elite company for England at major tournaments. The 32-year-old has now scored six World Cup goals in 2026, matching the benchmark previously set only twice by an England player at any major competition: Lineker at the 1986 World Cup and Kane himself at the 2018 tournament.
Mexico chased an equaliser that would have forced extra time, with Jimenez scooping one late effort over as England’s defenders blocked several shots around the box. The Three Lions’ determination was captured by a late sequence of clearances and interceptions, as players repeatedly threw themselves in front of strikes to protect the slender lead.
A tie that had absolutely everything. A win that means absolutely everything. WE ARE WORLD CUP QUARTER-FINALISTS! pic.twitter.com/mpBLI7m3XQEngland (@England) July 6, 2026
The result sends England into a third straight World Cup quarter-final and the 11th in national history, a figure exceeded only by Brazil with 15 and Germany with 14. After overcoming the conditions, the Azteca’s history and a persistent Mexico team, England now prepare for a last-eight meeting with Norway with confidence but also clear evidence of areas to improve.















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