Julián Quiñones and Raúl Jiménez find the net at the iconic Estadio Azteca as a dramatic curtain-raiser sees three red cards flashed.
MEXICO CITY — Co-hosts Mexico launched the historic 48-team FIFA World Cup 2026 in spectacular fashion, securing a clinical 2-0 victory over South Africa in the tournament’s opening Group A encounter. Amid an electric atmosphere generated by a capacity crowd of over 80,000 passionate spectators at the iconic Estadio Azteca, El Tri successfully navigated heavy home expectations to bag three vital opening points. The dramatic clash, watched closely by football enthusiasts worldwide including the massive, football-crazy Gulf Malayali diaspora, will be remembered as much for its strategic goals as for its fiery disciplinary record, which yielded three red cards.
Quiñones Calms Early Nerves
The home side took less than ten minutes to break the deadlock and settle any premature opening-day anxieties. In the 9th minute, dynamic forward Julián Quiñones etched his name into football folklore by scoring the very first goal of the 2026 FIFA World Cup. Capitalizing on a sharp, defensive lapse from South Africa’s Sphephelo Sithole, midfielder Érik Lira quickly intercepted the ball and released Quiñones, who smartly slotted it past Bafana Bafana goalkeeper Ronwen Williams.
The early blow forced South Africa into a defensive shell. Although the African side showed glimpses of resistance, Mexico continued to dictate the tempo of the first half, testing Williams repeatedly. Bafana Bafana were arguably relieved to head into the tunnel at halftime trailing by just a single goal, courtesy of their captain’s spectacular saves against veteran striker Raúl Jiménez.
Second-Half Drama and a Red Card Flurry
The complexion of the game tilted irreversibly in Mexico’s favor shortly after the interval. In the 49th minute, South Africa’s Sphephelo Sithole was shown a straight red card for a professional foul on a goal-bound Jiménez on the edge of the box. Reduced to ten men, the South African tactical shape collapsed under incessant waves of Mexican pressure.
In the 67th minute, the numerical advantage bore fruit. Following a clever one-two sequence with Quiñones, winger Roberto Alvarado floated a pinpoint cross to the back post. An unmarked Raúl Jiménez rose highest to power home a commanding header, doubling Mexico’s lead and sending the Azteca into absolute raptures. With this 46th international goal, Jiménez tied legendary forward Jared Borgetti as the second-highest goalscorer in Mexican national team history.
The final phase of the match descended into chaotic disciplinary issues. South Africa’s misery deepened in the 83rd minute when substitute Themba Zwane was sent off following a VAR review, leaving Bafana Bafana to finish the match with nine men. However, Mexico failed to keep a completely clean disciplinary sheet; defender César Montes was also shown a straight red card deep into stoppage time for a reckless challenge, ruling him out of Mexico’s next fixture.
Strategic Group A Footing
Despite the late flashpoints, Javier Aguirre’s men comfortably managed the closing minutes to secure an optimal start to their home campaign. The victory marks a significant redemption for Mexico after their disappointing first-round exit at Qatar 2022.
With three points comfortably in the bag, Mexico currently leads Group A. The co-hosts will travel next to Guadalajara to face a formidable South Korea side, while a bruised South Africa must regroup rapidly before flying to Atlanta to face Czechia in what has suddenly become a must-win fixture for the African nation.











































