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Mexico And Quinones Forge Historic Concacaf World Cup Win Over Ecuador

Mexico advanced to the World Cup round of 16 with a 2-0 win over Ecuador, becoming the first Concacaf team to knock out a CONMEBOL side at this stage. Julian Quinones scored once and assisted Raul Jimenez, while Javier Aguirre's co-hosts now await England or DR Congo at Mexico City Stadium.

The victory also continued Mexico's defensive run at this World Cup. Aguirre's team have not conceded in four matches, and they have now gone 15 World Cup games without allowing a first-half goal, a streak last broken against Argentina in 2010.

Mexico beat Ecuador to make Concacaf history

Underlying numbers suggested a tighter contest, with Mexico posting 1.02 expected goals (xG) against Ecuador's 0.73. However, the co-hosts managed the game well, prevented pressure after the interval, and did not allow a single shot on target in the second half of this knockout tie.

Key performance metrics from Mexico vs Ecuador highlighted their control in both penalty areas:

Team Expected goals (xG) Second-half shots on target conceded
Mexico 1.02 0
Ecuador 0.73 2

Mexico joined an exclusive World Cup group with that record. Since 1994, only Switzerland in 2006 had also opened a tournament with four consecutive clean sheets. Switzerland exited on penalties in their fourth match, despite not conceding, a scenario Mexico will try to avoid in the coming rounds.

Quinones delivered another influential display in front of home fans. The forward became only the second Mexico player to score in three matches at a single World Cup, matching Luis Hernandez's 1998 feat, and also drew level with Hernandez's national record of four direct goal contributions in one edition.

The 29-year-old reached more milestones against Ecuador. Quinones became the second Mexico player to record both a goal and an assist in a World Cup knockout match, after Negrete achieved the same against Bulgaria in 1986. Only Roberto Alvarado created more chances, registering four to Quinones' three.

The match, delayed for an hour because of a thunderstorm, opened at high speed once play started. Raul Jimenez headed wide early on, then 17-year-old Gilberto Mora curled an effort narrowly past the right post, as Mexico produced six attempts inside the opening 15 minutes and set an attacking tone.

Ecuador replied through John Yeboah, who slipped the ball through Cesar Montes' legs before striking the woodwork. Mexico struck first in the 22nd minute when Alvarado threaded a pass to Quinones, who drove a powerful shot inside the near post, beating Hernan Galindez from close range.

The second goal arrived shortly after the half-hour. Jimenez exchanged passes with Quinones before firing a rising shot into the top-right corner, leaving Galindez with no chance. Yeboah later forced a save from Raul Rangel, but Ecuador could not build sustained pressure after the break, while Galindez denied a Montes header at the opposite end.

Late drama came in second-half stoppage time. Piero Hincapie received a red card after a VAR review, with officials judging an incident in which Hincapie covered a hand over the mouth while speaking to Mexico forward Santiago Gimenez. Ecuador finished with ten players as the co-hosts comfortably protected their advantage.

The result also triggered a strong reaction from Mexico's supporters:

Mexico now enter the round of 16 with strong defensive numbers, historical firsts against CONMEBOL opposition, and an in-form attack led by Quinones and Jimenez. With England or DR Congo next, the co-hosts carry momentum and confidence into another knockout match at Mexico City Stadium.

Story first published: Wednesday, July 1, 2026, 10:07 [IST]
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