Hooligan Soccer
·25 Juni 2026
Best & Worst of Group A: Mexico, South Africa Make History; South Korea Falls Flat

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Yahoo sportsHooligan Soccer
·25 Juni 2026

The final day of Group A delivered everything a World Cup group stage should: history, drama, heartbreak and a few surprises nobody saw coming.
If you don’t believe it, ask Mexico.
Javier Aguirre’s side wrapped up the group stage with an emphatic 3-0 victory over the Czech Republic, eliminating the Europeans while becoming the first Mexican team ever to finish a World Cup group stage with a perfect nine points from three matches.
And if that isn’t surprising enough, give South Africa a call.
Hugo Broos’ men went from looking like the weakest team in the group to shocking South Korea 1-0, securing the Bafana Bafana’s first-ever trip to the World Cup knockout stage.
If you ask which story is more surprising, the answer has to be South Africa.
After opening the tournament with a lifeless 2-0 defeat against Mexico, they looked completely out of their depth. Then came a dramatic late equalizer against the Czech Republic to earn a point, setting up a winner-take-all match against South Korea.
The Koreans entered as overwhelming favorites. Their squad was deeper, more experienced and filled with bigger names. Yet in Monterrey, South Africa produced the upset despite once again leaving star striker Lyle Foster on the bench for reasons that remain a mystery.
Mexico, meanwhile, looked every bit like a genuine contender. El Tri won all three matches without conceding a single goal, finishing atop Group A with nine points and a perfect defensive record.
Javier Aguirre also gave fans an emotional moment by bringing on veteran goalkeeper Guillermo Ochoa during the second half against the Czech Republic. While Raúl Rangel has clearly established himself as Mexico’s new No. 1, seeing Ochoa make his sixth World Cup appearance felt like a gift for an entire generation that grew up watching him represent Mexico from 2006 until today.
Mexico will face one of the best third-place finishers in the Round of 32 next Tuesday. The room for experimentation is over. Every mistake from this point forward could end the dream. Scotland, Ecuador and Cape Verde currently appear to be the most likely opponents awaiting El Tri at Estadio Ciudad de México.
South Africa now travels to Los Angeles to face Canada on June 28. On paper, it’s a difficult challenge—but after what they’ve already accomplished, nobody should be counting them out anymore.
South Korea’s fate now depends on advancing as one of the best third-place teams, while the Czech Republic’s disappointing World Cup comes to an early end.
At just 17 years old, Mexico’s newest wonderkid became the youngest player in the country’s World Cup history. His performance against the Czech Republic was spectacular, and it’s becoming increasingly difficult to justify leaving him out of the starting lineup for the knockout stage.
The goalkeeper arrived at the tournament surrounded by questions about whether he deserved the starting job. Three clean sheets later, those questions have become muted.
Perhaps not a complete surprise—much like Erik Lira—but Quiñones has quietly emerged as one of Mexico’s best players at this World Cup. The Colombian-born forward scored his second goal of the tournament against the Czech Republic after opening Mexico’s scoring in the tournament opener.
The 22-year-old scored the goal that sent South Africa to the knockout rounds for the first time ever. After replacing Lyle Foster in the starting lineup during the second match, he never looked back. He’ll return home a national hero regardless of what happens next.
South Korea’s biggest star simply never arrived. He finished the group stage without a goal or an assist and struggled to influence matches the way everyone expected.
The Bayer Leverkusen striker—and honestly the Czech Republic as a whole—failed to meet expectations. Schick entered the tournament as his country’s leader after guiding them through the playoffs, but he never found his rhythm.
On paper, South Africa’s best player. In reality, he started the opener before spending the next two matches on the bench. Whether it was tactical or disciplinary remains unknown, but it remains one of the tournament’s biggest mysteries.
The clash between the two teams expected to battle for first place lived up to the hype. A costly mistake by South Korean goalkeeper Kim Seung-gyu gifted Luis Romo the winning goal, but both goalkeepers produced outstanding saves throughout the night.
It was tense, evenly contested, dramatic until the final whistle—and ultimately the defining match that decided Group A.
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