GOAL
·15 Juni 2026
Mexico vs South Africa: Winners & losers - Quiñones fires Mexico to history

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Yahoo sportsGOAL
·15 Juni 2026

Mexico claimed their first-ever World Cup opening-match victory with a dominant 2–0 win over South Africa at Estadio Azteca, as Julián Quiñones scored the tournament's first goal before Raúl Jiménez sealed the result. The visitors imploded with two red cards that reduced them to nine men while the hosts controlled proceedings throughout. GOAL breaks down the winners & losers from Mexico v South Africa.
Julián Quiñones etched his name into World Cup history by scoring the tournament's opening goal. The Mexico forward capitalised on Yaya Sithole's error in the ninth minute, collecting the loose ball after Érik Lira's challenge and finishing with his right foot to give the hosts an early lead in front of over 80,000 fans at Estadio Azteca.
Quiñones remained Mexico's most dangerous attacker throughout. At 42 minutes, his right-footed shot from inside the penalty area struck the post with goalkeeper Ronwen Williams beaten. He continued testing the South African defence with efforts from distance, including a long-range attempt at 48 minutes that Williams recovered to save.
His goal set the tone for Mexico's dominant display and proved decisive in their first-ever World Cup opening-match victory. The forward's directness and willingness to shoot unsettled South Africa's backline all evening, drawing a yellow card foul from Nkosinathi Sibisi at 74 minutes as they struggled to contain him before his substitution at 79 minutes.
Raúl Jiménez sealed Mexico's victory with a decisive header at 67 minutes. Roberto Alvarado delivered a cross from the right side, and the striker rose unmarked in the penalty area to guide the ball into the far corner. The goal made it 2–0 and effectively ended any hope of a South African comeback.
The striker had signalled his threat early. In the fifth minute, he struck a first-time shot from the edge of the area that forced Ronwen Williams into a sharp save for a corner. At 52 minutes, his direct free kick was blocked by the defensive wall as Mexico pressed for a second goal against ten-man South Africa.
His physical presence caused constant problems for South Africa's centre-backs, winning aerial duels and holding the ball up to bring teammates into play. Withdrawn at 76 minutes after delivering the crucial contribution, Jiménez's performance demonstrated his value to Mexico's World Cup campaign as they made history with their first opening-match win.
Yaya Sithole endured a disastrous evening that encapsulated South Africa's struggles. His poor touch under pressure from Érik Lira in the ninth minute surrendered possession, with the loose ball falling to Julián Quiñones who scored the tournament's opening goal. That defensive lapse set the tone for a painful defeat.
Any chance of redemption disappeared at 49 minutes when he received a straight red card. Brian Gutiérrez broke through on goal and Sithole brought him down as the last defender, leaving referee Wilton Pereira Sampaio with no option but to show a red card for denying an obvious goalscoring opportunity.
His dismissal reduced South Africa to ten men with more than 40 minutes remaining, fundamentally altering the contest. Hugo Broos was forced to sacrifice striker Lyle Foster for Thalente Mbatha to reorganise defensively, and Mexico exploited the numerical advantage by scoring their second goal at 67 minutes to seal the 2–0 victory.
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