
England booked their place in the World Cup quarter-finals after surviving a chaotic encounter against co-hosts Mexico, edging a pulsating contest 3-2 in front of a hostile crowd at the Azteca Stadium.
Jude Bellingham scored twice in a devastating first-half spell before Harry Kane’s second-half penalty proved to be the winner, as Thomas Tuchel’s side overcame a red card, two penalties and relentless late pressure to secure an incredible win.
England withstand early Mexico pressure
The atmosphere inside the stadium was ferocious from the opening whistle and Mexico fed off the energy of the home crowd during a lively start.
Declan Rice was booked inside the opening minute after catching teenage midfielder Gilberto Mora with a high boot, immediately placing England’s midfielder on a tightrope.
Mexico created the first clear opening when Roberto Alvarado delivered a dangerous cross from the right, allowing Raul Jimenez to glance a header towards goal. Jordan Pickford reacted brilliantly, diving low to his right to keep the ball out.
England gradually settled into the contest and began to find joy through Anthony Gordon down the left flank, but clear-cut opportunities remained limited in a tense opening half-hour.
Bellingham strikes twice in two minutes
The game exploded into life in the 36th minute.
After Mexico failed to capitalise on a promising attack, Pickford launched a quick counter with a sharp throw to Rice.
The midfielder released Bukayo Saka down the right and the Arsenal winger delivered an inviting cross that evaded Harry Kane before finding Bellingham unmarked at the far post. The Real Madrid star powered a header home to silence the packed stadium.
Barely two minutes later, England struck again.
Elliot Anderson won possession high up the pitch before Gordon fed Bellingham. The midfielder exchanged passes with Kane before arriving in the box to finish from close range and complete a 90-second brace that left Mexico stunned.
Quinones sparks Mexico revival

Mexico refused to fold and found a route back into the match before the interval.
Alvarado’s dangerous free-kick caused problems inside the England penalty area and the loose ball fell kindly for Julian Quinones, who reacted quickest to volley into the roof of the net.
The goal transformed the mood inside the stadium and Mexico nearly levelled before half-time. Pickford produced another excellent save to deny Jimenez’s powerful header before Bellingham made a crucial last-ditch clearance from Cesar Montes moments later.
Quansah sees red as drama intensifies
England nearly restored their two-goal cushion shortly after the restart when Nico O’Reilly’s deflected volley crashed against the post.
However, the momentum shifted midway through the second half.
Initially escaping punishment for a challenge on Jesus Gallardo, Jarell Quansah was eventually shown a straight red card following a VAR review. The referee judged that the defender’s follow-through endangered his opponent, reducing England to 10 men with more than half an hour remaining.
Tuchel responded by sacrificing attacking options and introducing defensive reinforcements, but there was still more drama to come.
Kane penalty followed by Mexico response
Despite having a man less, England regained control of the match in the 58th minute.
Kane muscled his way through a challenge before Anthony Gordon raced onto the loose ball and was brought down by goalkeeper Raul Rangel. The referee pointed straight to the spot and, after a lengthy delay, Kane calmly converted to make it 3-1.
But the celebrations barely had time to settle before potential disaster struck.
Mexico were awarded a penalty of their own less than 10 minutes later after VAR instructed the referee to review a challenge involving Kane and Brian Gutierrez. Following another pitchside review, the spot-kick was given.
Jimenez stepped up and coolly sent Pickford the wrong way to reduce the deficit to 3-2 and set up a frantic finale.
England hold on under siege
The final stages became an exercise in survival for England. Mexico launched wave after wave of attacks as the hosts searched desperately for an equaliser. Gimenez, Alvarado and Gutierrez all threatened, while Pickford dealt with several crosses superbly.
Spence produced a superb sliding tackle to deny Gimenez, while Marc Guehi and Dan Burn repeatedly cleared dangerous deliveries into the box.
Eleven minutes of stoppage time only increased the tension, and the noise.
Mexico came agonisingly close with virtually the final action when a loose ball ricocheted through the six-yard area, but John Stones slid in to divert it just wide before England finally cleared their lines.
The final whistle sparked euphoric celebrations among the England players, who had survived one of the most demanding tests of their tournament to book a quarter-final showdown with Norway.



