Mexico 2-0 South Africa: World Cup 2026 Opens With Drama, Three Red Cards and Raul Jimenez Tears at the Azteca

Mexico beat South Africa 2-0 in the World Cup 2026 opening match at the Estadio Azteca. Quinones scored in the 9th minute, Jimenez added a second but three red cards — two for South Africa — made it a dramatic opening night.

Published: June 12, 2026 |   Author: Hemim SK

The FIFA World Cup 2026 has begun. And it began exactly the way this tournament always does — with drama, emotion, controversy and moments that will be talked about for years.

Mexico beat South Africa 2-0 at the Estadio Azteca on June 11 in front of a deafening crowd of 87,000 people in Mexico City. Julian Quinones scored the fastest goal of the 2026 World Cup in just the 9th minute. Raul Jimenez doubled the lead in the 67th minute in an emotionally charged moment dedicated to his recently deceased father. And the match produced three red cards — making it the most controversial opening match in World Cup history.

The World Cup 2026 era has officially begun. It started with exactly the kind of chaos and emotion this tournament is famous for.


Mexico 2-0 South Africa — Match Facts

Date: Thursday June 11, 2026
Venue: Estadio Azteca, Mexico City, Mexico
Attendance: 87,000
Group: A

Goals:
Mexico — J. Quinones 9′
Mexico — R. Jimenez 67′

Red Cards:
South Africa — S. Sithole 49′
South Africa — T. Zwane 84′
Mexico — C. Montes 90+2′

Man of the Match: Julian Quinones
Result: Mexico advance to 3 points in Group A — South Africa remain on 0


Minute by Minute — How the Match Unfolded

The atmosphere inside the Azteca from the very first whistle was unlike anything seen at a World Cup opening match in modern history. 87,000 Mexican fans — the largest crowd at any match in 2026 so far — created a wall of noise that shook the stadium’s foundations. Green flags, fireworks, horns, chants. The Azteca roared.

9′ — GOAL MEXICO — JULIAN QUINONES

The fastest goal in World Cup 2026 history came just nine minutes in. Julian Quinones, the Colombian-born Mexican striker who became eligible for El Tri through naturalisation, collected the ball on the right side of the penalty area, turned his marker with a sharp body feint and drove a low, precise shot into the bottom left corner. The Azteca erupted. Mexico were ahead. The World Cup had its first goal.

Quinones’ celebration — arms spread wide, screaming at the sky, surrounded by teammates — was the image that went around the world instantly. Fabrizio Romano described it as the “opening dance for this 2026 World Cup.”

49′ — RED CARD SOUTH AFRICA — S. SITHOLE

Four minutes after half time, South Africa were reduced to ten men. S. Sithole received a straight red card for a challenge that the referee deemed dangerous play. The decision was controversial — replays showed debate about whether it merited a red — but the card stood. South Africa’s already difficult task became almost impossible.

67′ — GOAL MEXICO — RAUL JIMENEZ

The most emotional moment of the entire match. Raul Jimenez — Mexico’s veteran striker who had recently lost his father — scored Mexico’s second goal with a clinical finish from inside the penalty area. The goal was set up by a flowing team move and Jimenez converted with the composure of a player who has spent his career delivering in big moments.

What followed was one of the most moving scenes of the 2026 World Cup so far. Jimenez pointed to the sky immediately after scoring. Tears streamed down his face. His teammates surrounded him. The Azteca fell briefly quiet before erupting in the most emotional roar of the night.

Fabrizio Romano noted that Jimenez was “feeling emotional for his dad recently lost” — and the image of the striker weeping while pointing to the heavens became the defining human moment of Day 1.

84′ — RED CARD SOUTH AFRICA — T. ZWANE

South Africa’s miserable evening got worse with six minutes to go when Themba Zwane — one of their most experienced players and a key attacking threat — received a second yellow card and was dismissed. South Africa were down to nine men. The match was effectively over.

90+2′ — RED CARD MEXICO — C. MONTES

In the final seconds of the match, with the result secured, Mexico’s Cesar Montes received a red card for a late challenge. Three red cards in the World Cup 2026 opening match — the most in the history of a tournament opener. The Azteca booed the decision loudly.

The final whistle blew. Mexico won 2-0. The World Cup era began.


Match Analysis — What We Learned

Mexico delivered what was needed from a co-host in their opening match — a win, goals and control — but the manner of the victory raised questions as much as it answered them.

The positive: Quinones was electric in the first half. His goal showed exactly the clinical, direct quality that Mexico needed from their attacking positions. His movement, his sharpness and his confidence in a high-pressure environment was the best individual performance by a Mexican player in their opening World Cup match in years.

The positive: Jimenez showed the experience and composure that a veteran striker brings. His goal was technically excellent — the right touch, the right angle, the right power. And the emotional context of his father’s passing added a layer of humanity to the evening that reminded every viewer watching why football matters beyond results.

The concern: Mexico only created two real clear chances despite having eleven vs eleven for most of the first half and eleven vs ten for most of the second. South Africa — who could not score against Nicaragua in pre-tournament — threatened very rarely but Mexico did not dominate with the kind of convincing control that a co-host with an 87,000-strong home crowd should produce.

The red cards: South Africa’s two dismissals changed the match completely. With eleven players they were competitive and organised for 49 minutes. With ten and then nine they had no chance. Mexico’s victory over a nine-man South Africa in the final ten minutes will not tell them much about their readiness for tougher opponents.

The South Korea test on June 18 at Estadio Akron in Guadalajara — as covered in our Mexico World Cup 2026 Schedule — will be a completely different challenge. South Korea are sharp, disciplined and lost none of their quality between their pre-tournament form and Day 1 of the tournament.

The Azteca Moment

Whatever the tactical analysis, the Azteca on June 11 delivered the kind of occasion that justifies the entire World Cup. The stadium that hosted the 1970 final, the 1986 final, the Hand of God — it hosted the opening match of the biggest World Cup in history and produced exactly the passion, the drama and the emotion that the occasion demanded.

Jimenez weeping for his father while 87,000 people sang around him. Quinones dancing in front of the Azteca crowd after the fastest goal of the tournament. Three red cards in 90 minutes making this the most chaotic World Cup opener in modern history.

The 2026 World Cup has begun. And it has already delivered more story in one match than most tournaments manage in a week.


Group A Standings After Day 1

1. Mexico — 3 points (W 2-0 South Africa)
2. South Korea — 3 points 
3. Czechia — 0 points 
4. South Africa — 0 points (L 0-2 Mexico)

What Happens Next for Both Teams

Mexico: Face South Korea on June 18 at Estadio Akron, Guadalajara. Their biggest test in Group A. South Korea are sharp and motivated. Mexico need to improve their attacking output significantly.

South Africa: Now face a very difficult path to qualification. They play Czechia on June 18 at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta. They are without Sithole and Zwane through suspension. Their attack must find goals they could not manage against Nicaragua or Mexico.


Need To Know
What was the Mexico vs South Africa score?
Mexico beat South Africa 2-0 in the World Cup 2026 opening match at the Estadio Azteca on June 11. Goals from Julian Quinones (9′) and Raul Jimenez (67′).

Who scored for Mexico against South Africa?
Julian Quinones scored in the 9th minute — the first goal of the 2026 World Cup — and Raul Jimenez scored in the 67th minute dedicating his goal to his recently deceased father.

How many red cards were there in Mexico vs South Africa?
Three red cards — the most in any World Cup opening match in history. South Africa had two players sent off: S. Sithole in the 49th minute and T. Zwane in the 84th minute. Mexico’s C. Montes was dismissed in the 90+2nd minute.

Why was Raul Jimenez emotional after scoring?
Raul Jimenez recently lost his father. When he scored Mexico’s second goal in the 67th minute he dedicated it to his father by pointing to the sky and was visibly emotional in tears. It was one of the most moving moments of the 2026 World Cup so far.

Who scored the first goal of World Cup 2026?
Julian Quinones scored the first goal of the FIFA World Cup 2026 in the 9th minute of Mexico vs South Africa at the Estadio Azteca on June 11, 2026.

What happened to South Africa at World Cup 2026?
South Africa lost 0-2 to co-hosts Mexico in the World Cup 2026 opening match. They had two players sent off — Sithole (49′) and Zwane (84′) — leaving them with nine men for the final six minutes. They now face an uphill task to qualify from Group A.

Mexico 2-0 South Africa. The World Cup 2026 is open. Three red cards. One goal of pure technique. One goal of pure emotion. The Azteca delivered the occasion the tournament deserved for its opening night.

Raul Jimenez pointing to the sky, tears on his face, 87,000 people singing around him — that is the image of Day 1. That is what the World Cup is.

Day 2 continues tonight. Canada face Bosnia-Herzegovina at BMO Field in Toronto. USA face Paraguay at SoFi Stadium in Los Angeles. The tournament is just getting started.


Read next: South Korea vs Czechia — Lineups, Preview and Prediction — World Cup 2026 Day 1 Match 2

Related: Mexico World Cup 2026 Schedule — All El Tri Matches, Dates and Times

Related: South Africa World Cup 2026 Schedule — Bafana Bafana Full Group A Guide

Related: World Cup 2026 Groups: Every Team and Who Will Advance


What did you think of the World Cup 2026 opening match — was three red cards too much drama for Day 1? Tell us in the comments!

 

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