Key events
Oh, one other curio from ITV’s England v Argentina 1986 FIFA World Cup classic. As well as winning the Golden Boot that year, Gary Lineker was also planning ahead for a career in broadcasting.
After some studio chat, anchor Brian Moore tells us: “He (Lineker) insisted on the same pre-match build-up and that includes, as he did against Paraguay, a message for all of us back here.”
The camera then cuts to Lineker, who stares into camera and says: “Here we are at the Aztec, we’re going to give it all we’ve got. Be sure and join us here on ITV after the break.”
The delivery is a little monotone and I think he means to say “to join us” but it’s a bit like discovering an early demo from a now iconic band.
For Australian-based fans of the English Premier League, football and sleep deprivation walk hand-in-hand. Christopher Knaus watched every minute of Liverpool’s 2024/25 title campaign so knows a thing or too about how to survive the carnage of through the night viewing. Ahead of the 1am kick-off in Mexico City, this is worth a read.
The FIFA World Cup Classics on ITV are well worth a view. For very obvious reasons, I watched the England v Argentina 1986 Azteca showdown a couple of days ago and it’s fascinating viewing. For most England fans, our collective memories have distilled this classic encounter down to a handful of moments: the ‘Hand of God goal’, Barry Davies’ BBC commentary for Maradona’s second goal – ‘Oh, you have to say that’s magnificent!” – and John Barnes’ brilliant cameo that results in Gary Lineker pulling one back and then somehow not converting a second header from the winger’s left-flank delivery. In my mind, nothing happened between those two Barnes crosses but watch it back and straight from the kick-off after Lineker’s goal, Maradona does a double dragback pirouette to take out all of England’s midfield and then exchanges passes with sub Carlos Tapia, who blasts his shot against the inside of the post. I had absolutely no recall of that!
And, of course, the ITV coverage seems unfamiliar too as Brian Moore hosts a panel featuring Kevin Keegan, Mick Channon and Jimmy Greaves. There are loads of other random nuggets. Despite three second-half goals and other stoppages, the full-time whistle goes at 91 minutes and two seconds while Jim Rosenthal’s on-pitch interview with England boss at full-time Bobby Robson is eye-opening too. Robson does no more than call Maradona’s first goal “dubious” (did he see it properly?) and even back in the studio Keegan describes what pundits would now lose their minds over as “the old pro’s trick”. Overall, the emphasis seems to be very much on it being no disgrace that England lost to a very good team. All very English!
The scene last night outside the Marriott Santa Fe hotel where England are staying. Hardly a baying crowd, is it. More a bunch of young ones getting stuff for their TikToks. Maybe the hardcore don’t know the way to Santa Fe? It’s currently 07:20 in Mexico City.
It’s probably reasonable to ask this: who are the favourites to win in Mexico City tonight? With home advantage, all the talk of altitude and the hosts’ record so far of four wins out of four with no goals conceded, many give the edge to Mexico.
It’s fairly tight but the bookies make England favourites. Note that the draw odds are shorter than they’d be for a standard game.
7/5 England
2/1 Mexico
2/1 Draw
Thanks Taha. Tick. Tick. Tick. Now just 11 hours until Azteca time. Are we (in the UK) planning a pre-match snooze? Will have to be an early one as it’s Brazil v Norway at 9pm BST.
Time for me to head – David Tindall’s back to take the reins.
Kylian Mbappé’s opener was such a simple, pure statement of speed and power.
@Taha The best game so far? The second halves of Cabo Verde–Argentina and Portugal–Croatia were what people now call absolute cinema, but for me France’s performance against Sweden stands above them all.
I genuinely didn’t expect football to still have the power to mesmerise me, to put me in real awe, yet this France proved me wrong.
The live blog thingy asks for people’s game of the tournament so far…
Croatia v Portugal for me.
Just a shame we were denied more of it by micro-analysis of a (maybe) brush of a bloke’s hair in the dying seconds, and denied a couple of other wonderful goals that were only a shoulder offside, in both cases.
Should have been 3-3 going into extra-time, but even as it stood at the end (2-1 to Portugal) it was still a magnificent, completely gripping game of football.
What an email from Martin Bolme:
As an anglophile norwegian this is the biggest day of football since we beat Brazil in the 1998 WC.
But I am also a bit fatigued. And then there is all the Spurs news. As usual in Norway in the 80s and 90s we would pick an english team and I landed on Tottenham in 1991 with Erik the Viking (who’s son plays for Norway), Gazza and Lineker.
So on one hand I think there is too much football, too much transfer gossip, to much ro-ing. But at the same time Norway just might make it to RD16 in our first World Cup in 28 years. Might even meet England
And then there’s Tottenhams transfer-fest. My head cannot process this.
Are we getting more? Like Kroupi? Or Savinho?
Are we winning the league, Taha? That’s my question and I could have started with that. Sorry.
But are we? I know we are not, but at least tell me something positive about the PL season too come.
Tell me Norway will beat Brazil, England will beat Mexico and Spurs will win the league.
Say it!
Martin, Norway will beat Brazil, England will beat Mexico and Spurs will – ah, sorry, let’s be real. I reckon they’ll be better off than 17th, though.
Pete Higginson’s prepped for tonight.
Wolverhampton.
My plan is to make a hot chilli con carne at 6 followed by a five hour snooze with alarm set to Midnight.
I’ve got a horrible feeling Mexico will batter us with two goals in the first twenty minutes as we acclimatise and Wolves’ Jimenez will score.
So predicting 2-2, extra time and a win on penalties.
I, for one, am just looking forward to the end of the altitude discourse.
I am thoroughly enjoying Barney’s World Cup diary.
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Paraguay’s antics last night have taken me back to 2006, when the Netherlands and Portugal were competing to see who could end up with the fewest players on the pitch. Yep, the Battle of Nuremberg, where four players were sent off, with 16 yellows shown. This is worth a watch just for the ultra-dramatic voiceover.
Plenty going on BTL: would be great to hear what everyone’s game of the tournament has been. I’ll go with anything including France – every time Michael Olise gets a hold of the ball, I’m locked in.
Krishnamoorthy v writes in:
While, understandably, the whole focus is on the England Mexico match, the earlier one of Brazil Norway will be a cracker. This Brazil team does not have the aura with some of their best teams and individual brilliance is sort of restricted to Allison and Vinicius. I have been saying this all along and I will repeat – if this Brazil team prevails over Norway or goes all the way or even lift the trophy it would be due to one of the sharpest minds in the football world – Don ‘Cool’ Carlo!
He really is the coolest.
Dumfries joins Real Madrid from Inter
Real Madrid have announced the signing of Denzel Dumfries on a four-year deal from Inter. The Dutchman – who spent five seasons in Italy, reaching the Champions League final twice – will be competing with Trent Alexander-Arnold at right-back.
England have played Mexico once before at the World Cup … back in 1966. Bobby Charlton and Roger Hunt scored in a 2-0 group-stage victory for the eventual winners. Charlton’s strike was proper.
Aramco’s branding will also be in your face when England play Australia today in the Women’s T20 World Cup final at Lord’s.
Um, what?
The England head coach was also asked by a local journalist to confirm wild suggestions that they had used Viagra as a means of mastering the altitude, drawing laughter from Tuchel and Jordan Henderson, who addressed the media with him. “The information didn’t reach me, that is not true,” Tuchel said.
Hello, all. Philippe Diallo, the president of the French football federation, has condemned “in the strongest possible terms” remarks made by former Paraguay goalkeeper José Luis Chilavert.
I’m on a raised chair and the altitude is getting to me so I’ll hand you now to Taha Hashim for more updates. Mexico v England kick-off countdown clock: 14 hours to go!
The pod squad are here with their daily offering. Max and Barry are joined by Archie Rhind-Tutt, Barney Ronay and Philippe Auclair. A masterclass in the dark arts from Paraguay, Mexico v England preview, Barney’s tales from Miami and your questions answered. Have a listen.
A visual history of England in the Azteca. Look carefully and you’ll notice that Peter Beardsley isn’t the only one with his front teeth missing.
Man Utd target £50m Andrey Santos from Chelsea
Will Unwin
Domestic news now and an exclusive from our Will Unwin. After missing out on Elliot Anderson and Mateus Fernandes, Manchester United have their eyes on Chelsea midfielder Andrey Santos.
To further reduce altitude panic, here’s the Memory Lane I wrote for Football Daily yesterday. Hopefully Motty’s words will help put England fans at ease.
MEMORY LANE
While that game against Argentina in the 1986 World Cup is the one we associate with England in the Azteca, it’s worth a reminder that the Three Lions do have winning form in Mexico’s iconic home stadium. Fresh from a hat-trick against Poland in the final group game, Gary Lineker scored twice in a 3-0 win against Paraguay in the last 16. Just before two Gary Stevens were involved in the buildup to Lineker’s second goal, the BBC’s John Motson chirped: “England have adjusted ever so well … 6,000 feet higher up than we were [the group games took place in Monterrey, a mere 1,800 feet above sea level] but we’re running as hard and as well as the Paraguayans.” Lineker quickly checked to see if he was offside before celebrating with the Tottenham Gary Stevens and a mass of white England shirts in the crowd of 98,728.
Here’s England’s Jordan Henderson on training in the altitude of Mexico City. Is it a problem?
“You can feel it a little bit, you can feel something. I felt it a little bit, even when you just land and you come to the hotel and you’re just walking around, you can feel something.
“And then today, in training, for me personally I felt that maybe in the first 10-15 minutes and then once training got going I stopped thinking about it so much and just concentrated on training.
“So hopefully when the game comes tomorrow, once the lads have done the warm-up and they’ve got going then the full focus is just on the game, and that’s all the focus is on.”
Co-host count: one down, two remain. Can England eliminate Mexico? And how about Belgium knocking out the USA? Here’s Alexander Abnos on the game in Seattle on Monday.
“This won’t be the first meeting between the sides in 2026. In March, Belgium humbled the US 5-2 in Atlanta – a result that created significant doubt about the Americans’ prospects at this World Cup.
De Cuyper warned against drawing too many conclusions from Belgium’s victory in March, saying the scoreline gave the game a “distorted picture”. He also praised Senne Lammens’s performance in that match, saying the result could have been different without the goalkeeper.”
Mbappe v Galarza gallery. You all wanted it.
Here’s French boss Didier Deschamps on the win over Paraguay.
“It wasn’t easy. If we’d taken one of our chances late in the game, it would have been a much more comfortable finish. Paraguay use every trick in the book. It’s not necessarily the kind of football people enjoy watching, but we stayed focused and that’s not easy to do.” Fair play. And fair play to Mbappe for just laughing at the constant attempts to foul him. Wrong target I guess.
By the way, while Paraguay’s players received no bookings between them (a sort of beauty in that; it makes for a great line), the French picked up three. Here’s how:
Bradley Barcola (roughing)
Manu Kone (tripping)
Michael Olise (Unsportsmanlike conduct)
Paraguay’s players did absolutely none of that. Definitely not.
Many of you BTL are very cross with referee Ilgiz Tantashev after his performance in the France v Paraguay game. I’d argue that it wasn’t his finest hour but at least he got through the full 90 minutes…
(From AP wires 2024): “The first substitution made in the Olympics men’s soccer semifinal match between Morocco and Spain on Monday was the referee. The ref, Ilgiz Tantashev of Uzbekistan, limped off the field 15 minutes into the match shortly after he was inadvertently knocked down by Spain defender Marc Pubill near midfield. Pubill appeared to be pushed by a Moroccan player. He tumbled forward and into Tantashev’s right leg. Play was stopped for a few minutes while Tantashev received treatment. But the referee couldn’t continue and was replaced by fourth official Glenn Nyberg of Sweden.”
That Paraguay display against France, eh! Absolute pure shithousery. And the fact that no Paraguay player was booked should easily make the list of ‘Top 10 Extraordinary Things at the 2026 World Cup’. Watch the game back and explain how Matias Galarza and Juan Caceres don’t pick up about 12 yellow cards between them. The absolute rogues. Genuinely remarkable stuff. Let’s not ride the high horse though. I’m more thinking a documentary in about 20 years’ time when Mbappe is reunited with the pair of them in a bar in Paris/Asunción and they all have a good laugh about it.
Jacob Steinberg
Talking of Harry Kane, here’s Jacob Steinberg’s piece on the England striker. Can he be the difference maker again when the Three Lions take on Mexico?
“This is a modern great who stands the test of time. They had this debate on the Stick to Football podcast this week; it did not feel ridiculous when Gary Neville, Roy Keane, Ian Wright and Jill Scott had Kane up there with Bobby Moore and Sir Bobby Charlton in England’s top three.”
Kylian Mbappe has pulled level with Lionel Messi at the top of the Golden Boot charts. Both icons have seven after the Frenchman tucked away the winning penalty against Paraguay.
Erling Haaland (5), Harry Kane (5) and Vinícius Júnior (4) all have the chance to close the gap in the next 24 hours. And also look out for Spain’s Mikel Oyarzabal (4) creeping up on the rails.
Seven has already beaten the top scorer’s tally from 10 of the last 12 World Cups.
Brazil star Rodrygo is back home after sampling the World Cup in the United States. In his latest column for us, he notices the differences between a country enjoying the World Cup and one obsessed by it. A reminder that Brazil play Norway in the last-16 today. Kick-off 9pm BST.
“The rhythm of life in Brazil – the “land of football” as we call it – is dictated by the team’s progress in the World Cup. Work schedules are affected, as are the operations of certain public services. Daily life doesn’t stop, but we go to great lengths to shape it around Brazil’s matches. Afterwards, as one of our sayings goes, we “play catchup” with everyday life.”
Maybe life doesn’t begin at 40 but it doesn’t mean the end for a world-class footballer. So says Emma Hayes in her latest World Cup column.
Sid Lowe
It’s Q&A time with none other than Luis de la Fuente! Spain’s manager answers your questions on advice for Lamine Yamal, the hardest thing about being a coach and how the current team compares to the winners of 2010. Sid Lowe has pieced it all together.
Canada boss Jesse Marsch is a polarising figure. In fact, you’d be forgiven for thinking his first name is ‘Theinsufferable’ if scrolling and asking around. Were Canada the better side, as he claims here? You have to enjoy the response of Morocco manager Mohamed Ouahbi. “It takes some nerve to say that when you lose 3-0.” Quotes here after Morocco’s clinical display of finishing.
David Hytner
It’s just gone 1.30am in Mexico City. Is there a cacophony of noise outside the hotel? Are England’s players managing any sleep? The game kicks off at 6pm local time or, as those in the UK know, 1am BST. Here’s David Hytner’s latest report from Mexico City.
“England stepped off their seventh flight in 12 days on Friday and are about to play their fourth game in 13 days. The period was always going to be a grind; one simply to plot a course through.”
Nick Ames
Our reporters are in Mexico City for the big one and between running 5ks to show the effects of altitude, they’ve also written some words. Let’s start with Nick Ames, who has quotes from both managers: England’s Thomas Tuchel and Mexico’s Javier Aguirre.
Morocco end run of co-hosts Canada
Jonathan Wilson
Jonathan Wilson was at Houston Stadium to witness 2022 semi-finalists Morocco beat Canada. Three second-half goals settled this one as Mohamed Ouahbi’s side became the first African nation to reach the World Cup quarter-finals twice.
“This wasn’t really about the new style. This was a very old-fashioned Morocco performance, dogged and dour, admirably competitive, and with the undoubted ability of the more creative players seen almost entirely in counterattacks. Whether their cagey start was by design or because they were forced into it by Canada’s ferocity, though, was unclear.”
France battle past Paraguay to reach quarter-finals
Paul MacInnes
Let’s start with Paul MacInnes’ match report from a hot and sweaty Philadelphia Stadium. The 1-0 win for France was a repeat of the scoreline from their last-16 tie in 1998 and we all know how that World Cup ended.
“The World Cup favourites were forced to drop a gear or two but still had too much for a Paraguay team that set out for a fight but were ultimately no more than a nuisance.”
Preamble
Good morning/afternoon/evening wherever you are! It feels like we’re getting to the business end of the World Cup now as highlighted by the first two quarter-finalists emerging. Morocco were too clinical for co-hosts Canada while France came through a bruising encounter with Paraguay.
We’ll have all the reaction to those two last-16 ties and build-up to the much-anticipated clash between Mexico and England in the Azteca. There’s also the little matter of Brazil v Norway this evening so, yeah, the serious stuff is really happening now. Ready for day 25 of the World Cup? Let’s do it!
