Wednesday, July 08, 2026 | Muharram 22, 1448 H
broken clouds
weather
OMAN
26°C / 26°C
EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Aguirre bids farewell with pride, backs Marquez to lead Mexico forward

Mexico coach Javier Aguirre reacts. — Reuters
Mexico coach Javier Aguirre reacts. — Reuters
minus
plus

Javier Aguirre backed Rafa Marquez to lead Mexico into the future after the co-hosts' World Cup run ended with a 3-2 defeat by England on Sunday, bringing the curtain down on Aguirre's third spell in charge.


Aguirre, who had already made clear he would ⁠leave his role after the tournament, said former Mexico captain Marquez was ready to ⁠continue the work done with a squad that restored belief during the country's deepest World Cup run in 40 years.


England booked their place in the quarter-finals after surviving a late Mexico push at the ‌Azteca Stadium, where the home side fell short ​despite a spirited fightback.


"I ⁠would have liked to say goodbye to my people with a ​victory. That hurts," Aguirre told reporters. "We tried."


Jude Bellingham's quick-fire double put England in control before Julian Quinones pulled one back for Mexico. Harry Kane added a second-half penalty ​after England had been reduced to 10 men, and Raul Jimenez's late spot-kick was not enough to prevent Mexico's exit.

Mexico fans looks dejected at a fan zone after England's Jude Bellingham scores their second goal. — Reuters
Mexico fans looks dejected at a fan zone after England's Jude Bellingham scores their second goal. — Reuters

"The players need to leave with their heads held high," Aguirre said. "Today it could not be. We failed to capitalise, but I want to thank them all."


The match, delayed ‌by one hour because of adverse weather around the Azteca, was played in front ​of a passionate home crowd that Aguirre has often described as Mexico's "12th player".


The fans roared ​Mexico ‌on ⁠in the closing stages, chanting "yes we can" as the co-hosts pushed for an equaliser, but England held firm to advance to a quarter-final against Norway in Miami on Saturday.


Aguirre said ​he was leaving with pride despite the pain of elimination, pointing ⁠to the unity ​of the squad and the renewed connection with supporters.


"I leave with a lot of pride," he said. "These players made me very happy. We recovered the sense of belonging and the identity of this team."


Marquez, who captained Mexico at five World Cups and worked alongside ​Aguirre during the tournament, is expected to take the project forward after ​the veteran coach's departure.


"I wish him the best," Aguirre said. "He is more than capable, and he will do better than me." — Reuters


SHARE ARTICLE
Most Read
No Image
ROP allows up to 50% vehicle window tinting Oman’s mega pumped hydro bet: Investing in a 100-year energy asset TRA warns against the use of VPNs Motorists caught driving above 200 km/h on Sultan Said bin Taimour Road
FOLLOW US
arrow up
home icon