The headline outputs are clean and difficult to argue with:
That blend - results plus breathing room - is what separates teams that simply qualify from teams that look ready to manage knockout football. Mexico haven’t needed chaos or last-ditch moments; they’ve stacked wins, and that steadiness travels well.
Ochoa making a record sixth World Cup appearance matters beyond sentiment. Tournament football punishes instability: set-piece organisation, game management, and emotional control often swing ties more than fluency in open play. A goalkeeper with that level of World Cup exposure effectively acts as an on-pitch coach, especially in the tight minutes when knockout matches tilt.
Starting 17-year-old Gilberto Mora - and seeing him shine - is a selection decision with consequences. The update notes he became the youngest player to start at the tournament in 24 years, and that is a hard statement of intent: Mexico are not merely protecting a result, they’re expanding the ceiling of the squad inside the tournament itself.
Mexico now move into the next phase with maximum momentum. The next storyline is whether that mix - veteran spine, fearless youth, and group-stage efficiency - holds when the margin for error drops to a single bad half.