Jude Bellingham struck twice in two devastating first-half minutes as England weathered a red card, the thin air of Mexico City, and 11 minutes of desperate stoppage time to beat the co-hosts 3-2 and reach the World Cup quarterfinals.
Thomas Tuchel's side produced a performance of breathtaking efficiency and iron-willed resilience at the Estadio Azteca, ending Mexico's tournament on their own soil after the hosts had not conceded a single goal before kickoff.
Kickoff was delayed by an hour due to severe thunderstorms and lightning over the capital, the second consecutive knockout match at the venue to be pushed back by the weather.
When the action finally began, the electric atmosphere inside the ground was matched by the fury of the contest.
Bellingham broke the deadlock in the 36th minute, rising to meet a Bukayo Saka cross with a firm header that left goalkeeper Raúl Rangel rooted.
Two minutes later he struck again, this time fed by Harry Kane, to put England in commanding control.
Mexico responded almost immediately. Julián Quiñones pounced from point-blank range after a Jesus Gallardo free kick was not cleared, hauling the hosts back to 2-1 before half-time and sending the crowd into a frenzy.
The tie lurched again in the 54th minute when Jarell Quansah was shown a straight red card, reducing England to ten men with more than a third of the match remaining. The Azteca sensed blood.
Yet England extended their lead against the run of play. Anthony Gordon was fouled in the box by Rangel, and Kane stepped up to convert the penalty coolly in the 60th minute, restoring a two-goal cushion.
Mexico were handed a lifeline nine minutes later when VAR spotted a Kane foul inside the area.
Raúl Jiménez sent the goalkeeper the wrong way from the spot to make it 3-2, and the final twenty minutes became an exercise in English survival.
Eleven minutes of added time tested every nerve.
John Stones produced a desperate goal-line clearance, Dan Burn threw himself in front of a point-blank effort, and Jordan Henderson collected a yellow card from the bench in the 98th minute as tensions boiled over.
For Mexico, it was a heartbreaking exit on home soil. They had entered the knockout rounds with a perfect defensive record, yet conceded three times to an England side operating with clinical precision even when outnumbered.
Bellingham's brace underlined his status as one of the tournament's outstanding performers, combining aerial power and razor-sharp movement to dismantle a defence that had previously looked impenetrable.
England advance to face Norway in the quarterfinals, carrying the memory of a night at 2, 200 metres above sea level where they proved that Tuchel's squad possesses the resilience, and the quality, to win this World Cup.








