A historic red-card frenzy in Mexico City and a fever-stricken South Korean victory in Guadalajara have set the table for the largest World Cup ever. Now, the spotlight shifts to Canada’s debut on home soil.
History finally arrived on Thursday as the 2026 World Cup kicked off, delivering immediate drama that defined the expanded 48-team format. Two opening Group A matches launched a 39-day tournament spanning Canada, the United States, and Mexico, proving instantly that unpredictability will be the defining theme. For Canadian fans, the opening day served as both a spectacular preview and a critical scouting report for their own team’s upcoming challenge.
Mexico Breaks Two Decades of Opening Match Struggles
The tournament began under the iconic lights of the Estadio Azteca, where over 80,000 fans created a deafening atmosphere for the curtain-raiser featuring musical performances by Shakira and Maná. The match between Mexico and South Africa quickly spiraled into one of the most chaotic openers in World Cup history.
While the game started cautiously, the ninth minute changed everything. Erik Lira stripped a South African defender, allowing Julián Quiñones to slip a ball through goalkeeper Ronyon Williams’ legs for the tournament’s first goal. The second goal carried immense emotional weight. Raúl Jiménez, having survived a terrifying skull fracture in 2020 while playing for Wolverhampton, rose to head home his first-ever World Cup goal, leaving the pitch in tears.
However, the most enduring story of the night was the discipline. Brazilian referee Wilton Sampaio issued three red cards, a record for a World Cup opener and the first time three were shown in a match in twenty years. South Africa lost Sphephelo Sithole and Themba Zwane (after a video review caught a swipe on Roberto Alvarado), while Mexico’s César Montes was dismissed late for stopping a breakaway. All three ejected players will now miss their next group fixture.
For the co-hosts, the result was a monumental breakthrough. Javier Aguirre’s squad secured their first-ever victory in a World Cup opening match, ending a streak of five losses and two draws. The 2-0 win, sealed with a clean sheet, featured 17-year-old Gilberto Mora in a central role, marking one of the most convincing performances Mexico has produced in years.
South Korea: The Fever-Stricken Dark Horse Rises
While Mexico’s match was defined by chaos, the second Group A fixture in Guadalajara showcased pure resilience. Ranked 25th globally, South Korea fell behind to 38th-ranked Czechia but rallied to win 2-1 in a partially filled Estadio Akron.
The first half was uninspiring, with both teams booed off by the crowd until Czechia struck in the 59th minute. Captain Ladislav Krejčí outmuscled defenders to head in a long throw, a tactic Czechia relied on heavily during qualifying. South Korea’s response was the match’s highlight. Eight minutes later, Lee Kang-in fed Hwang In-beom, who feigned a shot to deceive two defenders and the keeper before curling the ball into the corner. The build-up involved 25 passes, a sequence among the longest in World Cup history leading to a goal.
The drama continued when Tomáš Souček appeared to restore Czechia’s lead with a 77th-minute header, only for an offside flag, confirmed via review, to nullify the score. Three minutes later, South Korea sealed the victory. Substitute Oh Hyeon-gyu, who admitted later that a 38-degree fever had nearly prevented him from playing, tucked in Hwang’s low cross for the winner. Goalkeeper Kim Seung-gyu then preserved the lead with a diving save deep into stoppage time.
South Korea outshot the Czechs 15 to 8, cementing their status as genuine dark horses. The win also marked another milestone for captain Son Heung-min, now one of only two players to appear at four World Cups for his nation, alongside current head coach Hong Myung-bo.
Group A Dynamics and Canada’s Next Step
- Mexico and South Korea both sit at the top of Group A with three points, separated only by goal difference.
- South Africa and Czechia are both defeated and face selection headaches due to suspensions from red cards.
- Canada begins its campaign on Friday at a sold-out BMO Field in Toronto against Bosnia and Herzegovina.
For Canadian observers, Thursday was merely the warm-up. Jesse Marsch’s team, grouped in Group B alongside Bosnia, Qatar, and Switzerland, faces Bosnia in the first men’s World Cup match ever played on Canadian soil. The squad will complete its group stage at BC Place in Vancouver. After watching three other co-host nations and global heavyweights take the stage, Canada is eager to announce itself to a home crowd that has waited a generation for this moment.
If the opening day proved anything, this expanded World Cup is designed to be loud, fast, and unpredictable. Three red cards, a tearful redemption story, a fever-stricken hero, and a 25-pass masterpiece unfolded before Canada had even kicked a ball. The hosts could not have asked for a more electric overture to a tournament that, for the next five weeks, belongs partially to them.
