FIFA World Cup
Mexico's fifth-match curse has a tougher new version in the 2026 World Cup
The 2026 World Cup could present a unique opportunity to finally break the historic barrier of Mexico’s fifth match curse.… Show More
The 2026 World Cup could present a unique opportunity to finally break the historic barrier of Mexico’s fifth match curse.
For almost three decades, Mexico’s World Cup story was defined by the same painful ceiling: the famous “quinto partido.” From 1994 to 2018, El Tri reached the round of 16 seven consecutive times and lost every single one.
But the curse quietly changed in Qatar 2022. Mexico did not even reach the fourth match, crashing out in the group stage for the first time since 1978. That made the 2026 World Cup more than a chance at redemption. It turned it into a test of whether Mexico can rebuild its old reliability first, and only then chase the historic breakthrough that has haunted the program for years.
The fifth match is no longer one win away
The expanded 48-team format changes everything. In the old 32-team World Cup, Mexico needed to survive the group and win one knockout match to reach the quarterfinals. In 2026, with a new round of 32, El Tri must win two elimination games to reach that same stage. In other words, the famous fifth match is no longer the immediate door after the group. It is a longer hallway.
That is why winning Group A matters so much. Mexico will face South Africa, South Korea and Czechia, a group that looks manageable on paper but dangerous in rhythm. South Africa brings the emotional edge of a team returning to the World Cup. South Korea has tournament experience and pace. Czechia adds the European physical test that can make a group finale uncomfortable. Mexico has home advantage, but also home pressure.
The real danger is the bracket not just the opponent
Under the new format, the top two teams from each group advance, along with the eight best third-place teams. That makes qualification slightly more forgiving, but the path after that less predictable. A group winner can get a more favorable matchup against a third-place team, while finishing second or third may immediately throw Mexico into a harder bracket.
That may be the new version of the curse. For years, Mexico's obstacle was a single round-of-16 match. Under the expanded format, the challenge becomes more complex, requiring consistency across multiple knockout rounds before the quarterfinals even come into view.







