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England heroes made on incredible night at Azteca

England beat Mexico 3-2 at the Azteca in a World Cup thriller, withstanding altitude, storms and a red card.

Sport

England heroes made on incredible night at Azteca

England's players dropped to their knees in sheer elation and exhaustion at the end of a performance fit for heroes as Mexico's great fortress of the Azteca was breached.

On a spine-tingling night of drama, emotion and pure theatre in one of sport's most atmospheric arenas, England delivered one of their great World Cup victories – arguably their best since the World Cup was won at Wembley in 1966.

England beat Mexico 3-2 at the Azteca in a World Cup thriller, withstanding altitude, storms and a red card.

Head coach Thomas Tuchel, who shook two-goal hero Jude Bellingham in sheer joy after the final whistle before the pair collapsed into each other's arms, had masterminded exactly the sort of win the Football Association had in mind when he was appointed.

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England won 3-2 to move forward to play Norway in the quarter-final in Miami on Saturday at 22:00 BST. The scoreline alone barely touches the sides of a night that will never be forgotten by anyone who experienced it.

Tuchel and his players had been presented with barriers from the moment they arrived in Mexico, from the Azteca's altitude of more than 7,000ft, the sheer noise and hostility they were confronted with here, the game delayed for an hour by storms, then Jarell Quansah's red card early in the second half.

All overcome. The World Cup quest continues.

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Mexico had lost only two of 89 competitive games at the Azteca before England won – and it is easy to see why. Supporters lined the roads five hours before kick-off, the noise at kick-off was deafening, with some Mexico supporters in tears as they sang the national anthem. The cracks of thunder, flashes of lightning and the dark clouds over the Azteca as kick-off was delayed only added to the sense of unfolding drama.

Into this cauldron walked England, questioned because of spluttering progress to the last 16 but about to show what they can be to their fans inside the stadium, as well as those glued to TV and radios in the early hours back home as the game stretched towards daybreak.

England spent every reserve they had in these alien conditions high above sea level – all of which makes this the most memorable win of Tuchel's reign and one to stand alongside any in recent years.

Former England captain Alan Shearer told BBC Sport: "Those players have represented their country in magnificent form. Every single player had the right attitude. Everything that could have gone against them, everything that was thrown at them - the energy, the altitude - they have got past all of that and they deserved it. That is an incredible performance from start to finish."

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