By Angelica Medina
MEXICO CITY, June 1 (Reuters) – Mexico goalkeeper Guillermo Ochoa has spent two decades turning World Cups into personal theatre but the veteran has now become something more complicated – not just a member of the squad but a symbol of a team caught between nostalgia and renewal.
Co-hosts Mexico open their Group A campaign against South Africa at the Azteca Stadium before facing South Korea in Guadalajara and the Czech Republic back in Mexico City.
The schedule adds weight to every selection call and puts coach Javier Aguirre’s transition project under scrutiny.
Ochoa’s case is built on more than sentiment. His breakout saves against Brazil at the 2014 tournament and his penalty stop against Poland in Qatar eight years later helped to make him one of the country’s defining figures on the global stage.
He has been part of five finals squads, started at the last three editions and remains one of El Tri’s few active players with proven authority at the highest level.
Aguirre’s veteran core gives Mexico structure.
Edson Alvarez, now with West Ham United, anchors midfield and provides leadership; Fulham’s Raul Jimenez offers experience and a penalty-area reference point; while defenders such as Johan Vasquez and Cesar Montes give Mexico a tested base.
But the more revealing part of the squad debate is the group pushing from below.
The 17-year-old Tijuana attacking midfielder Gilberto Mora has become the clearest symbol of Mexico’s future. Meanwhile, Armando ‘Hormiga’ Gonzalez, a 23-year-old striker with Chivas, brings domestic momentum and a different attacking profile.
Obed Vargas, a 20-year-old midfielder with the Seattle Sounders, offers another option from outside Liga MX.
That mix gives Mexico’s build-up its central tension. Ochoa and the veterans can help to absorb the noise of a home tournament; the younger players can inject pace, ambition and the sense that 2026 is more than a farewell tour for a familiar generation.
For Aguirre, the challenge is balance rather than sentiment. Too much caution risks another predictable campaign. Too much youth could expose players still adapting to internationals.
Mexico’s best outcome may depend on connecting both eras: the experience to manage the occasion and the fresh talent to change it.
(Reporting by Angelica Medina in Mexico City; Editing by Ken Ferris)







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