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Soccer-Mexico ease past Ghana in World Cup warm-up in Puebla

By Thomson Reuters May 22, 2026 | 11:52 PM

By Janina Nuno Rios

PUEBLA, Mexico, May 22 (Reuters) – Mexico beat Ghana 2-0 in Puebla on Friday in a World Cup warm-up that offered a glimpse of the excitement building less ​than three weeks before the country opens the tournament.

While ‌Puebla is not among Mexico’s World Cup host cities, fans in green shirts created a lively atmosphere throughout the night. Repeated Mexican waves rolled around the stadium despite visible empty sections closed under FIFA sanctions linked to discriminatory chants at ‌previous ​national team matches.

Brian Gutierrez set the tone ⁠immediately, curling home from the ⁠edge of the box after two minutes at Cuauhtemoc Stadium.

Teenage Liga MX sensation Gil Mora struck the post in the first half, and Alexis Vega had a header ruled out for offside ​before the break.

“He’s a different player, we’ve always said that,” Mexico coach Javier Aguirre said of Mora, who made his first appearance ⁠for Mexico since November after returning ⁠from injury.

“He’s brave, direct, vertical … he gives us great ​joy because he’s Mexican and because he’s back without pain.”

Ghana, with recently ​appointed coach Carlos Queiroz absent and assistants leading from the ‌bench, threatened an equaliser early in the second half after forcing a pair of saves from the Mexican goalkeeper and hitting the crossbar.

But substitute Guillermo Martinez ended the visitors’ hopes in the 54th minute, ⁠finishing off a counterattack to double Mexico’s lead.

Coach Aguirre used the friendly to continue evaluating players ahead of naming Mexico’s final World Cup squad on ⁠June 1, with ‌Europe-based players Luis Chavez, Edson Alvarez, Jorge Sanchez ⁠making second-half appearances after recently joining training camp.

The coach ​praised ‌the effort shown by players battling for places ​in the final ⁠squad, saying: “The fact they tried and gave their best effort, for me, that’s already worthwhile.

“It’s not easy (to pick the team), it’s the most complex part of my job …  It’s a bit about trying to see all the possible scenarios with my coaching staff.”

(Reporting by Janina Nuno Rios; Editing ​by Tom Hogue)