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  1. 'I'm a football LOVER!'- Tuchelpublished at 10:16 BST

    Mexico v England (Sun, 01:00 BST)

    Thomas Tuchel has been speaking overnight about the mammoth task that lies ahead for his England team, describing their World Cup last-16 tie against Mexico is 'an iconic match, in an iconic stadium, in an iconic country'.

    Check out the video below...more of Tuchel's quotes are coming up...

  2. Postpublished at 10:13 BST

    Mexico v England (Sun, 01:00 BST)

    You can check out exactly how you can follow Mexico v England on the BBC via this link, or stick with us and we will spell it out in this page in a moment...

  3. get involved

    Get Involved - Stay up or catch up?published at 10:08 BST

    Click 'Get Involved' to have your say

    Mexico v England in the last 16 of the 2026 World Cup kicks off at the Azteca Stadium in Mexico City at 01:00 BST, all being well, if the thunderstorms stay away.

    What's your strategy for watching the big game?:

    • Stay up all night and power on through?
    • An early sleep and 1am alarm call?
    • Or do you plan to go to bed as normal and either watch the highlights over breakfast or take in the full game as live from 07:10 BST?

    Whatever you decide, the BBC has you covered - whether that's watching the game on BBC One or iPlayer, listening to 5 Live commentary on BBC Sounds or following our live text commentary on the BBC Sport website and app.

    Please get in touch to tell us your big-match plans using the 'Get Involved' button, and how you are coping with the pre-match nerves.

    Thanks.

  4. Postpublished at 10:06 BST

    Mexico v England (Sun, 01:00 BST)

    Welcome back.

    Excited?

    Stick with us this morning and into the afternoon as we build up to the big game...

  5. It's the final countdownpublished at 09:59 BST

    Mexico v England (Sun, 01:00 BST)

    Thomas Tuchel in the Azteca StadiumImage source, Getty Images
  6. Are Morocco serious World Cup contenders?published at 09:27 BST

    Morocco 3-0 Canada

    Emma Smith
    BBC Sport

    In a meeting of two sides currently blessed by golden generations of talent, it was the Moroccans who shone.

    For Canada, injured Alphonso Davies was helpless on the bench as Morocco neutralised Stephen Eustaquio's dangerous passing and squeezed star striker Jonathan David out of the game.

    Meanwhile, Morocco captain Achraf Hakimi, arguably the world's best right back, was a constant menace both on the ball and in the Canadian players' faces, while creative fulcrum Brahim Diaz claimed two assists. He now has four in World Cups – the most of any African player.

    "The first half was very intense," Morocco manager Mohamed Ouahbi told his post-match media conference.

    "There were a few adjustments to be made at half-time. We were never safe from pressure.

    "What matters is we didn't change our identity, we didn't change our game philosophy. There were lots of ideas being thrown around and we took the best one.

    "We are playing the World Cup which means there will be difficult moments. What matters is when we are not at our best, we have to be resilient. We have to remember who we are playing for and what we are playing for."

    It was more than enough to take Morocco to a second successive men's World Cup quarter-final, progressing through five matches as they did in Qatar.

    Morocco have now won four World Cup knockout matches - two in 2022, two in 2026 – which is as many as all other African nations combined.

    One more win, and they will have officially matched their showing at the 2022 World Cup, where they became the first African nation ever to reach the semi-finals.

    So Morocco are contenders, although there remains a feeling they have not been tested to their full capabilities yet.

    They impressed in drawing with Brazil in their opening game, before contrasting wins over Scotland and Haiti – the first a hard-fought slog following a goal inside two minutes, the latter a frenetic 4-2 against free-wheeling, already eliminated foes.

    In the round of 32, they were the better team against Netherlands but needed a stoppage-time header to avoid elimination. Then against Canada they were eventually comfortable, but it was not a high-quality win to assuage doubters ahead of a possible meeting with France in the last eight.

    ggImage source, Getty Images
  7. 'This can be a stepping stone for Canadian football'published at 09:24 BST

    Morocco 3-0 Canada

    David Edgar
    Former Canada defender on BBC Radio 5 Live

    Jesse Marsch signed a new four-year deal leading up to the World Cup and we have gone on to have this successful campaign.

    Hopefully this can be the stepping stone for Canadian football to move on to bigger and better things.

    It has been quite doom and gloom for pretty long so to have us come out of this with the world's respect in football, I think has been a massive achievement for Canada and for Jesse Marsch and the team.

    The fans in the game travelled down to Houston and paid their hard-earned money to go to Los Angeles last week as well.

    You've galvanised a young generation who have the Stephen Eustaquio moment from last week to go and do it in the park themselves like we did as kids. Now they have someone to look up to.

    Hopefully we will see it in not in the next five or six months but in the years and years to come.

  8. Canada golden generation loses its shinepublished at 09:20 BST

    Morocco 3-0 Canada

    For the second time, Canada were in the strange situation of playing on foreign soil in a home World Cup - and their supporters were outnumbered by Morocco fans in Texas.

    Yet they stepped up to the challenge with high tempo and pressing, leaving Morocco looking stunned at times in the first half.

    But Canada, for all their effort, lacked the quality to break down the solid Moroccan defence as Juventus striker David ended his below-par tournament on another quiet note.

    Another member of what has been dubbed Canada's golden generation did not even get off the bench. Their captain and talisman, Bayern Munich winger Alphonso Davies, was an unused sub.

    Davies has struggled with a hamstring injury and while he came on in the last 32 against South Africa, he was not fit enough to make an impact here.

    Marsch said Davies had an MRI scan - which came back clear - after training on Friday.

    "The good news was there was no injury," he added. "But his hamstring didn't feel right. We wanted to be cautious and make sure we weren't risking anything."

    ggImage source, Getty Images
  9. 'I'd rather be us than them!' - Proud Marsch on Canada exitpublished at 09:16 BST

    Morocco 3-0 Canada

    Media caption,

    'I'd rather be us than them!' - Marsch expresses pride in his Canada side

  10. 'There are tougher tests to come'published at 09:12 BST

    Morocco 3-0 Canada

    "Morocco were just not at their very best, and there are tougher tests to come," said BBC 5 Live pundit Chris Sutton.

    "They surprised me with their lethargy at the start. I don't know whether there was a bit of arrogance in dismissing the Canada team. Something was amiss with their performance.

    "Morocco were never going to perform as badly in the second half. The longer the game went on, the stronger they became.

    "They are devastating on the counterattack. But if France get through and Morocco perform like they did in the first half against a team like France, they will be crushed."

    Yet there is no question that this Moroccan side have a better chance to become Africa's first ever world champions than any other side in history.

    Morocco's success is not overnight. The one thing underpinning the North Africans' success has been long-term investment backed by the country's King Mohammed VI.

    An academy and $65m (£48.7m) training complex, both bearing his name, opened in 2009 and 2019 respectively and have helped the Atlas Lions establish themselves as Africa's top-ranked side.

    "Everything that is happening right now in Moroccan football is thanks to Mohammed VI," Ouahbi said. "He has invested a lot in the last few years, especially this academy."

    After reaching three out of four World Cups between 1986 and 1998, Morocco went 20 years without qualifying. This investment turned around their fortunes and allowed them to recruit players from the diaspora abroad – like Hakimi and Diaz, both born in Spain.

    It has given Morocco a competitiveness and belief which has become the blueprint for other African and Arabic nations, and it gives them a different aura to four years ago.

    "It's not a surprise, we are no longer a surprise as of today," Ouahbi said. "When people talk about Morocco they talk about a real contender, a major footballing nation and it's a great source of pride.

    "It's only the beginning and I hope we can continue to have similar World Cup runs for many years. We want to keep going, we don't want to stop."

    While the run in Qatar was twinged with disbelief, their journey in North America has been infused with purpose.

    A football fairytale, this is not.

    ggImage source, Getty Images
  11. 'Morocco picked their moments'published at 09:08 BST

    Morocco 3-0 Canada

    Chris Sutton
    Former England forward on BBC Radio 5 Live

    Morocco took off in Houston in the second half. They picked their moments.

    Azzedine Ounahi with a couple of brilliant finishes.

    Tougher tests to come for Morocco but it is job done and they are the first team into the quarter-finals.

  12. Look at the statspublished at 09:02 BST

    Morocco 3-0 Canada

    nn
  13. Most cards in any match at World Cuppublished at 09:00 BST

    Morocco 3-0 Canada

    With the United States celebrating Independence Day, fireworks were expected from these two teams after their thrilling round-of-32 clashes, but attacking excitement was sorely missing in the opening 45 minutes.

    There was still some spark, albeit for the wrong reasons, with this the first World Cup match on record (since 1966) to see more yellow cards (6) than shots (5) at half-time.

    This clash was also only the second knockout match at the finals to see six first-half yellow cards, with Brazil’s 3-0 win over Ghana in 2006 the other instance (also six).

    The eight cautions by full-time was the most in any match at this year’s tournament.

    fImage source, Getty Images
  14. Morocco making Africa proudpublished at 08:57 BST

    Morocco 3-0 Canada

    Morocco have become the first African nation ever to reach the quarter-finals of two World Cup tournaments (2022 and 2026).

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  15. 'We scored goals when we needed to'published at 08:53 BST

    Morocco 3-0 Canada

    Hassan Kachloul
    Former Morocco international speaking to BBC Radio 5 Live

    The first half was very disappointing, they looked tired from the the 120 minutes they had to play previously against the Netherlands.

    The speech from the manager at half-time must have turned things around.

    We scored goals when we needed to so that's what is positive now.

  16. Ounahi at the doublepublished at 08:49 BST

    Morocco 3-0 Canada

    Ounahi became the first Morocco player to score twice in a World Cup match since Salaheddine Bassir in 1998 against Scotland.

    bbImage source, Getty Images
    ggImage source, Getty Images
  17. Ounahi scores superb opener for Moroccopublished at 08:42 BST

    Morocco 3-0 Canada

  18. Morocco reach quarter-finals as co-hosts Canada knocked outpublished at 08:38 BST

    Morocco 3-0 Canada

    Emma Smith
    BBC Sport

    Canada became the first co-host to exit the 2026 World Cup as they were well beaten by Morocco in Houston.

    The Moroccans, having failed to impress in a bad-tempered first half, took the lead five minutes after the interval through Azzedine Ounahi.

    Ounahi swept home Achraf Hakimi's cut-back free-kick from inside the D as the Canadian defence failed to close him down.

    The Girona midfielder scored his second by converting a breakaway with eight minutes remaining to seal victory.

    And an ultimately comfortable win was topped off in stoppage time as Soufiane Rahimi slid his shot under keeper Maxime Crepeau.

    It was tough on Canada, who had started by far the stronger team in Texas and should have led early on.

    "There was one team on the pitch," Canada boss Jesse Marsch said of his side's start to the game.

    "We were better than the number seven team in the world today."

    But Morocco progress, as they move one win away from equalling their historic run to the semi-finals at the 2022 World Cup.

    Canada pressed the Moroccans relentlessly from the start, and both Jonathan David and Tani Oluwaseyi were denied one on one by Morocco keeper Bono inside the opening 11 minutes.

    The African side were below par and clearly frustrated for long periods as eight yellow cards were shown by English referee Michael Oliver.

    But Morocco ultimately came through and were close to a third when Rahimi looped a header off the crossbar - before the striker finally got his goal with the last touch of the match.

    It means Canada's most successful men's World Cup campaign comes to an end - a tournament in which they earned their first point, win, group-stage progression and knockout victory.

    "We want to thank you for making us dream," one Canadian journalist said to Marsch in the post-match news conference.

    "Before, we never believed we'd ever make it this far. So we just want to say thank you."

    Media caption,

    Morocco reach quarter-finals as co-hosts Canada knocked out

  19. Postpublished at 08:34 BST

    Another country who enjoy getting to the quarter-finals are Morocco.

    They have reached the quarter-finals in the last two World Cups and secured their spot after beating Canada.

    Canada became the first host nation to drop out of this World Cup, with Morocco finishing the job in style.