Raúl Jiménez buried a 69th-minute penalty past England’s goalkeeper at Estadio Azteca on July 5, pulling Mexico within one goal at 2-3 in what has become one of the most electric matches of the 2026 FIFA World Cup. The foul that led to the spot kick came from England captain Harry Kane, and the resulting goal marked Jiménez’s second of the tournament.

England came out swinging, building a 2-0 lead that looked comfortable enough to start planning the post-match press conference. Mexico had other ideas. Julián Quiñones pulled one back for El Tri, injecting life into a stadium that needed no encouragement. Then Jiménez stepped up from twelve yards after Kane’s foul, converting with the kind of composure that belies the pressure of a World Cup knockout-stage atmosphere.

Why crypto cares about the World Cup

The intersection of professional football and blockchain technology has matured considerably since the last World Cup cycle. Fan tokens, which give holders voting rights on minor club decisions and access to exclusive content, have become a multi-hundred-million-dollar market segment.

Platforms like Chiliz and Socios have signed partnerships with major football federations and clubs across Europe and Latin America. During high-drama matches, trading volumes on fan tokens tend to spike in direct correlation with on-pitch excitement.