Mexico’s World Cup dream as co-hosts lasted exactly one knockout round. After falling 3-2 to England in the round of 16 on July 5, Javier Aguirre stepped down as manager, and Rafael Márquez, the former Barcelona and Mexico captain who had been serving as assistant coach, immediately stepped into the top job.

A succession plan that ran ahead of schedule

Here’s the thing about this coaching change: it was essentially pre-written. When Aguirre was appointed as Mexico’s manager on July 23, 2024, Márquez was named his assistant on the same date, with an explicit understanding that the Barcelona legend would eventually take over.

The Mexican Football Federation’s sporting director confirmed the succession plan publicly in April 2026. Márquez had signed his contract to succeed Aguirre after the World Cup as of April 22, 2026. Aguirre’s own deal was set to expire on July 31, 2026.

So the transition was always coming. Mexico’s early elimination just moved the calendar up by roughly 26 days.