Jordan Pickford’s performance in England’s 3-2 win over Mexico will be remembered for two saves inside the first 45 minutes, but the numbers behind his display tell a fuller story of a goalkeeper who barely put a foot wrong across a chaotic night at the Azteca.
The numbers
Mexico finished the match with 23 shots to England’s six and 66% of possession, yet managed only two goals — both from the penalty spot or a set-piece scramble rather than open play created against a settled defence.
Pickford’s two saves before half-time, both off headers from Raul Jimenez, were rated among the standout moments of the tournament’s knockout stages so far, according to Goal’s player ratings from the match. He was beaten only by a Julian Quinones strike from a poorly cleared free-kick and Jimenez’s converted penalty — neither a case of Pickford being at fault.
Minute by minute
Kick-off was delayed by an hour due to storms near the stadium, pushing the match into the early hours in the UK. Mexico came out quickly once it began, and Pickford was called into action almost immediately.
15′ — Pickford’s first major intervention. Jimenez rose for a diving header inside the box, and the goalkeeper got down low to his left, judging the bounce to turn the ball around the post. Football365 described it as the more technically difficult of his two stops, even if the second grabbed more attention.
36′ — Bukayo Saka’s cross found Bellingham at the back post, who headed England in front.
38′ — Bellingham struck again, just 98 seconds later, bundling the ball home after Harry Kane’s pass. England led 2-0.
42′ — Mexico responded through Quinones, who finished powerfully after a free-kick was only half-cleared. It was the one goal England’s defence, rather than Pickford, could be said to have contributed to.
45+’ — Pickford’s second world-class save of the half, diving high to his right to deny another Jimenez header.
54′ — Jarell Quansah was sent off following a VAR review for a high challenge on Jesus Gallardo, leaving England to play the remainder of the match with 10 men.
60′ — Kane converted from the penalty spot after Anthony Gordon was fouled by Mexico goalkeeper Raul Rangel, restoring England’s two-goal cushion at 3-1.
69′ — Kane gave away a penalty of his own, and Jimenez converted to make it 3-2, setting up a nervous final third of the match.
69’–90+’ — This was the phase in which Pickford’s contribution shifted from shot-stopping to game management. Facing sustained Mexican pressure with 10 men on the pitch, he was not required to make another significant save, but his handling of when to come for crosses and when to stay on his line was repeatedly praised as central to England seeing out the win. A late header from Dan Burn, brought on purely for defensive solidity, cleared a Jimenez overhead-kick attempt at a crucial moment.
Full time
England held on to win 3-2 and book a World Cup quarter-final against Norway on Saturday, a tie that will see Pickford face Erling Haaland again, following their extensive head-to-head history.
Pickford’s night in Mexico City sits alongside his best performances at the 2018 and 2022 World Cups, and gives him a strong platform heading into the Norway quarter-final.



