Los Angeles Times

SOCCER SHOT IS A GULP FOR MEXICO Nation’s fans go wild as Lozano’s goal beats defending champion Germany in a historic World Cup upset

- By Kevin Baxter and Kate Linthicum

MOSCOW — When Hirving Lozano’s shot hit the back of the net in Moscow, the ground literally shook in Mexico, half a world away. Or so the scientists said. Lozano’s score was all Mexico needed to beat defending champion Germany 1-0 in its World Cup opener Sunday. And the goal was met with such a raucous roar across the country, the Institute of Geological and Atmospheri­c Research said at least two sensors in Mexico City recorded an earthquake.

Experts dismissed the account, saying there was no such thing as an artificial earthquake. But the goal certainly set the people of Mexico aquiver.

“This is a day we will never forget. It will pass into the history of Mexico,” said Guillermo Rodriguez, 39, a computer technician. “I don’t know what’s going to happen in the next games, but today’s game is a historic triumph.”

Despite the midmorning kickoff, tens of thousands of people gathered at iconic Mexico City locales to watch the game and to celebrate what felt like a cathartic moment for a country preparing for a national election amid widespread disquiet about the future as well as dissatisfa­ction with rising crime, a sagging economy and other problems.

“Thanks to the team for giving us this moment of happiness, which we lack so much in this country full of disappoint­ments,” said Juana Sanchez, 41, a homemaker who was among the throngs taking to the streets to celebrate. “Today everyone in Mexico is happy.”

It was only a first-round win, one that doesn’t clinch anything in the monthlong competitio­n in Russia. But it puts Mexico in a solid posi-

tion to move on to the second round.

Mexico’s presidenti­al candidates, in their frenetic final weeks of campaignin­g before the July 1 election, also celebrated the victory — and tried to use it to win over voters.

Candidates Ricardo Anaya and José Antonio Meade tweeted photos of themselves, dressed in Mexico’s signature green jerseys, at separate watch parties. And front-runner Andres Manuel López Obrador, famously a baseball fan, delayed an event in Ecatepec, a working-class community just outside Mexico City, so fans could watch the game on big screens.

In Moscow, where a soldout Luzhniki Stadium was transforme­d into a sea of green jerseys, turning the match into a home game for Mexico, fans celebrated deep into the night — then early into the next morning.

Nearly 60,000 World Cup tickets were sold in Mexico and tens of thousands more were sold to Mexican fans in the U.S. All those supporters made their presence felt Sunday and that made an impression on the team.

“Since the anthem started, everybody knew who the home team was,” said goalkeeper Guillermo Ochoa, who made nine saves to shut out the defending champions. “The people are always here with us, in the good times and the bad times. They do everything possible to be with us, they pay any price to be with the team and we try to do things for ourselves, but we want people to trust us.”

Coach Juan Carlos Osorio, the target of such withering criticism in Mexico that he declined a contract extension last winter, was also moved.

“I want to dedicate this great result to all the Mexican fans who made the journey out here,” he said. “And those who don’t support us yet, we will work to convince them to join us.”

More than four hours after the game, dozens of those fans, most in Mexican jerseys, some with flags slung over their shoulders or tied around their necks, milled about in the open space between the stadium and the Sportivnay­a metro station.

“It was crazy. It’s a historic win for us,” said Dario Jurado, a 35-year copywriter from Mexico City, who didn’t want to leave. “We cannot ask for a better result.”

A couple of dozen yards away, Ignacio Lopez, a 45year-old telecommun­ications worker from Mexico City, didn’t want the night to end, either. Dressed in a national team jersey and the silver mask of lucha libre star Rey Mysterio, he stared at the subway station but wasn’t ready to enter.

“The atmosphere was crazy,” he slurred in Spanish. “It’s a historic moment. There’s nothing to compare it to. We beat the world champion.”

Lopez said he spent more than $5,000 to come to Moscow for the World Cup, “but it was worth every penny.”

Inside the stations, the sound of the national team’s unofficial theme song, “Cielito Lindo,” echoed off tiled walls.

Ay, ay, ay, ay, canta y no llores.

A few stops up the line, another group of fans piled into a subway car, dancing and singing in Spanish as the other passengers stared straight ahead. It’s safe to say that in Russia, where smiles are about as easy to find as Hillary Clinton campaign buttons, it was the first spontaneou­s celebratio­n on a subway car in some time.

“I’m so drunk,” Frank Morones of Mexico City confessed with a smile. “This was a really big surprise. All the work we went through to get here was worth it for this game.”

 ?? Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times ?? LUIS CAMPOS, 11, center, of Ecatepec, Mexico, celebrates with others at a political rally as his team defeats Germany 1-0 in its World Cup opener in Moscow.
Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times LUIS CAMPOS, 11, center, of Ecatepec, Mexico, celebrates with others at a political rally as his team defeats Germany 1-0 in its World Cup opener in Moscow.
 ?? Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times ?? AMINA TAURAS, 4, blows a vuvuzela while her father, Mike Tauras, 37, left, watches at a World Cup party in L.A. In Mexico City, thousands of fans who had gathered at iconic locales celebrated a cathartic moment.
Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times AMINA TAURAS, 4, blows a vuvuzela while her father, Mike Tauras, 37, left, watches at a World Cup party in L.A. In Mexico City, thousands of fans who had gathered at iconic locales celebrated a cathartic moment.

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