Tuesday night in Guadalajara had a different pulse. On the avenue surrounding the Hilton Guadalajara Midtown hotel, the usual traffic was replaced by a wave of green, white and red flags. It wasn't a match, but it felt like one, since the Mexican National Team in Guadalajara It was received by hundreds of fans who, braving the humidity of the Guadalajara night, waited with patience fueled by adrenaline to see, just for a few seconds, the minibus that was transporting the players before the World Cup match.

The atmosphere was filled with that mixture of nervousness and hope that only the World Cup can provoke. When the vehicle finally turned the corner, the ambient sound changed drastically: the mariachis tuned their guitars, the trumpets set the rhythm, and “Cielito Lindo” became the unofficial anthem of the wait.
For Javier 'Vasco' Aguirre and his coaching staff, this welcome in the capital of Jalisco is no small feat. The team arrives with the urgency of consolidating what was shown in the debut, where they won 2-0 against South Africa in a Aztec Stadium that still resonates in the collective memory. However, the air in the hotel lobby was of total concentration.

Aguirre's tactical crossroads
Not everything is celebration. The reality of the field hits hard: the absence of César Montes, sent off in the final minutes of the first match for an unnecessary play that still generates debate on coffee tables and sports programs, forces a movement of key pieces.
Montes, who has established himself as the owner of the central defense, will leave a gap that the coaching staff has been trying to patch since training on Monday. While the starters of the inauguration carried out regenerative work, Aguirre's eyes were on who will be in charge of stopping the Korean attack, a team that knows how to take advantage of speed and tactical order.
The tactical rehearsal in the pouring rain a couple of days ago was a test of character. Despite the water and the physical wear and tear, the spirit in the locker room seems armored. “Guadalajara welcomed us with its heart,” they wrote from the team's official accounts, a message that seeks to connect that external energy with the tactical discipline necessary for Thursday.

The objective of the Mexican National Team in Guadalajara: secure leadership
Thursday's confrontation is not just another one. It is the match that can define the position of Group A. South Korea presents itself as a rival that demands order and, above all, a cool head. The antecedent against the South Africans showed that Mexico has arrived, but defensive solidity will be what dictates whether El Tri can allow itself to dream of absolute leadership before the last date.
On the streets of Guadalajara, that mathematical calculator matters little. What is felt is the desire to see the team win at home, in a World Cup that, at times, seems to have erased any social division, unifying the national sentiment behind eleven players.
Tomorrow, when the ball rolls, the passion of the reception must be translated into football. For now, the Hilton hotel in Midtown has become the epicenter of a country that refuses to let go of its illusion.
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