Estadio Azteca has seen its fair share of World Cup magic over the decades, but Wednesday night in Mexico City gave the iconic stadium a fresh chapter, one where a brand new nation announced itself on football’s biggest stage before ultimately bowing to Colombian class. Final score: Uzbekistan 1, Colombia 3. But trust me, that scoreline barely scratches the surface of what actually happened.
A Historic Night Before a Ball Was Even Kicked

Let’s set the scene first, because this wasn’t just any match. This was Uzbekistan’s first ever World Cup appearance, the first time any Central Asian nation had reached the tournament. Thirty-six years of waiting, hoping, and building came down to ninety minutes against South American heavyweights Colombia. Coached by Italian World Cup winner Fabio Cannavaro and led by Manchester City defender Abdukodir Khusanov, the White Wolves walked out determined to prove this wasn’t a fluke qualification.

The first half belonged almost entirely to Colombia though, who dominated possession at nearly 70% and patiently probed for an opening. Jhon Arias rattled the post early on after a clever setup, a warning sign for Uzbekistan that the pressure was building. It finally broke through in the 40th minute, when Luis Diaz danced past defenders and slid a defense-shattering pass into the path of Daniel Munoz, who finished with ice in his veins. 1-0, and the Colombian section of the crowd, decked head to toe in yellow, erupted.
Then Uzbekistan Wrote Their Own Fairytale

If you thought the debutants would simply roll over, think again. Uzbekistan came out swinging in the second half, stepping out of their defensive shell and actually troubling Colombia’s back line. And in the 60th minute, the moment arrived. Abbosbek Fayzullaev, the 22-year-old midfield talent who’d already won titles at CSKA Moscow, found himself in the right place at the right time and tapped home the equalizer.

Cue absolute pandemonium. This wasn’t just a goal, this was Uzbekistan’s first ever World Cup goal in the nation’s history. Thirty-six years of football dreams condensed into one perfect moment, and Fayzullaev’s name etched permanently into his country’s sporting story. FOX Soccer’s clip of the goal lit up X within minutes, with fans worldwide tipping their caps to the achievement regardless of which side they were supporting. Even neutral fans couldn’t help but feel something watching a nation experience that for the very first time.
Colombia Respond, And Respond Again

Just five minutes after the equalizer though, Colombia snatched the lead right back. Diaz, who’d already set up the opener, took matters into his own hands this time, firing a shot that the Uzbek goalkeeper simply could not handle, and it slipped through into the net. 2-1, and just like that, the wind got sucked back out of the building. It was Diaz’s first ever World Cup goal to go with his assist, an absolute statement performance from the Bayern Munich winger who arrived in North America with little fanfare but is clearly not interested in letting Messi, Mbappe, Haaland, and Kane have all the headlines to themselves.

Uzbekistan kept pushing forward, throwing bodies into the box and refusing to accept defeat quietly, but Colombia’s defense held strong, soaking up pressure and waiting to strike. Behruzjon Karimov even rattled the crossbar deep into stoppage time, the kind of moment that would have sent Mexico City into chaos had it gone in. It wasn’t enough though. In the ninth minute of stoppage time, Colombia broke forward on the counter, Juan Hernandez battled to keep possession alive on the right, and floated a pinpoint cross to the back post where substitute Jaminton Campaz rose above everyone and powered home a header to make it 3-1. Game over.
A Result That Tells Two Stories

For Colombia, this is exactly the start they wanted, three points, top of Group K, and a Luis Diaz performance that announces him as a genuine difference-maker on the world stage.

For Uzbekistan, the result stings, but the story isn’t really about the loss. It’s about a nation that waited thirty-six years for this moment and got to celebrate scoring at a World Cup on debut, with a president back home cheering them on and a golden generation of young players believing anything is now possible. Heartbreak and history, all in one unforgettable night at the Azteca.
Man of the Match: Luis Diaz













