CORRECTED-UPDATE 1-Soccer-Four matches postponed after Mexican cartel leader's death sparks violence

Sunday's women's match between ⁠Necaxa ​and Queretaro in Aguascalientes ⁠was suspended when players fled the pitch after hearing loud noises outside Estadio Victoria, which media reports described as gunshots. The ⁠match later resumed, with Necaxa winning 2-1.


Reuters | Updated: 23-02-2026 21:01 IST | Created: 23-02-2026 21:01 IST
CORRECTED-UPDATE 1-Soccer-Four matches postponed after Mexican cartel leader's death sparks violence

​Four soccer games in Mexico were ​postponed after violence flared near Guadalajara, ‌one ​of the country’s host cities for the 2026 World Cup, in the wake of a military operation on Sunday that left cartel ‌leader Nemesio Oseguera, "El Mencho", dead.

Oseguera, 59, mastermind of the powerful Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG), died in custody after being injured in a special forces operation on Mexico's Pacific coast in Jalisco state, according to ‌the defense ministry. The Mexican league said on its social media pages that two top-tier games ‌scheduled for Sunday - Queretaro v FC Juarez in the men’s league and Chivas v America in the women's league - had been postponed indefinitely.

Two second division matches scheduled for Sunday were also called off, local media reported. Sunday's women's match between ⁠Necaxa ​and Queretaro in Aguascalientes ⁠was suspended when players fled the pitch after hearing loud noises outside Estadio Victoria, which media reports described as gunshots.

The ⁠match later resumed, with Necaxa winning 2-1. The Mexico national team is due to face Iceland on Wednesday in ​a friendly fixture at the Corregidora Stadium in Queretaro.

Meanwhile, organisers of the Mexican Open ⁠men's tennis tournament in Acapulco said the event would begin on Monday as scheduled under established security protocols. The Merida Open ⁠women's ​tennis tournament is also scheduled to start from Monday.

After reports of El Mencho's death, suspected cartel members blockaded highways with burning cars and torched businesses in more than half a dozen ⁠states. No civilian deaths were reported. In Jalisco's popular beach resort of Puerto Vallarta, frightened tourists on ⁠social media described plumes ⁠of dark smoke rising into the sky from around the bay. Air Canada, United Airlines, Aeromexico and American Airlines suspended flights in the area.

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