Raúl Jiménez – Mexico Forward | 2026 World Cup Performance Analysis
The 2026 World Cup will crown heroes, and Raúl Jiménez has every weapon in his arsenal to become Mexico's greatest.
Raúl Jiménez's contributions at Fulham have been the backbone of their season—exactly the consistency Mexico need. With 32 international goals and 11 assists across 102 caps, his 7/10 KickOracle rating tells only part of the story. At 35, he brings irreplaceable veteran wisdom—the kind of composure that steadies an entire squad under World Cup pressure.
While managing chronic knee issue; match-fit but workload monitored adds a layer of uncertainty, Raúl Jiménez's track record of performing through discomfort gives Mexico confidence. His presence in the 2026 World Cup Starting XI could hinge on smart load management in the group stage.
When Mexico need a goal that changes everything at the 2026 World Cup, Raúl Jiménez will be the man in the electric atmospheres of the 2026 host cities. His Key Stats profile is that of a born match-winner.
Want proof? Explore Raúl Jiménez's complete Key Stats profile and real-time Performance Analysis below. Compare him against any player in the 2026 World Cup and see what makes him indispensable to Mexico.
World Cup 2026 Outlook
Raúl Jiménez's 2026 World Cup story is a redemption arc. His skull-fracture injury in late 2020 nearly ended his career, and the two years following were a slow return to fitness rather than to elite-level form. The 2023-24 season at Fulham has been the closest Jiménez has come to his pre-injury self: regular Premier League starts, a goal contribution every other match, and the senior-figure status of Mexico's primary centre-forward. The realistic expectation for 2026 is that Jiménez competes with Santiago Giménez for the No. 9 spot, that the partnership Mexico settles on depends on the opponent, and that Jiménez's hold-up play is the structural reason Mexico can play through midfield rather than around it. The single biggest tactical question is whether Jiménez or Giménez starts the bigger knockout-round games. The comparable tournament is Russia 2018, where Jiménez was a substitute in every match and Mexico exited in the round of 16. Eight years on, on home soil, he is the senior No. 9 figure and not the substitute. The signature moment is his comeback Premier League goal in late 2021 — the one that confirmed his career was not over. The deeper number is that he is one of only two Mexican forwards in modern history with 25+ international goals.
Signature stat
Career senior goals for Mexico: 30+ — top-five all-time Mexican forwards
Key 2026 matchups
- Group stage: a possession-heavy European side
- Round of 16: a CONMEBOL low-block team
- Quarter-finals: any top-eight team
