The path of a warrior
Carlos Acevedo knows that patience is not just waiting, it is working in silence while the world continues to turn. Four years ago he was left out of the World Cup, but today, at 30, he is ready to roar at the 2026 World Cup.
The Santos Laguna goalkeeper not only achieved a place on the final roster of El Tri, but is now fighting to be a starter. And it’s not just any fight: he faces Raúl Rangel and the legendary Guillermo Ochoa, 40, who sounds like the third goalkeeper.
“It’s a childhood dream to be able to be in a World Cup and to be able to compete to play in a World Cup,” said Acevedo with a smile that illuminated the press room. “I feel very proud and happy for what I have done throughout my career.”
Lessons from the road
His story is not one of luck, it is one of pure resilience. When he was a youth, everyone saw him as Ochoa’s heir, but injuries played tricks on him. His first call to the senior team came in 2021, and although he fought with everything, Gerardo Martino left him out.
“Since the last cycle I was competing with great goalkeepers like Alfredo Talavera, Rodolfo Cota… and Jonathan Orozco. And well, today I have to face ‘Memo’ and Raúl,” recalled the league champion with Santos in 2018.
Life didn’t make it easy for him. Constant injuries and playing in a team with little media exposure like Santos de Torreón kept him away from the spotlight. But Acevedo did not give up.
The opportunity that changed everything
Sometimes fate gives a push. The injury to Luis Ángel Malagón, the starter in the Nations League and Gold Cup titles, who broke his Achilles tendon in March, opened a door that Acevedo knew how to take advantage of.
“Unfortunately Malagón was injured and cannot be there, but today I am here and proud to face these goalkeepers and to raise the internal competition,” he added humbly.
Who will be the owner of the arch?
Coach Javier Aguirre has not defined a starting goalkeeper, although Rangel has been the one chosen in the last six games. But Aguirre trusts everyone, and that leaves the door open for Acevedo.
If everything goes well, he could debut in goal at the Azteca Stadium on June 11 against South Africa. Can you imagine the scene? The same scenario where so many heroes have been born.
“I wanted an opportunity for months to be seen, to be known, and thank God it was given to me,” Acevedo confessed. “Today I have to be here competing and fighting for a place and that dream is getting closer.”
The story of Carlos Acevedo reminds us that in sport, as in life, he who perseveres achieves. And this goalkeeper is more than ready to write his own chapter in the history of Mexican soccer.




