Following his Achilles tendon rupture confirmed on March 11, Club América and Mexico goalkeeper Luis Ángel Malagón underwent successful surgery, facing a 6-to-8-month recovery that rules him out of the 2026 World Cup. This vacancy intensifies the battle for Javier Aguirre's starting spot among candidates like Raúl Rangel, Carlos Acevedo, and Guillermo Ochoa.
Building on the Achilles tendon rupture Malagón suffered in the 37th minute of América's Concachampions round-of-16 first leg against Philadelphia Union, the club reported a successful surgery at Guadalajara's Hospital Medyarthros. Doctor Luis Arturo Gómez Carlín noted Malagón will begin rehabilitation in two weeks, describing his outlook: “He's sad. Beyond the fact that the injury prognosis is excellent and everything should be fine, it takes time.” Recovery is projected at 6 to 8 months, effectively sidelining him for Mexico's 2026 World Cup opener on June 11 at Estadio Azteca against South Africa.
Malagón shared gratitude on Instagram and at Guadalajara airport, thanking teammates including Raúl Rangel, Carlos Acevedo, Antonio Rodríguez, and Guillermo Ochoa.
For the national team under Javier Aguirre, Malagón's absence—amid injuries to Édson Álvarez and Alexis Vega—creates an open contest. Rangel, who vied with Malagón for the starter role, is the frontrunner for upcoming friendlies against Portugal and Belgium. Acevedo has been called up recently without minutes; Ochoa, last summoned for the 2025 Gold Cup, may return per Fox Sports México reports. Emerging options include Álex Padilla (Athletic Club) and Cruz Azul's Andrés Gudiño, who affirmed: “I work every day to be my best version.”