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Meet Didier Deschamps’ assistant of 17 years who is stepping up in France’s hour of need

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This piece was first published during Euro 2024, but it has been updated to reflect further conversations with Guy Stephan during a second interview with The Athletic in Washington D.C. in March 2026.


On a usual France match-day, Didier Deschamps will go into Guy Stephan’s bedroom, pick up an electric razor and shave his assistant’s head with light, gentle strokes.

Nobody else will be present but the ritual is an essential part of a matchday routine that dates back to 2014. There are other superstitions: at every meal — breakfast, lunch and dinner — Stephan sits to Deschamps’ left. On every bus ride and plane flight, he sits to his right.

“It’s all about balance, there’s nothing political about it!” Stephan laughs.

The proud Breton has been Deschamps’ number two for the last 17 years: the first three at Marseille and the last 14 with France. They endured tough times together at Marseille, a “volcanic” club, in Stephan’s words. But their relationship goes back even further than that, to 2000, when Deschamps, then the French captain, and Stephan, assistant to then-manager Roger Lemerre, won the European Championship.

It has been a phenomenally successful alliance, yielding league titles at Marseille and three finals at major tournaments with France, including winning the 2018 World Cup in Russia. Major disappointments, such as a shock last-16 defeat to Switzerland at Euro 2020, have been rare.

Guy Stephan talking to the media ahead of the Norway game (FRANCK FIFE / AFP via Getty Images)

“It hasn’t always been linear,” Stephan tells The Athletic. “But despite those few defeats, we’ve managed to hold on.”

The bond between Stephan and Deschamps — who will step down after the World Cup — is now so strong that they often do not even require words to communicate.

“We understand each other,” Stephan says. “We don’t even need to speak anymore. A glance is enough when we’re out on the pitch or at a training session; if something needs changing or tweaking, we just look at each other and —boom— it’s as if we’d actually spoken. That’s the strength of the time we’ve spent together — 17 years. We don’t always agree — not always… We talk things through, but once a decision is made, it’s made.”


On Friday afternoon at Gillette Stadium near Boston, Stephan will emerge from a career in the shadows to take centre stage in the France dugout. That telepathy, between head coach and assistant, should put Deschamps’ sporting mind at rest even from afar.

Due to the passing of Deschamps’ mother this week, he has returned to his native country to mourn with his family. Stephan will assume temporary reins for the third group game against Norway. He has done so once before, coaching the team in a defeat against Denmark following the passing of Deschamps’ father in June 2022, but aged 69, this will be his first time doing so for France at a major tournament.

Stephan is, almost certainly, the coach at this World Cup with the most international tournaments to his name. Stephan is now at his fourth World Cup alongside Deschamps. Yet he had prior history, too, having served as the assistant to Lemerre when France won Euro 2000, before leaving the job after the World Cup in 2002. Stephan also had a couple of years coaching Senegal, bringing his total major tournament haul up to 10.

Stephan and Deschamps had what the assistant describes as a “normal” coach-player relationship at Euro 2000, but they crossed paths again when both men worked as analysts in a television studio in 2007. Deschamps asked Stephan to work with him. “I said ‘OK!’ There was a brief flirtation — something with Liverpool — back in 2008. A little something, but it didn’t work out. Then came Marseille in June 2009.”

As for France, this, he insists, will definitely be their final tournament, with Zinedine Zidane expected to take over. “People will miss Didier later on,” Stephan says. “That’s not a criticism of the new manager at all. They’ll just realize everything that was achieved over fourteen years. But people want change; they like a change of pace. Journalists like having new stories to write, too—it’s normal. That’s life!”

Stephan did not tread the traditional route into football management. His father, a mechanic, thought being a footballer was not a profession and, while Stephan’s secondary school PE teacher, Claude Perrard, was an encouraging presence, he enrolled in a teacher training course at the behest of his parents.

He does not regret it. “My career path would probably have been different, not better or worse, had I turned professional before studying,” he says. Stephan was, in his own words, “a good player, not a very good player” but he still represented France’s youth team.

Between the ages of 19 and 23, Stephan spent his weekdays training to be a teacher in Dinard, Brittany, and then on Saturdays driving 90 minutes to play for second division side Guingamp. He had a close relationship with the club president, Noel Le Graet, who went onto become FFF president for 12 years, from 2011 to 2023.

Stephan qualified as a sports teacher but did not return to the classroom. Instead, in 1980, aged 23, he became a professional footballer, joining Rennes — his eldest son Julien, who was born there, is their current manager. It was the start of a professional playing career that also took in spells at Le Havre, Orleans and Caen.

Then, on July 24, 1986, everything changed. Stephan was travelling home after training at Caen when he was involved in a serious car accident. He fractured his jaw, leg and elbow and sustained such a serious head injury that he was put into a coma.

“I learnt you have to get up again,” he says. “It’s obviously difficult at the time, for you and even more difficult for those around you. You tell yourself that you’ll get back up again.”

After several months of rehabilitation and physiotherapy, Stephan returned to training but soon realised “it wouldn’t be like before”. He struggled to return to the same level and, at the age of 29, decided to retire.

But Stephan’s football story was not over. His calling was always to teach in some form — his knowledge of psychology, physiology and pedagogy acquired from his teacher training helped him gain his coaching qualifications — and so he became Caen’s first-team assistant alongside Pierre Mankowski.

The coaching profession has evolved over the years. When Stephan started out in the 1980s, coaches tended to be, in his words, “authoritarian” and “ruled with an iron fist”. But times have changed and coaches have had to adapt too.

Deschamps has faced criticism for being too functional but Stephan disagrees he is “old school”. Despite winning the World Cup and Euros, plus three Champions League titles, Deschamps hardly ever harks back to his playing days and instead stays reactive to the present moment.

Stephan and Deschamps prepare for a Marseille game in 2009 (GERARD JULIEN/AFP via Getty Images)

“He’s got something extra,” Stephan says. “The main thing is to always be aware of what’s going on out there. You’ve got all the generations, you have to talk a lot with the players. It’s important for them to express themselves.

“In that respect, Didier is very, very strong. He’s very good at talking one-on-one with a player — he spends a lot of time and energy on that. Today’s coaching job is all about human relationships and getting the best out of the player. He has evolved. He’s closer to the players than he used to be.”

But if Deschamps is close to the players, he is even closer to Stephan. During an interview with The Athletic in Washington D.C., Deschamps briefly gatecrashed — received by Stephan with a traditional French kiss on both cheeks — and he called Stephan, who turns 70 in October, “un gamin” (the youngster).

“We spend much more time together than we do with our wives when we’re in camp,” Stephan laughs. “We think about football in the same way, even if there are some differences. We mustn’t leave room for the slightest leak. Sometimes they cause problems and conflict in a group. We have to try to resolve it as quickly as possible. But there are always some. The media, you’re too strong,” he chuckles.

Stephan is energised by the turnover of players in the France squad for this tournament. He describes this as “oxygenation.” The generation of Hugo Lloris, Raphael Varane, Paul Pogba and Olivier Giroud has passed on, and the team is now from a largely younger generation, powered by Kylian Mbappe, Michael Olise, Ousmane Dembele, Desire Doue, Bradley Barcola and Rayan Cherki.

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“But you need both things: individual quality and collective quality,” Stephan warns. “For a coach, it’s collective quality that ensures longevity. But it’s the individual talent that wins you games.

“One of our main tasks is observing players and being able to recognise — at a certain point — that a player is at the elite level because of their technique, their intelligence, and their power. Sometimes— and I don’t mean this in a derogatory way —we hear people in the media say, ‘Hey, that player ought to be playing.’ I don’t want to name names, but they have no idea. People, generally speaking, have no idea of ​​the power, technique, and intelligence required to play at the elite level.”

The players are just one team but there is a whole backroom staff to align as well. When Stephan started out coaching, he, like many in that era, did almost everything, including training the goalkeepers and preparing players physically. Now, he is responsible for devising the daily training programme and writing it on the flipchart, but an army of around 20 other staff members also have an input, from the team chef to data and performance analysts.

Didier Deschmaps flanked by Guy Stephan and goalkeeper coach Franck Raviot (Franck FIFE / AFP via Getty Images)

Even so, Deschamps has a tight inner circle of technical coaches — Stephan, goalkeeping coach Franck Raviot and physical trainer Cyril Moine — which is far smaller compared to other national teams. He can rely on them to be, in Deschamps’ words, “fuel to his thinking”. His style is quality over quantity, with loyal, competent staff covering every base from medical to media.

One of the difficulties managers face is keeping players who do not feature in matches on board. That has become even trickier with the increase in squad sizes from 23 to 26, a rule initially introduced at Euro 2020 because of the global pandemic. A little like England with Jordan Henderson, there are players selected for what they bring to France off-the-field, in the example they set. N’Golo Kante, now 35, remains in the France squad.

“It’s difficult for a player — someone who played in 2018, for example — to stay with the squad and become a substitute,” says Stephan. “There are always exceptions, though. Kante: Fantastic man. Fantastic mentality. When he plays, he performs at the right level, and when he’s on the bench, everything is fine. There are very few players like that.”


Beyond training and match preparation, Stephan’s role is to “oil the cogs”, as he puts it, including from a psychological aspect.

“I know the manager’s plans for the next match. I can anticipate. Who is going to be affected? When I’m walking down a corridor or going for lunch and cross paths with a player, I ask how he is, how his family are. I try to find a topic of conversation that will lead to an exchange.

“I can see whether that player seems down or not, whether he’s smiling. I don’t have to report all the information because there’s a certain trust with the player which is also very important. Then, in training sessions, I can engage him as much as possible.”

Stephan and Deschamps running a France training session (FRANCK FIFE / AFP via Getty Images)

In turn, that creates a more sustainable environment throughout the tournament, which is needed if a team is to go far.

Ask Stephan what makes a World Cup-winning manager, and he could not be clearer. “You need to detect everyone’s qualities, bring people together, be a good psychologist, strategist and someone who obviously takes responsibility for results, whether good or bad,” he says.

What strikes him, however, is Deschamps’ calm persona in big pressure moments.

“He transmits serenity to the group,” says Stephan. “He’s focused but he’s not uptight in his language. Matches are often won in the second half and substitutions. We talk a lot during and after games. Sometimes there are questions on the bench. He asks my opinion and there’s a certain pressure to get results. That’s true for everyone. But he’s not a stressed person. That’s one of the reasons for his success, too.”

“I’ve watched Didier grow. I’m older than him (by 12 years) so he owes me respect, I say that with a smile. He was already very good and I’ve seen him get better.”

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Special report: Searching for Mexico’s disappeared in the shadow of the World Cup

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A small, yellow toy frog lies abandoned as the pole plunges into the ground.

“This is how you search for bodies,” the mothers of the missing explain. “We search with our noses. Like wild dogs.”

When the earth is soft, it means it has been dug recently. Sometimes, they find concrete underneath — a calling card of concealed cartel burials. It is usually only the work of a few intense minutes for the women to break through with pickaxes.

Forcing their construction pole into the dirt, they draw it back out gently, and raise its tip to smell. They say they know the scent of flesh, the depth of the marker telling them how far to dig. Sometimes it is animal, more often it is human.

“If we find a body, we say a small prayer,” they say. “It’s to tell them: ‘Here we are. We’ve found you.’”

Gabriela using her probe to search for bodies in Villa Fontana, Jalisco (Credit: The Athletic)

These are the Guerreros Buscadores de Jalisco (Jalisco Search Warriors), a collective of families whose loved ones number among the 130,000 disappeared recorded by Mexico’s government, though experts believe the real number to be far higher. The vast majority are victims of narcoviolence. Since the beginning of last year, this group alone says it has found at least 350 bags of remains in the wasteland, backyards, and construction sites of Guadalajara.

According to them, at least 22 shallow graves have been unearthed in the immediate vicinity of the Estadio Akron, host of four World Cup games this summer, situated on open scrub to the city’s west. A further 270 bags were found in Las Agujas, just eight miles north.

Many of the families of the disappeared say the presence of the World Cup is unwelcome while their sons and daughters remain unfound.

‘Champion in Disappearances’ reads a ball at a protest in Guadalajara (Credit: The Athletic)

“Everything we have was spent on renovations, to make this a beautiful city when it’s not this city to us,” says one member of the Buscadores, Victoria. She says that in two days, it will be the sixth anniversary of her son’s disappearance.

“The World Cup victimises us more. The ball comes back, but when are our children going to return?”


In Guadalajara, the Glorieta de los Niños Héroes (Roundabout of the Boy Heroes) symbolises the scale of Mexico’s disappeared.

Flyers pile over the borders of their neighbours, a wave of absent faces staring back at drivers. They hang off lampposts too, yet never look frayed. There is always a new poster ready to be pasted. It is now nicknamed the Glorieta de las y los Desaparecidos — the Roundabout of the Disappeared. Drive west, and the junction for Estadio Akron is less than 30 minutes away.

The Glorieta de los Niños Héroes in central Guadalajara (Credit: The Athletic)

On the day of the World Cup’s opening game, the families of the disappeared stage coordinated marches across Mexico. Graciela holds out a necklace, decorated with the face of her daughter Jessica. A member of the Buscadores, Graciela has lost two children to the violence. She is speaking in Spanish like all those quoted in this article, with her words translated into English.

“Jessica was 24 when she disappeared in 2019,” she says. “She was babysitting for two children, and that’s all we know. They took them all. Some months ago, I found out from a person that had been released from prison that she had already been killed, and buried in a house.”

Graciela claims the government has not yet allowed her attempt to retrieve her daughter’s remains, which she says are situated on private property.

“My son also disappeared in 2011,” she adds. “I found him, yes, I found him. But he was given to me in ashes. I don’t yet have a death certificate. They assure me that they are the remains of my son, but I am still fighting for him.”

Graciela’s daughter, Jessica (Credit: The Athletic)


The Buscadores meet at a petrol station on the city’s southern fringe. It is Father’s Day.

For their own safety, the searchers have a non-negotiable rule — they arrive at the search site in convoy, they leave the search site in convoy. Unusually, they are not accompanied by a police escort, which makes the day’s search even riskier. In recent years, the group says eight of their members have disappeared or been killed. The Athletic has decided to use only the searchers’ first names to protect their identities and photographs they have consented to using.

Susana is loading digging equipment into the flatbed of the group’s truck. Its number plates, along with every vehicle in the convoy, have been covered to make it more difficult for organised crime groups to track. Some members cover their faces to avoid being recognised.

“Look, there is a lot of danger,” she says, matter-of-factly. Two years ago, her brother Erick went to work as a waiter at a party. He never returned. “At the beginning, when I started searching, I was very scared. I would put on a hat, sunglasses, and a buff. I didn’t know who might want to hurt me.

“But over the years, I have lost my fear. You learn to live with it, you get used to it, don’t you? When I put on my boots, I feel like they give me superpowers. I can go into abandoned houses, I can find strange things. As a civilian, in my home, I would be scared. With my boots on, I can do anything.

“And somebody has to do it. If the government doesn’t dare, if they are scared to go into these neighbourhoods on a search, it is down to us.” She wears a long-sleeve t-shirt bearing her brother’s face, his name, and the date of his disappearance.

Susana says: “With my boots on, I can do anything” (Credit: The Athletic)

The group operates through anonymous tips, which they say are delivered by locals to a central hotline. “Some people say organised crime tells us where to look,” says Ruth, another member of the group. “That’s a lie, it’s the people who tell us.”

Today, they are bound for Villa Fontana in the suburb of Tlajomulco, a social housing project which lies 20 minutes south of Guadalajara in a low-income neighbourhood.

“Tlajomulco is a pit,” says Susana. “That’s what we call it. An open grave.”


Guadalajara is only Mexico’s third-largest city, yet possibly its most affected by narcoviolence. The city is a stronghold of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG), which over the past decade, has established a reputation as the country’s most violent organised crime group.

According to government figures, the CJNG has been responsible for over 75 per cent of cartel-related murders since 2017, almost doubling the national homicide rate in just four years. Those caught in the violence include not just those directly involved in the drug wars against both the government and rival groups, but also the victims of robberies, extortion, activists, and environmental defenders.

More than 16,000 are missing in Jalisco alone according to the state registry, the most of any Mexican state. Last March, the Buscadores discovered what has since been described as a CJNG-operated “extermination camp” at the Izaguirre ranch, the other side of the Primavera forest from the stadium. There, they found three giant kilns, charred remains, and over 200 pairs of shoes.

On February 22, Mexico’s president Claudia Sheinbaum ordered the capture of the CJNG’s leader, Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes, better known by his alias El Mencho. After a gunfight in the town of Tapalpa, the operation ended in his death. El Mencho is now buried in Zapopan, just a 10-minute drive from Estadio Akron.

A minute’s silence is held at a match in Mexico City to honour military personnel killed in the attempt to capture El Mencho (Photo: Yuri CORTEZ / AFP via Getty Images)

The CJNG reacted with immediate violence, burning cars, blocking roads, and ambushing police officers. Incidents were reported in 20 of Mexico’s 31 states, with 70 people killed. One of the streets shut down was the central highway in Zapopan, leading to the Estadio Akron, stoking fears of violence during the summer’s World Cup. Almost 15,000 security personnel were deployed to Guadalajara in response.

Over recent months, the security situation has calmed to an uneasy truce. The government has not launched any more major operations for fear of sparking further violence, with local experts explaining that cartels favour a smooth World Cup due to their financial interests, which run deeply across Mexico’s major cities.

But though the violence may be less overt, the suffering of the families remains. The disappearances have not stopped — and neither have the searchers.


As the Buscadores arrive in Villa Fontana, one father gently asks if they would mind moving their truck a few metres further forward. It is his daughter’s 10th birthday, and they are hoping to put a small bouncy castle in the space in front of their house.

Luz, the group’s search leader and spokesperson for the day, immediately motions with her hand for the group to drive forward. It is important, she explains, to be friendly and open with the local population. The Buscadores rely on individuals for anonymous tips.

A calling card of the CJNG, in Jalisco, has been to bribe families in low-income neighbourhoods to bury the corpses in their backyards, according to the searchers. On private property, the bodies are harder to ever find.

As they enter the first house, the Buscadores are clustered by the street’s residents. Already, after less than five minutes, they have several more tips.

Luz, who was happy to be photographed leading the search in Villa Fontana (Credit: The Athletic)

In the house’s tiny garden, the homeowner explains that the soil was filled with glass and debris. She says the family had already dug in several areas after moving in, but they are suspicious there was something underneath that. Upstairs, through an open window, television commentary of Spain’s win over Saudi Arabia drifts in the air.

Luz forces her pole into the soil. “The dirt is too compact,” she says. “The earth hasn’t been moved. It can’t be a grave.”

Like her fellow searcher Gabriela, Luz’s hair is tightly tied back into a matching plait. Both are dressed all in black; their long-sleeve t-shirts bear the same faces. They are sisters-in-law, whose husbands ran a car business, fitting and maintaining bespoke alarms and horns. At 3pm on January 2 2024, an armed group in two vans arrived at the shop, the women say. Three men were taken: their husbands, Fernando and Daniel, and an employee who had started work just three weeks before.

“They were robbed, they were beaten, and they were taken away,” says Gabriela. “We don’t know anything else.”

Their next search location was once abandoned, before its current occupants stripped the house of debris and moved in. The Buscadores think the smell might be sewage, but wish to dig to make sure. They are correct.

Another false alarm is ruled out 10 minutes later, over the street. There are hordes of mice and cockroaches in this backyard; the women flick them at each other and joke about a huge marijuana plant growing nearby. They laugh that when they get home, they are going to decompress with a herbal tincture. It is another unsuccessful search; the soil here is too hard again.

“If we struggle with the dirt, so will the people that dig,” says Susana. “It means they’re lazy, they leave the body near the surface.”

Street football games in Villa Fontana’s social housing (Credit: The Athletic)

For the Buscadores, ruling out every tip is part of the process. In the face of such vast suffering, their only option is to be systematic. The previous week, the group uncovered 11 bags of human remains in Santa Anita, some 10km west. They had already found 20 bags nearby.

“Sometimes it’s positive, sometimes it’s not,” says Gabriela. “Sometimes, we go to 10 different places and find nothing, other times, we find them as soon as we arrive.”

She describes one occasion last summer, when they discovered 10 bodies on a huge ranch property on the outskirts of the city. They had to use machinery to dig the corpses out.

“They were recent,” she says, gripping onto the side of the truck. “One of our colleagues on the search, she thought that one might have been her son. They were recent bodies, only maybe a month old. They were still complete. They all looked like they’d been tortured.”

Luz recovers during a brief break in the search (Credit: The Athletic)

As she speaks, an old man limps past. He stops and turns. “Get out of here,” he spits. “Liars!”

It demonstrates the difficulty of carrying out their work within communities of competing interests. Gabriela looks on sadly. “We’re used to it,” she says. It is the first direct hostility they have faced, aside from figures watching from afar, who she suspects are keeping the cartel updated.

“Sometimes when they go by, they shout rude things, an infinite number. But they can’t have empathy. Maybe it hasn’t happened to them. They don’t know what it’s like to search underground for the people you love.”


Four hours before Mexico face South Korea at Estadio Akron, Guadalajara is awash with the national team’s shirts. One of them, at the centre of a group outside Ex Convento del Carmen, has been thickly daubed with red paint, as if to look like blood.

“Los Mexicanos no estamos invitados al Mundial,” it reads. Mexicans are not invited to the World Cup.

A protest before Mexico face South Korea at Estadio Akron (Credit: The Athletic)

Among the families of the missing, there is anger at the perceived excesses of the World Cup. Protestors point to a 9m statue of Pelé commissioned for this World Cup, along with another 100 monumental sculptures of soccer balls dotted throughout the streets.

Beatriz is wearing her own Mexico jersey, decorated with the face of her son, a jeweller who went missing on a vacation to Jalisco. She has travelled across Mexico from Veracruz to stand with the activists.

“As mothers, we are not against sports,” she says. “(The government) have spent millions of pesos when they don’t look at the mothers, at the disappeared. We lack forensic scientists, we lack investigators, we lack tools. We are looking for the missing, but all we have to help us are ghosts.”

For Andrea, their fight is an “invisible struggle”. She is particularly upset that games will be held at Estadio Akron, given the number of bodies discovered in Zapopan over recent months.

“It is a bittersweet feeling to see how they are decorating the windows while there are corpses downstairs,” she says. “My country can be so contradictory, it shows this union and companionship — but people need to know these things are happening.”

Beatriz travelled over eight hours to raise awareness of the missing (Credit: The Athletic)

Sheinbaum’s government have acknowledged that a lack of forensic investigators “are the major outstanding issue” in the country, but say “unprecedented steps” are being taken to locate and identify more of the disappeared

One shirt at the demonstration stands out. Alejandro is wearing an England kit, given to him by a psychological support group for the families of the missing. They drew lots for jerseys; his friends picked Belgium and South Africa.

Alejandro is not against the World Cup’s presence. His son, Hector, worked less than a mile from Estadio Akron at the National Forestry Commission. He just wishes Hector was here to see it.

Alejandro wishes his son could have seen the World Cup (Credit: The Athletic)

“He disappeared a month after graduating,” Alejandro says. “He did nothing wrong. He went to that stadium every two weeks to watch Chivas play, he had his membership, they gave him his badge.

“I support the World Cup. The problem is that I need my son. Every four years we would get together to watch football. A lot of shouting, a lot of laughing, a lot of talk. He should be here. Watching, playing. I need my son.”

His cardboard sign is written in marker pen, a tiny Chivas shirt doodled in its corner. “Your passion is football,” Alejandro reads. “Our passion is finding you.”


The children are shouting in the street as the truck rolls by.

“It’s the Madres de Buscadores,” they cry, running over. Luz and Gabriela smile. The windows are down and a song is playing, ‘Hasta la Raíz’ (Down to the Root) by Natalia Lafourcade, adopted by the searchers as their rally.

They pull up on the edge of a cow field bordering the social housing, fly-tipped waste forming a natural barrier between the road and the land. Swallows forage its peaks, newly-arrived with the rainy season.

The present scene of a mass burial site in Villa Fontana (Credit: The Athletic)

Luz identifies a puddle. Seven bodies were found on that spot recently. “The first thing the searchers found was a skull,” she says. “Then the bags with body parts.” Nothing can be located today. There are only dead dogs and cow bones.

Locals point to a house on the corner nearby, previously inhabited by individuals linked to the cartel. They say that drug deals still take place, that they hear gunshots at night, and are convinced that it has been reoccupied — and that with the police already considering the location to have been searched, it gives organised criminals free rein.

Another occupied house nearby is also considered too risky to enter, despite possessing a tip. They will not consider returning without a police guard — and preferably with more numbers.

It means they are anxious to discover something tangible by the time they arrive at their final location of the morning. It is bordered by a playground, tended by a man who cuts back the grass borders with a scythe.

The children’s playground in Villa Fontana (Credit: The Athletic)

In the neighbouring block, four years ago, seven bags of human remains were found in another children’s playground in Tlajomulco. According to local media, police authorities had previously declared there was no evidence of graves in the area.

Graffiti is sprayed on the wall as they enter the grass–filled garden. “Solo vine, solo me voy,” it says, a gun painted underneath. “I came alone, I go alone.” No residents have come to watch this search; their only witnesses are half-demolished walls and empty bottles.

The Buscadores begin to dig. The ground is immediately soft until it is not. Concrete. Susana takes her pickaxe, striking it up to 30 times before it lies shattered at her feet. Luz inserts the construction pole; Susana sniffs. It is sticky.

The graffiti reads: “I came alone, I go alone.” (Credit: The Athletic)

They begin to dig in a frenzy, the toy yellow frog cast aside with the dirt. Ten inches, 15 inches, 20. The hole is almost half a metre deep before they stop, exhausted. Underneath the concrete, the soil is hardened once again, and filled with debris. They are shaken that there is nothing there.

“Why else would there be concrete there?” one asks. Luz begins to weep, frustrated. They refill the hole, scraping the dirt with the soles of their boots. Susana says she will stay until she finds something, until nightfall if necessary, on this Sunday and the Sundays to come.

“I’m dead while I’m alive,” Gloria, another of the Buscadores, had explained a few days earlier. “I’m not looking for culprits and I know I can’t fool myself that I’m going to find the remains of my son.

“But every morning I ask for the strength to continue, to get out of bed and continue to look. He was a being that was taken from me. You don’t stop as a mother until you find it.”

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Pochettino abruptly ends press conference after USMNT’s Turkey loss: ‘Sorry guys, we won (the group)’

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INGLEWOOD, Calif. — U.S. men’s national team head coach Mauricio Pochettino made an abrupt exit from his post-match press conference and struck a defiant tone following his team’s 3-2 loss to Turkey to close out its World Cup group stage campaign.

The USMNT still finished top of Group D, that fate determined after two games, which allowed Pochettino to rotate nearly his entire lineup at SoFi Stadium. Pochettino fielded a number of questions about the team’s performance, momentum and outlook for the knockout rounds. He took exception at the tone of the queries.

“It cannot be possible that Turkey celebrates three points, Australia celebrates getting through, Paraguay celebrates getting through … for you to not say congratulations for winning the group, it’s a little bit sad,” Pochettino said.

“I need to remind everyone we won the group, sorry guys, we won,” he added, before standing and swiftly leaving the room.

Turkey scored the game-winning goal in the eighth minute of stoppage time with the last kick of the game. Pochettino pointed out on numerous occasions in the press conference how the team had already wrapped up first place in the group, making the outcome here inconsequential.

“I’m happy, maybe I’m not showing because your questions are a little bit weird,” Pochettino told the media minutes before his departure. “But I’m happy, the players are happy because we are first. I’m confused, maybe the vibes are like we go home tonight and Turkey stays (in the World Cup), no?”

The USMNT rolled out an almost entirely rotated squad from the win over Australia, with just Ricardo Pepi and Weston McKennie retaining their starting places. Pepi got his start against the Socceroos in place of an injured Pulisic. McKennie played 86 minutes before being replaced by Malik Tillman. None of the four key starters at the risk of yellow card suspension — Tyler Adams, Folarin Balogun, Chris Richards and Antonee Robinson — made an appearance. Yellow cards are wiped after the group stage so they all start fresh in the round of 32.

All of that change, coupled with the U.S.’s first loss of the competition, resulted in natural wonder about whether all the goodwill achieved in the opening two games was somewhat tempered. Not in Pochettino’s eyes, though.

“Explain what you mean in momentum — I don’t understand,” Pochettino said. “To play with the same team we played against Australia to take a risk? To receive a yellow card (suspension)? To risk players who maybe have problems? I don’t understand. Germany lost momentum too and they played with (mostly) the same team (on Thursday).”

Auston Trusty gave the U.S. an early lead before Turkey responded. (Frederic J. Brown / AFP via Getty Images)

Auston Trusty scored the opening goal and Sebastian Berhalter leveled it early in the second half after Turkey took the lead. Arda Güler, in a man-of-the-match performance, scored and generally dictated his side’s best attacking moments.

Importantly for the U.S., star attacker Christian Pulisic entered the match in the 58th minute, making his return after exiting vs. Paraguay at halftime with a calf injury in the opening U.S. match. He moved normally and showed purpose, and he was immediately the most dangerous American attacker on the pitch after he came on in place of Tim Weah, who had earned a spot start on the left wing. The performance allays any fears he will be compromised in the knockout rounds, though Pulisic was nutmegged by Güler in the buildup to Turkey’s game-winning goal.

“The objective was not just to win, but to get Christian 30-40 minutes,” Pochettino said. “He finished well and he made an impact on the pitch.”

Still, with six points, the U.S. technically finished with their best-ever group stage performance. The record is matched by the 1930 team, though a win was two points in those days compared to three now. Pochettino would have preferred that reality reflected better on Thursday.

In another exchange, when asked what lessons the team learned today, Pochettino took the opportunity to answer his own question.

“No one congratulated us for finishing first in a very difficult group,” Pochettino said. “I congratulate the players, staff and fans. Now I’ll answer your question. You always learn when you are in a World Cup.”

Earlier on Thursday, it was confirmed that the team’s round-of-32 opponent will be Bosnia and Herzegovina, with that clash to be held in Santa Clara, Calif., next Wednesday, and the U.S. manager is confident in his group, regardless of Thursday night’s result.

“We’re a much better team now than we were before,” Pochettino said. “That will be put to the test next game.”

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BBC Sport quiz: Who am I? Guess World Cup star footballer 19

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Welcome to our Who am I? game.

The rules are simple. Each day there’s a new footballer and the challenge is to guess who they are in as few attempts as possible.

After each wrong guess you unlock a new clue. Guess the answer after as few clues as possible to score more points.

Three is a good score, four or five points is exceptional.

So take part and return for more tomorrow.

Missed yesterday’s quiz? Go back and try your luck here.

Today’s player and clues set by BBC Sport’s Joe Rindl.

After more quizzes? Go to our dedicated Football Quizzes and Sports Quizzes pages and sign up for notifications to get the latest quizzes sent straight to your device.

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