The Uruguayan Football Association (AUF) has cancelled the national team’s private charter flight home following their humiliating group-stage exit from the 2026 FIFA World Cup, forcing players and staff to arrange their own travel on commercial airlines.
The decision — first reported by Uruguayan journalist Martin Charquero — comes after the two-time world champions finished third in Group H with just two points from three matches, failing to record a single victory. A 1-0 defeat to Spain in Guadalajara on Friday sealed their fate, with goalkeeper Fernando Muslera’s costly error proving decisive.
The AUF had originally scheduled a charter flight from the team’s training base in Playa del Carmen, Mexico, directly to Montevideo. Instead, the 26 players and coaching staff must now book commercial flights — some returning to Uruguay, others heading directly to Europe or their club destinations.
In a statement, the AUF insisted the move was not punitive but logistical, citing the original delegation of over 150 people and more than 5,000 kg of luggage that required a charter for the outward journey. “The return trip never contemplated the charter option due to not knowing where the return would begin,” the federation explained, adding that commercial flights were “the fastest and most efficient way” for individual destinations.
Yet the timing has been widely interpreted as a rebuke. Uruguay, ranked 16th in the world, was the highest-rated team to fail to advance to the Round of 32 in the expanded 48-team tournament. Draws against debutants Cape Verde and Saudi Arabia preceded the Spain defeat, marking their worst group-stage performance since 2002.
Captain Jose Maria Gimenez, who remained on the bench for all three matches, offered a somber apology: “The pain is immense. The feeling is one of profound sadness. We apologize to the Uruguayan people. It wasn’t what we all expected.”
Coach Marcelo Bielsa, whose contract has now ended, delivered a blunt self-assessment: “What I leave to Uruguayan football is nothing. Fourth place in the qualifiers meant nothing, third in the Copa America meant nothing, and obviously this performance… I don’t need to define it.”
The cancellation of the charter flight — a privilege typically afforded to exiting national teams — has been labeled by local media as a symbolic reflection of the nation’s fury over a campaign that many consider the most embarrassing in half a century.




