The Mexico match in question appears to be the World Cup game against England, and the reporting says it was delayed by an hour because of severe weather, so its end time would shift accordingly. If you mean that match, it would finish about 90 minutes after the delayed kickoff, plus any stoppage time and a possible penalty shootout.

Timing

  • Regulation soccer lasts 90 minutes, split into two 45-minute halves.
  • Add halftime, stoppage time, and possibly extra time or penalties in knockout matches.
  • Because kickoff was pushed back one hour, the final whistle would also move later by roughly that amount.

What that means

  • If the match started at the delayed time reported, expect the end roughly 2 hours to 2 hours 30 minutes after kickoff.
  • If it goes to extra time and penalties, it can run longer.
  • The exact finish depends on how much stoppage time the referee adds.

Match context

  • Coverage from July 5 says FIFA had a contingency plan in case of further disruption, but the match was expected to go ahead after the delay.
  • ESPN’s reporting confirms Mexico’s World Cup match schedule entry and the delayed kickoff context.
TL;DR: If you mean Mexico vs England, expect the game to end about 2 to 2.5 hours after the delayed kickoff, longer if it goes to extra time or penalties.