Belgium’s dramatic comeback against Senegal keeps their World Cup journey in North America alive and reshapes expectations for the last 16. Rudi Garcia’s team overturned a two-goal deficit in Seattle Stadium, forced extra time with late strikes, then advanced through a stoppage-time penalty converted by captain Youri Tielemans after a VAR review.
The victory also entered World Cup record books. Tielemans’ decisive spot-kick, timed at 124:44, was the latest goal ever scored in the tournament. Belgium became the first side to win a World Cup match after trailing by at least two goals since their own turnaround against Japan in 2018.
Senegal had appeared in full control for most of the contest. Habib Diarra and Ismaila Sarr scored to put Pape Thiaw’s side 2-0 ahead, with that lead still intact approaching the 86th minute. Belgium then struck twice in three minutes through Romelu Lukaku and Tielemans to force extra time and tilt momentum.
With penalties approaching at the end of extra time, the key incident arrived deep into stoppage time. Lamine Camara was penalised for a foul on Tielemans inside the area after a VAR intervention. Tielemans, wearing the armband, took responsibility and converted, completing the turnaround and sending the Red Devils into the knockout phase.
Garcia underlined the historic nature of the response from a group often compared with previous Belgian generations. “I arrived 18 months ago because I believe that there’s quality in this team. It’s not the best of all time, but tonight we wrote history, Garcia told reporters. We didn’t win anything, we qualified for the round of 16, and we’ll see who we’re going to face. It doesn’t matter who it’s going to be. Now we’re going to savour our victory and our ‘remontada’.”
Belgium’s achievement also placed them in exclusive company. They are now only the second nation to win two World Cup games after falling at least two goals behind. Germany achieved this against Hungary in 1954, while England managed it versus Germany in 1970, highlighting how rare such turnarounds remain.
Underlying numbers showed Senegal carried more threat despite the final scoreline. Both teams attempted 19 shots, yet Senegal recorded an expected goals value of 3.58 compared with Belgium’s 1.74. Garcia’s side were highly clinical in normal time, scoring with both shots on target after the interval, with those goals arriving just 159 seconds apart.
| Team | Shots | Shots on target (second half, normal time) | xG |
|---|---|---|---|
| Belgium | 19 | 2 | 1.74 |
| Senegal | 19 | Not specified | 3.58 |
Garcia focused on how the experience could shape Belgium’s mindset for the rest of the World Cup in North America. “Football is emotions. We had plenty, Garcia added. When you’re down 2-0 in the 83rd minute, it’s never easy to come back and win the match. But this is what I said to the players at the hydration break: we had to score the third goal in the match and then anything is possible. We did it, we delivered, and then they opened up the game again. It is a scenario that can make the group grow even stronger and tighter together and realise that up until the match is not finished, until the final whistle, a lot of things can happen as we just demonstrated today.”
Senegal’s exit carried its own mixture of pride and disappointment. Thiaw’s team missed the chance to meet co-hosts the United States in the quarter-finals, yet still reached a notable attacking milestone. Senegal became the first African side to score 10 goals in a single World Cup tournament, reflecting their threat across the campaign.
Thiaw felt the late penalty award changed everything and queried the decision, while acknowledging Belgium’s progress. “It was a cruel defeat, Thiaw said. We played well and we were leading 2-0. But a football match doesn’t last 85 minutes. Belgium came back, and we couldn’t deal with that. We also had our chances, but we have to congratulate Belgium because they qualified. When the penalty was awarded, we had our own interpretation. We didn’t think it was a penalty. Our players questioned the decision because they believed they had the right to do so. Belgium scored from it, and that goal knocked us out.”
Belgium now move into the round of 16 carrying belief from a record-breaking remontada, while Garcia stresses that no trophy has been secured yet. Senegal depart after a late setback, but with an attacking record for African teams and a performance that tested Belgium’s resilience across 124 demanding minutes in Seattle Stadium.