Netherlands suffered a setback in World Cup preparation as Algeria earned a 1-0 victory at Stadion Feijenoord. Anis Hadj Moussa struck in the 86th minute, punishing wasteful Dutch finishing.
It was Netherlands’ final home fixture before travelling to North America for the World Cup, adding extra concern for Ronald Koeman.
The hosts created more pressure and produced higher attacking numbers, yet could not convert. Netherlands generated 2.2 expected goals, with Donyell Malen alone responsible for 1.12 xG before substitution for Teun Koopmeiners on 69 minutes. Memphis Depay featured after half-time, continuing recovery from injury but could not rescue the result.
Koeman’s team began strongly and almost scored inside 10 minutes when Malen struck the frame of the goal. Soon after, Tijjani Reijnders found the net, but the assistant’s flag ruled Crysensio Summerville offside in the build-up. Malen then missed the clearest Netherlands opportunity on 19 minutes, sending Summerville’s accurate cross wide from close range.
Algeria gradually settled and threatened before the interval when Mohammed Amoura broke through, only for Jan Paul van Hecke to block decisively. Both coaches changed entire outfield units during the break, introducing 11 substitutes each. Justin Kluivert, one of those additions, forced a smart stop from Luza Zidane shortly after the restart.
| Team | Score | Goalscorer | Minute | Expected Goals (xG) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Netherlands | 0 | – | – | 2.2 |
| Algeria | 1 | Anis Hadj Moussa | 86 | 0.02 (goal shot) |
The contest was decided late, when Hadj Moussa cut inside Jorrel Hato from the right side. The former Feyenoord player then curled a precise effort beyond Robin Roefs into the top-left corner. That strike was Algeria’s winner, despite coming from a chance valued at only 0.02 expected goals by the data models.
Netherlands and Algeria World Cup warm-up implications
Summerville remained a lively presence throughout, offering direct running and service from wide positions, although Netherlands lacked composure in finishing. Defensively, Koeman’s side allowed few clear chances and were beaten by a high-quality shot. For Algeria, Hadj Moussa delivered an influential cameo, creating two chances, attempting three dribbles and winning possession four times.
Vladimir Petkovic gained a confidence-building result as Algeria look towards a demanding World Cup opener against defending champions Argentina on June 16. Netherlands still have one warm-up remaining against Uzbekistan before facing Japan on June 14. Malen, a Roma forward, missed an opportunity to secure a starting position in Koeman’s competitive attacking options.
The defeat raises questions about Netherlands’ efficiency in front of goal, yet also highlights depth in Koeman’s squad, with many players gaining minutes. Algeria depart Rotterdam encouraged by disciplined defending and clinical late finishing. Both national teams now switch focus to final tactical adjustments ahead of their respective World Cup group matches.