Belgium defeated the United States 4-1 in the Round of 16 of the 2026 FIFA Men's World Cup at Lumen Field in Seattle, eliminating the co-hosts and advancing to the quarterfinals to face Spain. This comes amid the controversy surrounding FIFA's suspension of the one=game ban of American player Folarin Balogun.
Belgium dominated early when Nicolas Raskin exploited defensive lapses on the left, crossed low, and Charles De Ketelaere tapped in unmarked scoring in the 9th minute. The U.S. defense (including Sergiño Dest and others) was caught ball-watching.
In the 31th minute, Malik Tillman scored a free-kick from ~25 yards (straight-on but deeper than his previous one vs. Bosnia). It deflected off Belgian player Hans Vanaken and wrong-footed Thibaut Courtois, giving the US an equalizer that energized the American crowd.
In the 33rd minute, Leandro Trossard crossed from the byline; De Ketelaere headed home unmarked, beating Tim Ream. Poor marking again from the U.S. put Belgium ahead 2-1.
A major error by U.S. goalkeeper Matt Freese when he came off his line for a long ball, chested it down under pressure from De Ketelaere, hesitated, and lost control. Hans Vanaken pounced for a long-range finish in the 57th minute putting Belgium ahead 3-1. This effectively ended U.S. hopes.
In the 93rd minute, Amrican Chris Richards' giveaway in the box allowed Romelu Lukaku to seal it in stoppage time, 4-1, for the Belgians.
Belgium dominated possession and exploited U.S. defensive errors and naivety throughout. De Ketelaere was outstanding. The U.S. had moments, especially after the equalizer, but looked overmatched, with Christian Pulisic underperforming before a leg injury forced him off. Balogun was largely quiet. Substitutions like Gio Reyna and Ricardo Pepi couldn't turn it around.
Belgium joins Spain (their next opponent, Friday in the LA area), England, Norway, France, and Morocco in the quarterfinals. All three co-hosts, USA, Canada, Mexico, were eliminated in the Round of 16.
Pre-match coverage which added extra tension, Monday, was a surprise move by FIFA. The soccer body suspended Balogun's one-game ban (probationary period of one year under their disciplinary code, Article 27). If he commits a similar offense in that period, the ban activates. But he was cleared to play in the match against Belgium, after President Trump's intervention.
Trump and U.S. officials appealed to FIFA, including a phone call to the organization's President Gianni Infantino.
Critics called it favoritism toward the co-hosts. Belgium's federation in a statement said it was "astonished," and accused FIFA of crossing a "red line" on fair play. The Belgian soccer body appealed the decision but FIFA denied it. They considered post-match challenges to the decision, but the match proceeded with Balogun playing. Given the match result early Tuesday morning (UTC), the Belgians may not bother appealing afterall.