
The Netherlands are going home. Ronald Koeman's side — who'd looked sharp enough topping their group just days ago — fell to Morocco on penalties in the round of 16, a 1-1 draw after extra time giving way to the kind of shootout exit that Dutch football has a horrible habit of collecting. A back five built specifically for this tie, a late equaliser that wasn't enough, and then the long walk. Another tournament, another what-if.
Koeman went into the Morocco tie with a back five — Nathan Ake and Micky van de Ven both starting, Crysencio Summerville handed a place in the attacking line. This was a deliberate change for the knockout round: Ake had actually come in to replace Van de Ven for the Tunisia group-stage match, so pairing them together was Koeman's specific gamble for this occasion. On paper, it read as a manager hedging his bets: shore up defensively against a Morocco side that can hurt you on the break, while keeping enough quality higher up the pitch to nick something.
For large stretches, it looked like it might work. The Dutch were organised, difficult to play through, and Summerville — one of the more electric presences in this squad — gave them a threat in transition. But football has a way of punishing the cautious, and a 1-1 scoreline after 120 minutes tells its own story: enough to survive, not quite enough to win.
The frustrating part is that this Dutch side had looked genuinely convincing in the group stage. A 3-1 win over Tunisia in their final group match sent them through as group winners — the kind of performance that makes you think a team has found its rhythm at exactly the right moment. Denzel Dumfries was a constant threat down the right. There was a sense that Koeman had, finally, landed on something — even if the personnel in the back line shifted from game to game.
Morocco had other ideas. They were the Atlas Lions who reached the World Cup semi-finals in Qatar — a team that knows exactly how to make a knockout tie ugly, how to absorb pressure and make you pay for the one moment you switch off. The Netherlands found that out the hard way.
The shootout is where Dutch World Cup dreams go to quietly expire, and this one was no different. Full shootout details are still being confirmed across outlets, but the result is not in doubt: Morocco go through, the Netherlands go home, and Koeman is left to explain a decision-making process that will be picked apart for weeks.
Was the back five the right call? It's the question Dutch football will be asking all summer. A more aggressive setup might have won it in 90 minutes — or it might have left them exposed and out before extra time. That's the nature of tournament football: you only find out you were wrong when it's too late to change anything.
Koeman did not look like a man who thought he'd got it wrong. He rarely does.
The Netherlands are going home. Ronald Koeman's side — who'd looked sharp enough topping their group just days ago — fell to Morocco on penalties in the round of 16, a 1-1 draw after extra time giving way to the kind of…
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“Stays on World Cup — different angle, same beat.”
INT🚨 Developing story — full match details are still being confirmed. Morocco came from behind, held their nerve, and sent the Netherlands home on penalties — booking their place in the 2026 World Cup r
“Stays on World Cup — different angle, same beat.”
INT🚨 Developing story — full match details are still being confirmed. Morocco came from behind, held their nerve, and sent the Netherlands home on penalties — booking their place in the 2026 World Cup r