
Belgium were two goals down and heading out of the 2026 World Cup. Then they weren't. A stunning second-half comeback saw Rudi Garcia's side overturn a 2-0 deficit to beat Senegal 3-2 and reach the round of 16 — and if the result itself wasn't enough of a talking point, Garcia made sure the post-match press conference was.
For a significant stretch of this match, Senegal looked like the team going through. Two goals to the good, organised, and with Belgium visibly rattled — Pape Thiaw's side were in control of their own World Cup destiny. Then, somehow, they weren't.
Belgium's three-goal turnaround was the kind of shift that happens in football and still manages to feel impossible when it does. From 2-0 down to 3-2 up — and Senegal, who had done so much right to get themselves into that position, were eliminated. The Lions of Teranga had the game. They gave it back.
Thiaw will spend a long time turning this one over. A two-goal lead at a World Cup is not a guarantee, but it is a platform — and Belgium found the gaps to dismantle it.
Editorial note: the 3-2 result is reported by Foot Mercato. Flagside is seeking confirmation from a second outlet (BBC Sport, ESPN FC, or the official FIFA match report) before this article is finalised. The result will be updated once verified.
Important caveat first: Flagside has not independently verified the exact wording of Garcia's post-match remarks. The account below is drawn solely from Foot Mercato (Tier 2). A second source confirming the press conference content — or an official transcript — has not yet been obtained. Read accordingly.
According to Foot Mercato, the Belgium coach used his post-match comments to publicly question Thiaw's in-game management — suggesting that tactical decisions made by the Senegal bench during the match contributed to the collapse. The specific content of those remarks has not been fully detailed, and Garcia's full press conference transcript should be treated as unconfirmed until a second source confirms the wording.
What is clear is the direction of travel: a winning coach, on a World Cup night, pointing the finger — however diplomatically — at the opposing manager's choices. That is not nothing.
The comeback alone was the story. Garcia made it two stories.
Thiaw has built a reputation as a measured, thoughtful coach — and Senegal's campaign had genuine quality in it before this unravelled. A public critique from the opposing bench, on the biggest stage, is the kind of thing that follows a manager around. Whether Garcia's reading of the tactical situation was right is almost beside the point now.
Belgium are through. Senegal are going home. And somewhere between those two facts, there is a press conference that is going to be replayed a lot — if the quotes hold up.
Belgium were two goals down and heading out of the 2026 World Cup. Then they weren't. A stunning second-half comeback saw Rudi Garcia's side overturn a 2-0 deficit to beat Senegal 3-2 and reach the round of 16
Lähteet
Foot Mercato
Flagsiden jutut ovat omaperäisiä, monista lähteistä syntetisoituja kirjoituksia. Mainitsemme jokaisen median, joka ruokki juttua.
Yön otteluiden poiminta, mitä siirtoikkunassa tapahtuu, ja yksi kolumni, josta toimituksen pöytä väitteli. Ei mainoksia. Ei vinkkejä. Ei operaattoreita.
Yksi klikkaus poistaa tilauksesta. Emme jaa sähköpostiosoitteita.
“Stays on World Cup — different angle, same beat.”
MAAJOUKKUEETHabib Diarra picked the right moment to announce himself on the biggest stage. Twenty-five minutes into Senegal's 2026 FIFA World Cup round-of-16 tie against Belgium, the young midfielder put the Lion
“Stays on World Cup — different angle, same beat.”
MAAJOUKKUEETHabib Diarra picked the right moment to announce himself on the biggest stage. Twenty-five minutes into Senegal's 2026 FIFA World Cup round-of-16 tie against Belgium, the young midfielder put the Lion