The Netherlands arrived in Mexico City with questions. They left the group stage with answers — or at least enough of them to feel dangerous. A 2-2 draw with Japan in their opener suggested an Oranje side still finding its rhythm. What followed was a 5-1 demolition of Sweden and a 3-1 win over Tunisia that had Dutch fans breathing a lot easier heading into the knockout rounds. *Reporting based primarily on Football Oranje's on-the-ground coverage from Mexico City; scorelines corroborated by Soccerway match records.*
Dropping two points against Japan was the kind of result that sets a group stage on edge. According to Football Oranje columnist Ibrahim Ayyub, writing from Mexico City, the draw exposed a Netherlands side that hadn't yet clicked — capable of moments but not yet a coherent unit. It's the sort of performance that gets filed away and revisited the moment anything goes wrong later in the tournament.
For a squad carrying genuine knockout ambitions, a 2-2 felt like a warning. The question was whether the coaching staff would get a response.
They got one. A 5-1 win over Sweden is not a scoreline that leaves room for caveats — that's a statement result at any tournament, let alone a World Cup group stage. Ayyub's match column for Football Oranje framed it in the outlet's signature good-bad-ugly structure, which tells you there were still imperfections to pick at. But five goals against a Sweden side at this level is the kind of afternoon that resets the mood entirely. The result is logged in Soccerway's 2026 World Cup records, confirming the scoreline.
The margin also did something tactically useful: it meant the Netherlands could approach their final group game against Tunisia with the group already within reach.
A 3-1 win over Tunisia — confirmed in Soccerway's group-stage results — secured top spot. Ayyub's post-match column, again filed from Mexico City, noted the familiar mix of quality and concern that has followed this Oranje side through the group. Three goals is a healthy return. Conceding one, as they did against both Japan and Tunisia, is the thread worth pulling on before the knockout rounds begin.
The Netherlands have now conceded in all three group games. That's not a crisis, but it's a pattern.
Topping the group matters in a World Cup bracket — it shapes the path, at least in theory. The Netherlands have done it the hard way: a stumble, a roar, a controlled finish. The three scorelines have been corroborated via Soccerway; the tactical colour and on-the-ground detail comes from Ayyub's columns for Football Oranje, which represent one writer's perspective and haven't been independently verified beyond what that outlet has reported.
What is clear: this is an Oranje side that found something between matchday one and matchday three. Whether that's a genuine gear-change or just a favourable draw of opponents is exactly the kind of question the knockout rounds were invented to answer.
They looked like a team that needed a game to warm up. They got one — and then they got going.
The Netherlands arrived in Mexico City with questions. They left the group stage with answers — or at least enough of them to feel dangerous. A 2-2 draw with Japan in their opener suggested an Oranje side still finding…
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“Stays on World Cup — different angle, same beat.”
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