Belgium 5-1 New Zealand: Trossard brace and De Bruyne strike send Red Devils top of Group G
Belgium 5-1 New Zealand confirmed as Belgium finish top of Group G after a dominant performance at BC Place, with Leandro Trossard’s brace and a Kevin De Bruyne strike sealing first place. (cyprus-mail.com)
Strong start and decisive win
Belgium produced their most convincing display of the group stage, overturning earlier frustrations with a comprehensive 5-1 victory over New Zealand that propelled them to the top of Group G. The result gave Rudi Garcia’s side their first win of the tournament and settled the group’s pecking order ahead of the knockout draw. (cyprus-mail.com)
Arthur Theate, making his first World Cup start at centre-back, anchored a defence that rarely looked troubled, providing Belgium with a stability that had been missing in earlier matches. The Red Devils combined improved defensive organisation with sharper attacking movement, a blend that allowed them to turn a cagey opening into a rout by the closing stages. (skysports.com)
Trossard double puts Belgium in control
Leandro Trossard emerged as the match-winner, converting a rebound from a corner to open the scoring and then doubling his tally early in the second half after sharp interplay with the Belgian creative players. His first strike came from close range after a corner fell kindly, while his second was a composed finish following an incisive pass that split New Zealand’s back line. (skysports.com)
Trossard’s movement and finishing gave Belgium the cutting edge they had lacked in previous fixtures, and his display was a clear statement of intent from a side eager to restore pride. His double not only settled the contest but also allowed Garcia to introduce attacking options later, safe in the knowledge that Belgium held a comfortable lead. (skysports.com)
Midfield spark and late finishers extend lead
Kevin De Bruyne supplied the moment of quality that killed any remaining nerves, driving a precise strike from the edge of the box to make it 3-0 and make goal difference irrelevant for the final table. De Bruyne’s influence was evident all night as he orchestrated play and provided the creative spark Belgium needed to break down stubborn resistance. (gulfnews.com)
New Zealand pulled one back through Elijah Just, but substitutes Romelu Lukaku and Alexis Saelemaekers added late goals to compound the visitors’ misfortune and give Belgium a flattering final margin. Lukaku’s header restored the three-goal cushion and Saelemaekers’ stoppage-time strike capped a match that the Red Devils controlled from Trossard’s second onwards. (cyprus-mail.com)
Egypt hold Iran in dramatic finish
In the other Group G fixture, Egypt secured a 1-1 draw with Iran in a game that featured an early goal, a missed penalty and a stoppage-time VAR intervention. Mahmoud Saber gave Egypt a fifth-minute lead before Ramin Rezaeian equalised shortly afterwards in a chaotic opening spell. (washingtonpost.com)
Mehdi Taremi had a penalty saved in the first half and Iran thought they had snatched a stoppage-time winner only for Shoja Khalilzadeh’s effort to be ruled out for marginal offside after a VAR check. The draw left Egypt safely through and left Iran waiting on results elsewhere to discover if a third-place finish would be enough. (thestar.com.my)
Group permutations and knockout pathways
Belgium’s victory ensured they finished as Group G winners on goal difference, which determines their placement in the Round of 32 matrix and narrows their potential opponents. As winners, they will avoid certain potentially awkward matchups and will face a side determined by the pre-set combinations involving the best third-placed teams. (cyprus-mail.com)
Egypt’s point guaranteed them a place in the last 32 and set up a Round of 32 meeting with Australia in Dallas, while Iran must now calculate whether three draws and a resilient performance will be enough to earn one of the eight best third-placed slots. The expanded 48-team format leaves room for third-placed progress, but the final composition will depend on results across the remaining groups. (foxsports.com)
Elsewhere, Senegal’s emphatic 5-0 win over Iraq kept them in contention to advance as one of the leading third-placed teams, underscoring how finely balanced the race for the remaining knockout berths remains. Several nations must now await the conclusion of matchday three to learn whether their points and goal differences will be sufficient. (straitstimes.com)
Tactical reset and individual displays
Rudi Garcia’s selection adjustments paid dividends as Belgium combined a disciplined back line with a midfield that protected the defence and fed the front three. Arthur Theate’s composed debut start provided a defensive platform while De Bruyne’s orchestration in midfield created the openings Trossard and his teammates converted. (skysports.com)
The final scoreline also underlined Belgium’s depth, with experienced substitutes Romelu Lukaku and Alexis Saelemaekers contributing crucial late goals that spared the hosts any concerns about edging through on narrow margins. For New Zealand, the result was a harsh end to a campaign that showed moments of resilience but not enough cutting edge to progress. (channelnewsasia.com)
Belgium now move into the knockout rounds with renewed confidence and a clearer identity after a game that blended individual brilliance and collective structure. Their next opponent will be determined by the tournament’s bracket and the list of third-placed qualifiers, but the manner of their win provided a timely boost ahead of a potentially challenging Round of 32. (cyprus-mail.com)
Egypt, having secured their first-ever progression beyond the group stage, will need to manage fitness and bookings carefully before facing Australia, with attention turning to squad rotation and injury checks in the days ahead. Iran’s wait will be nervy but the performance offered positives to build on should they be among the third-placed qualifiers. (washingtonpost.com)
Belgium 5-1 New Zealand will be remembered in Vancouver as the match where the Red Devils recaptured their momentum, combining a clinical attacking display with improved defensive resolve to finish top of Group G and head into the knockout phase on a high.










