Belgium advanced to the 2026 FIFA World Cup round of 16 after one of the tournament's most dramatic finishes, overturning a two-goal deficit against Senegal with three late goals, the last a penalty converted by Youri Tielemans in the 120th minute plus five minutes of stoppage time.
Senegal had looked set to progress, holding a two-goal advantage deep into the match. What followed was a collapse that few would have predicted, as Belgium mounted a frantic comeback driven by Romelu Lukaku and then Tielemans to level the score before forcing the tie to its decisive moment.
How Belgium Turned It Around
Lukaku pulled one back to give Belgium a foothold when the match appeared beyond them. Tielemans then equalised to take the game into extra time. With the clock showing well past the 120th minute, Belgium won a penalty, and Tielemans stepped up to convert it himself, sending the Red Devils through and eliminating Senegal from the tournament.
The comeback is among the more remarkable in recent World Cup knockout-stage history. A two-goal lead at this stage of a tournament is typically regarded as a near-certain passage to the next round. Belgium managed to erase it in the match's final stretch, a feat that required both individual quality and a degree of Senegalese fortune turning sharply against the African side.
What It Means Going Forward
Belgium's place in the round of 16 sets up a new fixture that will test whether this late resilience reflects a genuine shift in the team's form or was a product of Senegal's defensive fragility under pressure. Lukaku's goal, in particular, will be closely watched: the striker has carried heavy expectation heading into this tournament, and a goal at this stage, regardless of context, matters for confidence and momentum.
Tielemans' role was doubly significant. He scored the equaliser and then held his nerve to convert the decisive penalty under extreme pressure, a combination that will define Belgium's campaign narrative regardless of what follows.
For Senegal, the exit is a sharp blow. African sides have progressively raised their standing at recent World Cups, and a two-goal lead surrendered this late will prompt hard questions about game management and substitution decisions in the final stages of the match.
Belgium's round of 16 opponent and the date of their next fixture will determine how much recovery time the squad has. The extraordinary length of this match, running deep into extra time, means physical fatigue is a genuine concern heading into the knockout round.