Senegal’s World Cup dream collapsed in brutal fashion after Belgium came from two goals down to beat the Lions of Teranga 3-2 after extra time in Seattle.
Pape Thiaw’s side looked ready to deliver one of the strongest African performances of the knockout round when Habib Diarra and Ismaila Sarr put Senegal 2-0 ahead.
But the final minutes changed everything.
Belgium pulled one back through Romelu Lukaku in the 86th minute before Youri Tielemans struck three minutes later to drag the Red Devils level and force extra time.
Then came the final blow.
Deep into stoppage time of extra time, Belgium were awarded a penalty after a VAR review. Tielemans stepped up and scored, sending Belgium into the last 16 and ending Senegal’s tournament in the cruellest possible way.
Thiaw Left Hurting After Senegal Exit
Thiaw admitted the defeat was painful after Senegal failed to protect a lead that had placed them within touching distance of a famous win.
“We’re out it hurts. We must congratulate the team, who gave it their all, but unfortunately, we weren’t able to hold on to our two-goal lead.”
The Senegal coach refused to turn the penalty decision into the centre of his reaction, saying he did not want to comment on the referee’s call.
Instead, he pointed to Senegal’s failure to manage the closing stages and the physical problems that forced changes late in the contest.
“We had physical problems, there were players who couldn’t go on any longer, so we were forced to make changes,” Thiaw said. “We have to accept it, that’s football.”
Belgium Turn Survival Into Statement
For Belgium, this was a rescue mission that became a statement.
They were five minutes from elimination. Then Lukaku gave them life, Tielemans delivered the equaliser, and the Aston Villa midfielder completed the comeback from the spot in extra time.
Senegal had control for long stretches, but Belgium punished the one thing knockout football rarely forgives: losing command when the match should be closed.
Belgium coach Rudi Garcia, stated Senegal became too protective of their 2-0 lead. Thiaw rejected that view, insisting his team had been well positioned before the late collapse.
“That’s his opinion, but it’s not mine at all,” Thiaw said. “Because we were well positioned. Once you win, it’s easier to talk.”
Senegal Face Painful Review
The defeat leaves Senegal with a painful review, not just because they lost, but because of how close they came to advancing. They had the lead, had the moment. They had Belgium under pressure.
But they could not carry the match over the line.
For Thiaw, the only route now is to study the collapse and build from it.
“We have to move forward, study it well, see what didn’t work in order to try to change it for next time,” he said.
Senegal leave the World Cup with regret. Belgium move on with momentum.
That is the knife-edge of knockout football.