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De Ketelaere Doubles Down as Belgium Crushes US World Cup Hopes

By Sachit Subba Football • Jul 07, 2026 02:51 AM • 175 views

De Ketelaere Doubles Down as Belgium Crushes US World Cup Hopes

SEATTLE — The deafening roars of "U-S-A!" had barely faded into the Pacific Northwest night before reality set in. The United States’ ambitious World Cup campaign came to a crashing, painful halt at a stunned Seattle Stadium on Monday, dismantled 4-1 by a ruthless Belgium side in a Round of 16 clash.

Charles De Ketelaere was the architect of American heartbreak, scoring twice to anchor a performance that exposed the host nation’s tactical vulnerabilities on the grandest stage. Ultimately, the bureaucratic manoeuvring proved futile. The 25-year-old striker was reduced to a passenger, suffocated by a disciplined Belgian backline as the Americans struggled to match the European giants' intensity.

Dodi Lukebakio, drafted into the starting lineup for the injured Jeremy Doku, terrorised the American flanks from the opening kickoff. Moments after Timothy Castagne forced an acrobatic fingertip save from U.S. goalkeeper Matt Freese, Lukebakio carved open the defence to set up Youri Tielemans, who uncharacteristically fluffed his lines. The reprieve lasted less than sixty seconds. In the ninth minute, Nicolas Raskin exploited a hesitant, nervous U.S. rearguard, driving a low cross into the six-yard box. De Ketelaere was perfectly positioned to tap home, instantly deflating the heavily partisan home crowd.

Struggling for oxygen and ideas, the co-hosts found a lifeline courtesy of the first-half hydration break. Rejuvenated by the tactical reset, Balogun finally made an impact, drawing a foul in a dangerous central area. In the 31st minute, Malik Tillman stepped up, unleashing a free kick that took a wicked, wrong-footing deflection off the forehead of Hans Vanaken—who had entered early for the injured Amadou Onana—leaving Thibaut Courtois stranded as the ball sailed into the net.

The euphoria in Seattle lasted a mere 70 seconds. From the kickoff, the U.S. reverted to passive defence. Leandro Trossard was allowed time to lift a delicate cross to the back post, where De Ketelaere easily outmuscled veteran defender Tim Ream to loop a header past Freese, instantly restoring the Belgian advantage. Gregg Berhalter’s men emerged for the second half with far more authority, stringing passes together and pinning Belgium deep into their own territory. But any burgeoning hopes of a historic comeback were permanently shattered in the 57th minute by a moment of pure footballing tragedy.

Receiving a routine backpass, Freese dawdled catastrophically on the ball well outside his six-yard box. The towering Vanaken closed him down instantly, blocking the clearance and turning the ball into an empty net to make it 3-1. It was a psychological blow from which the Americans would never recover.

With U.S. fans already streaming toward the exits, the legendary Romelu Lukaku put the final exclamation point on the evening. Deep into stoppage time, the veteran marksman slotted home a cool finish to bag his 7th career World Cup goal and his 93rd international strike overall.

For Belgium, a historic third quarter-final appearance in their last four World Cups awaits, setting up a mouthwatering blockbuster against European champions Spain in Los Angeles this Friday. For the United States, a tournament defined by immense expectations ends with a sobering lesson in the ruthless nature of knockout football.

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