Belgium’s Golden Generation Bows Out as Lammens’ Error Spells End to World Cup Dreams


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Belgium’s Golden Generation Says Goodbye to World Cup Ambitions

Fairytale goodbyes are a rare occurrence in football, and Belgium’s 2-1 defeat at the hands of Spain in the quarter-finals of the 2026 World Cup marked the likely final curtain call for the Red Devils’ golden generation.

Belgium's Golden Generation Bows Out as Lammens' Error Spells End to World Cup Dreams
Source: s.yimg.com

Thibaut Courtois, Romelu Lukaku, Kevin de Bruyne, and Axel Witsel have been stalwarts of the national team since the 2014 World Cup in Brazil, but their last chance at claiming football’s biggest prize ended with a mistake from one of their successors.

The injured Courtois, replaced midway through the second half, could only watch as 24-year-old Senne Lammens spilled an 88th-minute shot and Mikel Merino tucked home the rebound.

‘Lammens doesn’t cover himself in any glory. He didn’t make a mistake for Man United last year but this is another pressure,’ said Stephen Warnock on BBC Radio 5 Live.

The next generation’s time will come, but it felt a sad way for the old guard to depart. ‘They could have had one last hurrah – everyone deserves to go far,’ echoed the sentiments of manager Rudi Garcia.

Belgium’s Golden Generation: A Legacy of Unfulfilled Expectations

The Belgian side that beat Algeria 2-1 in their opening group stage game of the 2014 World Cup read like an all-star fantasy team of players in their prime.

Courtois, De Bruyne, Witsel, and Lukaku all started, as did Eden Hazard, Mousa Dembele, and Vincent Kompany, with Dries Mertens and Marouane Fellaini coming off the bench.

Belgium topped their group in their first World Cup since 2002 and reached the quarter-finals, before going one better and reaching the final four in 2018 and winning the third-place play-off.

The same group of players reached the quarter-finals of both Euro 2016 and 2020, before crashing out of the group stages of the 2022 World Cup in Qatar.

Critics say such a talented group should have achieved more, but for a nation of less than 12 million people, was international success ever a realistic aim?

‘To be a golden generation you have to win some gold and then you can be called that,’ said Spanish football journalist Guillem Balague.

‘It’s put the expectations very high in Belgium and it’s interesting that people look back at that group of players because with Lukaku, De Bruyne, Tielemans, Trossard they have actually had a good run.

‘They were third in the last World Cup and that seems to have been forgotten with Roberto Martinez as their manager. I’m not sure how much more you could ask for.’

The Next Generation: A Bright Future for Belgium

Along with those celebrated names, Leandro Trossard (31), Brandon Mechele (33), Timothy Castagne (33), Hans Vanaken (33), and Thomas Meunier (34) have likely played their last World Cup minutes.

‘I’m disappointed for those that maybe might not come back with the national team,’ manager Rudi Garcia said after the match.

‘I took a team that I wanted to take as far as possible. My veteran players, who are maybe on their way out, that they could have one last hurrah.’

The members of that new generation – 13 squad members are aged 25 or below – have certainly given cause to be optimistic for the future.

Striker Charles de Ketelaere was not a prolific goal scorer in Serie A last season – he managed just three goals in 31 games – but he found the net on three occasions at the World Cup to finish the tournament as Belgium’s joint-top scorer.

The 25-year-old also provided one assist and did well creating space for the wingers to cut into the penalty area.

Captain Youri Tielemans, 29, scored both the equaliser and winner in the remarkable comeback win against Senegal in the last 32, while Aston Villa’s 24-year-old Amadou Onana played well before suffering an anterior cruciate ligament injury against the USA.

At 24, Jeremy Doku is an elite talent, though he was not able to recreate the form he found with Manchester City last season.

‘The younger members of the squad will learn something from this,’ Garcia said.

‘We can be proud of our World Cup stint. We learn through defeat. I don’t think we have anything to feel humiliated about. I feel we were able to give the Spanish squad a run for their money.’

With a new generation of players on the rise, Belgium’s future in football looks brighter than ever.