For 124 minutes, Senegal stood on the edge of history.
Then football, in its most merciless form, reminded them that history is never written until the final whistle.
This time, the Lions of Teranga did not walk away consumed by the injustice that haunted their Africa Cup of Nations final defeat months earlier. There was no premature exit from the field, no theatrical protest against fate itself. Yet when the referee Saíd Martínez pointed to the penalty spot in the dying seconds of extra time, another cruel chapter began to write itself for Senegalese football.
The clock read 124 minutes and 44 seconds when Youri Tielemans converted the decisive penalty — the latest goal ever scored in a FIFA World Cup match. It completed one of the most astonishing reversals the tournament has seen: Belgium, dead and buried at 2-0 down with four minutes of normal time remaining, had somehow dragged themselves back from oblivion.
For Senegal, it was devastation stretched across every second of extra time. For Belgium, it was a resurrection.
Senegal’s Match to Control
For most of the evening in Seattle, Senegal looked not merely superior, but entirely liberated. Their football carried the confidence of a side finally ready to transcend the emotional scars of recent tournaments.
Ismaïla Sarr tormented Belgium from the opening minutes. Inside 12 minutes he struck the post after capitalising on a spill by Thibaut Courtois, and soon after he repeated the feat, this time allowing Habib Diarra to convert the rebound into an empty net.
Belgium’s defence appeared vulnerable to every direct Senegalese attack. The pace, verticality and fluidity of Senegal’s transitions overwhelmed a Belgian side that looked old in body and exhausted in spirit.
Then came the moment that seemed to seal the contest.
Early in the second half, Moussa Niakhaté delivered a lofted pass toward Sarr. What followed felt almost poetic in execution. Sarr cushioned the ball on his chest while accelerating through Belgium’s retreating defenders, allowed it to bounce once, and then thundered a finish beyond Courtois into the top corner.
At 2-0, Belgium looked finished.
Even Kevin De Bruyne — withdrawn in the 56th minute alongside Jérémy Doku — appeared to be walking off the World Cup stage for the final time. Rudi Garcia’s substitutions looked less like tactical adjustments and more like surrender.
But football rarely obeys logic.
The Psychological Turn
The defining moment of the match may not have been a goal at all.
During the second-half hydration break, Tielemans and Leandro Trossard were involved in a heated confrontation. Romelu Lukaku intervened to calm tensions, while substitute Nico Raskin attempted to restore order.
After the match, Belgium manager Rudi Garcia surprisingly embraced the incident.
“We need that kind of grit,” Garcia said. “You need to battle to get results.”
In retrospect, the argument symbolised Belgium’s emotional awakening. Until then, they had drifted through the match passively, almost resigned to elimination. What followed was not tactical brilliance so much as emotional rebellion.
Lukaku’s introduction transformed Belgium physically. His presence pinned Senegal’s defenders deeper, disrupted their structure, and introduced panic where previously there had been control.
Still, Belgium required a spark of chaos.
Four Minutes That Changed Everything
With six minutes remaining, Senegal should have ended the contest. Sadio Mané, influential throughout the evening, found space to make it 3-0, but Courtois produced a vital save low to his right.
That moment became the hinge upon which the entire match turned.
In the 86th minute, Lukaku bullied his way past Pathé Ciss to sweep home Thomas Meunier’s cross at the near post.
Suddenly, belief returned.
Three minutes later, Belgium struck again. Tielemans had earlier pointed Trossard toward the space behind Senegal’s defensive line. Trossard delivered a precise cross, and Tielemans — sandwiched between defenders — rose highest to head into an empty net after goalkeeper Mory Diaw misjudged the flight.
In four chaotic minutes, Belgium erased an evening of mediocrity.
The psychological collapse from Senegal was visible. A side that had controlled the game for nearly ninety minutes suddenly played as though haunted by the possibility of losing it.
The Cruelest Ending
Extra time drifted toward penalties. Fatigue consumed both teams. Neither appeared willing to take the final risk.
Then came the final sequence.
Dodi Lukébakio struck the crossbar. Moments earlier, however, Lamine Camara had clipped Tielemans’s ankle inside the box. After a lengthy VAR review, Martínez pointed to the spot.
Senegal’s players surrounded the referee in desperation. Pathé Ciss collapsed onto the turf, trying to delay the inevitable. On the touchline, Garcia turned away, unable to watch.
Tielemans did not hesitate.
His penalty into the top-right corner secured Belgium’s 3-2 victory and immortalised the match in World Cup history.
A tearful Camara walked down the tunnel with his shirt covering his face. Senegal’s players remained frozen in disbelief.
“It is a cruel loss,” admitted Senegal manager Pape Thiaw afterwards. “A football match is not 85 minutes.”
No sentence better captured the tragedy.
Belgium’s Escape, Senegal’s Legacy
Belgium’s comeback immediately invited comparison with their famous recovery against Japan at the 2018 World Cup, when they also overturned a 2-0 deficit to win 3-2. Remarkably, they became only the second nation in World Cup history — after West Germany — to achieve such a comeback twice.
Yet beyond the statistics lies a more revealing truth about this Belgian side.
For years, Belgium’s so-called “golden generation” dazzled aesthetically while repeatedly falling short emotionally. Against Senegal, they survived not because they controlled the match, but because they refused to emotionally detach from it. Garcia’s substitutions injected aggression, urgency and disorder — qualities Belgium once lacked.
Senegal, meanwhile, depart with heartbreak but also significance. They became the first African nation to score 10 goals in a single World Cup edition. Sarr equalled Roger Milla’s African record of four goals in a single tournament. Diarra announced himself on the global stage.
And yet none of those achievements could soften the brutality of the ending.
Football, at its highest level, is often decided not by superiority, but by endurance — emotional, psychological, and spiritual. Senegal played the better football for most of the night. Belgium simply survived longer.
That is the cruelty of knockout football.
And that is why this match will be remembered.
Thank You
Faisal Caesar

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