Belgium's golden generation meets the wall: what the 2026 World Cup exposed
A generation that topped the FIFA rankings for three years has failed to clear a single knockout round at a major tournament since 2018. The 2026 World Cup confirmed what the data had been saying all along.

Belgium's football team arrived at the 2026 FIFA World Cup in North America carrying a peculiar burden: the unfulfilled promise of a generation. For three years the Red Devils sat atop the FIFA world rankings. The 2018 semifinal in Russia — the country's best ever finish — was supposed to be the floor, not the ceiling. The 2026 tournament, played across the United States, Canada and Mexico, has instead functioned as a verdict.
ThePrint's Akshat Mohan, in a video explainer published on 26 June 2026, argues that Belgium's "greatest footballing era is fading" and that the 2026 tournament is the proof. The argument is straightforward: a squad built around a cohort now aged between 30 and 34 has, tournament after tournament, failed to convert individual quality into collective knockout football. The talent has not evaporated; the leverage of that talent has.
The structural problem Belgium won't solve on the pitch
For roughly a decade Belgium enjoyed an unusual density of elite-level talent: deep squads at Manchester City, Chelsea, Liverpool and across the Bundesliga and Serie A, with most of the core still inside one Premier League cohort at its competitive peak. That density produced the ranking and the semifinal. It did not produce a system. Tournament football, particularly the knockout rounds, rewards sides that have rehearsed a plan against the ball — and Belgium, by the evidence of 2018, 2021 and 2022, have rarely arrived with one.
The 2026 cycle crystallised the issue. The elder statesmen remain central to selection because no comparable cohort sits behind them. The devolution is visible not just in results but in minutes: the Belgian squad that travelled to North America was, on average, the oldest at the tournament.
The counter-narrative: rankings aren't trophies
There is a competing read, and it deserves air. The FIFA ranking system is a model, not a record of accomplishment; it rewards friendly results, confederation weightings and match volume. Belgium sat atop it because they won the right fixtures, not because they had solved the deeper questions of knockout football. France's 2018 win came from a side that lost more depth at the top than Belgium ever did but had institutional clarity about what it wanted to be in possession.
A second counter-narrative points to the unusually high floor of European competition. Belgium's "failure" is, by absolute terms, the failure of a side that has reached the latter rounds of major tournaments for a decade. Many federations would trade for that floor. The framing of decline is real, but it is a decline from a summit that was partly a product of a generationally stacked player pool — a pool that, by definition, recedes.
What the 2026 tournament actually told us
Mohan frames the 2026 World Cup as the empirical confirmation of a thesis the data had already been whispering: Belgium's edge was individual, not systemic. The tournament exposed it in two specific ways. First, the squad's pressing structure degraded visibly as matches accumulated, a familiar pattern for ageing cores without rotation depth. Second, the bench — the second tier of talent that any serious knockout run requires — was thinner than at any point since the cohort's first major tournament together.
The deeper lesson is structural and applies beyond Belgium. National-team football is, increasingly, a function of federation-level coherence: a clear identity, a settled spine, a bench. Belgium built a generation; it did not, by the evidence of three consecutive tournament exits short of the final, build the institutional scaffolding around that generation.
Stakes and what comes next
The 2028 European Championship and the 2030 World Cup — co-hosted across Spain, Portugal and Morocco — will define whether the current cohort can convert experience into a final run, or whether the federation is forced into a managed transition earlier than planned. The latter is the harder path but the more honest one. Belgium's domestic league and academy pipeline have produced players of quality; the gap has never been at the bottom of the squad.
The story of Belgium's "golden generation" is, finally, the story of an outlier — a federation that, for one compressed window, sat close to the top of global football without the institutional architecture of the federations above it. The 2026 World Cup did not deliver that verdict alone. It merely confirmed what the previous three tournaments had already said.
What remains contested is the timeline. The federation has not publicly signalled a transition. The current cycle's data, including the 2026 tournament, will sharpen the pressure on that decision.
Desk note: Monexus framed this around structural causation — squad architecture and tournament-system design — rather than the individual-decay frame that much of the European sports press defaults to. ThePrint's explainer supplied the thesis; the wider argument about how national-team football actually works in 2026 is our own.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Belgium_national_football_team
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2026_FIFA_World_Cup