Belgium top Group G as De Bruyne breaks his World Cup duck
A 5-1 win over New Zealand sends Belgium into the round of 32 as Group G winners on goal difference, with Kevin De Bruyne opening his 2026 account and a potential USMNT tie looming.

Belgium booked their place in the World Cup round of 32 as Group G winners on 27 June 2026, thrashing New Zealand 5-1 in a result settled before the final whistle and defined, eventually, by Kevin De Bruyne's first goal of the tournament. The victory in the group finale lifted the Red Devils above their rivals on goal difference and set up a knockout bracket that may yet carry the loudest storyline of the tournament's opening phase: a third all-time meeting with the United States, should the Americans hold up their end of the round of 32. (BBC Sport, 27 June 2026, 06:18 UTC; CBS Sports, 27 June 2026, 05:43 UTC)
The headline number is the 5-1 scoreline, but the more useful one is goal difference. Belgium finished level with their closest pursuer in Group G and edged the group only by virtue of the swing produced against an already-eliminated New Zealand side. That kind of qualification is rarely elegant — it rewards a heavy late-group win over a weakened opponent, and it asks the knockout round to do the real work of measuring a team. Belgium, who arrived at this tournament under quiet scrutiny about an ageing core and a manager under pressure, will take the runway.
A goal that had been coming
De Bruyne had been the tournament's most conspicuous performer without a goal to show for it through the group stage. The trademark came on 27 June: a strike that BBC Sport described in a single word — "Brilliant!" — and that carried the unhurried quality Belgium have built their modern identity around. He does not score often in open play for his country; when he does, the games tend to follow. (BBC Sport, 27 June 2026, 05:32 UTC)
The supporting cast mattered too. A 5-1 scoreline against a New Zealand side that had been competitive in patches earlier in the group is the kind of result that flatters the winner and masks the underlying imbalance. Belgium created at pace, finished clinically, and never allowed the contest to become the nerve-settler their supporters had feared. The question that travels with them into the round of 32 is whether that pattern travels against a defence organised by a side that has not already conceded four.
The American variable
The bracket is doing the talking. CBS Sports noted on 27 June that if both Belgium and the United States win their respective round-of-32 fixtures, the two will meet in the knockout rounds for the third time at a men's World Cup — a sequence that began with the USA's famous 1-0 upset in 1950, ran through Belgium's 2-1 extra-time win in 2014, and would now arrive in 2026 on home North American soil. (CBS Sports, 27 June 2026, 05:43 UTC)
For the USMNT, the prospect is politically and culturally loaded in a way only hosting a World Cup can produce. For Belgium, it is a measure of where this generation actually stands: a third meeting in three eras is a small sample, but it is also the only sample the knockout draw can offer. Neither side has any interest in being cast as the understudy in that storyline.
What the result does — and does not — prove
Belgium are through, top of the group, and have a goalscorer in form at the right moment. They are also a team that, across three group games, conceded enough to leave the goal-difference arithmetic genuinely live until the late stages. The structural read is straightforward: this is a side with elite creators who have not yet demonstrated the defensive solidity that wins tournaments in the knockout rounds.
The alternative read is that the group phase was a calibration exercise, and that the heavy scoreline was a side clicking into gear at the right end of the schedule rather than a flattering outlier against limited opposition. Both readings are consistent with the same set of facts. The round of 32 will adjudicate.
Desk note: Monexus framed the qualification as a goal-difference finish rather than a statement performance, and resisted the temptation to over-read De Bruyne's opener as a return to peak form on the strength of a single goal against an already-eliminated opponent. The USMNT tie is flagged as a possibility, not a certainty.