Soccer-Belgium not taking anything for granted in Senegal last-32 clash


Soccer Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Belgium Training - Seattle Sounders FC Performance Centre and Clubhouse, Renton, Washington, U.S. - June 30, 2026 Belgium players during training IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters/Steven Bisig

SEATTLE, June 30 (Reuters) - Belgium enter ⁠their World Cup round of 32 match against Senegal on Wednesday with momentum and a fully fit ⁠squad, but coach Rudy Garcia said being favourites was no guarantee in knockout games.

Belgium laboured in ‌opening draws against Egypt and Iran before sparking to life with a 5-1 win over New Zealand that sent them through as Group G winners and kept them in Seattle, their home during the tournament, for Wednesday's match.

Belgium have everyone available for the first time at this ​World Cup, Garcia said. Winger Jeremy Doku missed time for his son's ⁠birth and a brief illness, while defender ⁠Zeno Debast is fit to play after missing the group stage with a leg problem.

Debast, who was injured last ⁠month ‌training with his Portuguese club Sporting, might not start against Senegal, and "he's going to need some time to get back to 100% of his capacities and his potential,"Garcia told reporters on Tuesday.

"But it's not going to ⁠be a problem, because ever since the start of the competition, we ​have shown a very strong ‌defence."

Belgium gave up two goals in the group stage -- one to Egypt and one to New Zealand.

With ⁠a healthy squad, Garcia ​has many options off the bench."What matters is not only the starting eleven," he said.

Striker Romelu Lukaku helped force Egypt to net an own goal seconds after coming on in the second half of Belgium's 1-1 draw in Seattle to open their group ⁠stage games.

Match conditions on Wednesday are forecast to be cool and ​overcast -- and better than the high temperatures during Belgium's opener with Egypt when Garcia complained that heat and dry grass made it difficult for his team to play fluidly.

FAVOURITES TAG MEANS LITTLE

Germany's shootout exit to Paraguay and the Netherlands' defeat ⁠by Morocco show that being favourites to win means little at this stage of the tournament.

"There are no small (in stature) squads," Garcia said. "Even if you're a favourite on paper, which was the case for Germany, you can lose."

Senegal, who emerged from a difficult group including France, Norway and Iraq, present a different challenge, he said.

Garcia described them as "very fast," "very ​strong," technical and well organised defensively.

Senegal qualified for the knockout phase as a ⁠third-placed team but they are far stronger than their group stage finish suggested, the Belgium coach said.

The match also carries ​a personal thread for Garcia, who worked with Senegal coach Pape Thiaw ‌at Saint-Etienne and recalled helping push him as a young ​player.

Thiaw is "a wonderful player, and he's a wonderful coach as well," Garcia said. "I'm very happy for him. But I'm going to defeat him," he added.

(Reporting by Dan Catchpole in Seattle; Editing by Ken Ferris)

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