Belgium vs Egypt: Under 2.5 goals edge
Belgium arrive with reputation and quality, but the side that steps onto the pitch in Seattle will be missing key components that normally turn possession into clear chances. Romelu Lukaku is expected on the bench, depriving the attack of its natural focal point, while Zeno Debast’s absence leaves an unsettled centre-back pairing tasked with containing Mohamed Salah and Omar Marmoush on the break.
Egypt have shown repeatedly they can frustrate superior technical sides when they set up compact. Their recent draw with Spain and narrow loss to Brazil both featured disciplined blocks and quick transitions rather than sustained possession. Against Belgium they are unlikely to chase the game early; instead they will look to deny central lanes and force De Bruyne and Doku into wider, less decisive areas.
Belgium’s control is more fragile than it appears
Recent performances against low blocks already hint at the difficulty. Belgium dominated possession against North Macedonia yet struggled to create consistent threats once the opponent sat deep. The same pattern could repeat here. Without Lukaku’s hold-up play and with an untested defensive structure, the usual rhythm of progressive passes into the box is disrupted from the first whistle.
Coach Garcia has stressed concentration and warned against taking Egypt lightly. That mindset usually produces measured rather than reckless play, especially in a group opener where avoiding an early concession matters more than chasing a landslide.
Egypt’s setup rewards caution
Egypt’s probable shape with three midfielders and Salah, Marmoush and Ziko up front is built for controlled transitions, not open exchanges. They have no reason to abandon that plan against a Belgium side that lacks its most physical striker. The result is long spells where the ball circulates without clear openings, punctuated only by occasional counters that Belgium’s full-backs and centre-backs must manage carefully.
Both sides know this match shapes the group. Egypt target points; Belgium want control without unnecessary risk. That shared incentive rarely produces end-to-end football.








