The Red Devils Unleashed

The roar in Brussels was deafening, a thunderous backdrop to a masterclass that sent shivers down the spine of any opposition. After dismantling Croatia in Rijeka, Belgium national football team returned home not just to rest, but to reign. Tunisia stood in their path, and they were swept aside with brutal efficiency. Five goals. Zero reply. A statement written in ink and fire.

Leandro Trossard struck first, breaking the dam at the 28th minute. But this was no mere victory; it was a procession. Charles De Ketelaere added another, stretching the canvas for the artists. Then came the maestro, Kevin De Bruyne, weaving magic at the 65th minute to seal the tone. By the time Dodi Lukébakio and Nicolas Raskin added the final blows in the dying embers, the result was a foregone conclusion. The crowd didn't just cheer; they erupted.

Disaster in the Desert

Tunisia fought with heart, but heart alone cannot stop a tidal wave. Ismaël Gharbi saw red in the 62nd minute, a second yellow card that stripped the visitors of their defensive spine. Playing with ten men against a Belgian side in full flight, the Tuniisians were exposed. The gap in quality was stark, the pressure immense. Sabri Lamouchi’s men did their best, but the Red Devils were simply in another league.

Eyes on the USA

Now, the gaze turns west. The 2026 FIFA World Cup awaits in the United States. Belgium, the silver medalists of 2018, arrive with momentum and menace. Group G presents a stern test: Egypt, Iran, and New Zealand. None will give an inch. But Belgium is no longer the team that settles for second. They are a force, honed, hungry, and dangerous. The world better watch out.