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Belgium exposed the defensive cracks USMNT showed all World Cup long

World Cup 2026 Soccer Belgium exposed the defensive cracks USMNT showed all World Cup long By Michael Duarte Published July 7, 2026, 1:56 a.m. ET See more of our coverage in your search results.

Add The New York Post on Google SEATTLE — The United States men’s national team finally showed the cracks along the fault lines that had been there from the beginning.

Their vulnerable defense that bent through friendlies, shined and survived in the group stage, and escaped against Bosnia and Herzegovina, finally fractured Monday night.

“Today wasn’t a good day,” midfielder Tyler Adams said. “There was a lot of things we could have done better. I think when you concede goals that easily against a team of that quality, you’re going to lose. This was an opportunity to advance and try and do something special and we fell short.”

Belgium found every weakness, pulled every loose thread and watched the entire sweater unravel in a devastating 4-1 Round of 16 victory that sent the Americans crashing out of the 2026 FIFA World Cup.

Belgium’s Charles De Ketelaere in action with Tim Ream of the U.S. and Antonee Robinson of the U.S. REUTERS If we’re being honest, the warning signs had been there for months. Belgium simply became the first elite opponent disciplined enough to punish them without mercy.

The Red Devils didn’t overwhelm the U.S. with dazzling individual brilliance. They dissected the defense with skill, quality and precision. Quick one-touch passing repeatedly pulled defenders out of position before Belgium attacked the channels near the edge of the penalty area. Once there, the final pass almost always found an American defender a step late, leaving their man unmarked over and over again.

And those mistakes became the difference between belief and elimination.

“We were so good defensively in this whole tournament, but today we gave up all those easy opportunities,” defender Alex Freeman said. “We can’t do that. We will look back on this game and realize those are the things we have to do better. We need to be more consistent. At the end of the day, that’s what we need to work on.”

Belgium’s opening goal was a clinic — for the wrong team. Tim Ream and Antonee Robinson both left Charles De Ketelaere unmarked and he stood completely alone in front of the goal before calmly finishing an easy chance in the ninth minute.

Again Belgium worked the ball wide. Again the cross arrived untouched. Again De Ketelaere slipped between Robinson and Ream, beating both to the delivery before powering a header into the net. It was less an isolated mistake than a recurring symptom of a defensive unit that never consistently communicated or recovered throughout the tournament.

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“To be honest, I’m not really able to analyze the game at this moment,” Ream said. “They’re a good side. They tilted the ball in their favor. I don’t have a whole lot of answers for you.”

Then came the sequence that will replay in American soccer nightmares for years to come.

In the 57th minute, goalkeeper Matt Freese sprinted well outside his penalty area to meet a hopeful long ball, forced to try to control it with his chest. As he prepared to clear, his foot got caught in the turf. He swung clean through nothing but Seattle air.

Hans Vanaken hardly needed an invitation. The loose ball rolled toward him and he calmly and cleanly kicked it toward the open net while Ream desperately scrambled back to try to stop it. The veteran defender and captain probably could have kicked it out of play, but instead he twisted awkwardly and missed. The inevitable occurred. Vanaken’s ball found the vacant goal and with it went any realistic hope of an American comeback.

Belgium’s Charles De Ketelaere (17) celebrates after scoring his side’s opening goal during the World Cup round of 16 soccer match between the United States and Belgium in Seattle, Monday, July 6, 2026. AP Photo/Maddy Grassy “That was an error of judgment on my part,” Freese said of his mistake. “It’s part of the position. I thought the guys in front of me did everything they could today to get the win. I’m so proud of them. I wish that moment was different and I wish the result was different. I’m obviously disappointed.”

It was the defining image of a defense that never looked settled when the pressure reached its highest point.

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Belgium added another goal before the final whistle, turning a competitive knockout match into a harsh indictment of the Americans’ biggest weakness. The timing made it all the more cruel. Christian Pulisic had already limped off injured, the team’s best player leaving the pitch with a poor final performance and the Americans leaving with nothing more than a whimper.

“Today we didn’t show our real quality as a team,” coach Mauricio Pochettino said. “I don’t think we ever connected with the flow of the game. We were not at our level. We were not the same team that showed up throughout the tournament. It was a very bad day. It wasn’t our day.”

Pochettino declared before this World Cup that success meant winning the tournament.

By that standard — and by the standard of a nation that believed this generation was finally ready to break through — the United States didn’t merely lose in Seattle; they crashed out in the Round of 16 just like they always do. This was the year they would advance further than any team before them.

Instead, their biggest weakness finally caught up to them.

Read original at New York Post

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