Belgium needs a win to avoid disaster, while New Zealand still dreams of a historic World Cup breakthrough in Vancouver.
The Big Picture
Group G reaches its decisive night with everything still open. Egypt leads with four points, Iran and Belgium sit on two, and New Zealand remains alive with one point.
For Belgium, this match is close to a must-win. Two draws against Egypt and Iran have left the Red Devils under pressure despite their star power.
For New Zealand, the equation is simple: win and keep the dream alive. After the 2-2 draw with Iran and the 3-1 loss to Egypt, the All Whites still have a path — but they need the biggest result in their World Cup history.
How the Teams Arrive
New Zealand showed courage against Iran, then briefly led Egypt before collapsing in the second half. Chris Wood remains the focal point, while Elijah Just has already proven he can punish open spaces.
Belgium has been solid defensively but poor in attack. Rudi Garcia’s side has conceded only one goal in two games, but has scored just once — and that goal came in a 1-1 draw against Egypt. The 0-0 against Iran increased pressure on Romelu Lukaku, Kevin De Bruyne and the entire Belgian attack.
Recent Form
New Zealand
New Zealand 1-3 Egypt
Iran 2-2 New Zealand
England 1-0 New Zealand
Haiti 4-0 New Zealand
New Zealand 4-1 Chile
Belgium
Belgium 0-0 Iran
Belgium 1-1 Egypt
Belgium 5-0 Tunisia
Croatia 0-2 Belgium
Mexico 1-1 Belgium
Head-to-Head History
There are no major recent head-to-head meetings between New Zealand and Belgium. This will be a rare clash between the All Whites and the Red Devils on the world stage.
Tactical Keys
New Zealand will likely defend deep, protect central spaces and look for direct balls toward Chris Wood. The All Whites need Sarpreet Singh, Elijah Just and Callum McCowatt to attack quickly after turnovers.
Belgium must finally turn possession into chances. Kevin De Bruyne will be central between the lines, with Trossard and Saelemaekers supporting Lukaku. The key for Belgium is tempo: slow circulation would allow New Zealand to stay compact.
Team News
New Zealand has no confirmed absences.
Belgium is without Nathan Ngoy, suspended after his red card against Iran. Arthur Theate or Koni De Winter should cover the defensive gap.
Probable Lineups
New Zealand — 4-2-3-1
Crocombe; Payne, Surman, Boxall, Cacace; Bell, Stamenic; McCowatt, Singh, Just; Wood.
Belgium — 4-2-3-1
Courtois; Meunier, De Winter, Mechele, De Cuyper; Raskin, Tielemans; Saelemaekers, De Bruyne, Trossard; Lukaku.
SMIT AI WORLD CUP SIMULATOR
Squad Strength Index
| Team | Index |
|---|---|
| Belgium | 84/100 |
| New Zealand | 67/100 |
Expected Goals Simulation
| Team | xG |
|---|---|
| Belgium | 1.74 |
| New Zealand | 0.86 |
Win Probability
| Result | Probability |
|---|---|
| Belgium win | 57% |
| Draw | 26% |
| New Zealand win | 17% |
Four Most Likely Results
| Score | Probability |
|---|---|
| Belgium 2-1 New Zealand | 16.2% |
| Belgium 1-0 New Zealand | 14.6% |
| Belgium 2-0 New Zealand | 13.8% |
| New Zealand 1-1 Belgium | 12.9% |
Most Likely Result
Belgium 2-1 New Zealand
Predicted Goalscorers
Romelu Lukaku
Kevin De Bruyne
Chris Wood
Player of the Simulation
Kevin De Bruyne
Confidence Level
64/100
AI Match Simulation
According to the SMIT AI Simulator, Belgium finally finds enough attacking rhythm to survive a tense night in Vancouver, but not without suffering.
The simulation projects New Zealand to start with a compact block, forcing Belgium wide and trying to keep Lukaku away from clean central service. Chris Wood becomes the All Whites’ main outlet, challenging Belgium’s center backs on long balls and set pieces. Elijah Just and Sarpreet Singh provide the most dangerous secondary runs, especially when Belgium loses possession in midfield.
Belgium controls the ball for long stretches, but the first half remains uncomfortable. De Bruyne drops deeper to accelerate the buildup, while Tielemans and Raskin try to move New Zealand’s defensive line side to side. The breakthrough arrives through Belgium’s individual quality: De Bruyne finds space between midfield and defense, creating the kind of chance Lukaku has been waiting for all tournament.
New Zealand responds with pride. The simulator gives Chris Wood a strong chance to score from a cross or second ball, keeping the match alive and forcing Belgium into a nervous final stretch.
The difference, however, comes from Belgium’s deeper attacking options. Trossard and Saelemaekers stretch the field, De Bruyne keeps finding pockets, and the Red Devils eventually create enough pressure to produce a second goal.
Why the Simulator Predicts This Result
Belgium has struggled to score, but its defensive structure, midfield quality and experience give it a clear edge. New Zealand’s physicality and direct play make the match dangerous, yet the simulator gives Belgium the advantage because of De Bruyne’s creativity and Lukaku’s penalty-area presence.
Group G Standings
| Pos | Team | P | W | D | L | GF | GA | GD | Pts |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Egypt | 2 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 4 | 2 | +2 | 4 |
| 2 | Iran | 2 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 2 | 2 | 0 | 2 |
| 3 | Belgium | 2 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 2 |
| 4 | New Zealand | 2 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 3 | 5 | -2 |