Lukaku spoils Salah’s big day as Belgium and Egypt draw
AI Summary
Entering its fifth day, the 2026 FIFA World Cup sees Spain, the Euro 2024 champions and tournament favourite, unexpectedly held to a draw by debutant Cape Verde. Concurrently, Belgium, Egypt, Iran, New Zealand, and Uruguay begin their campaigns, with France set to debut the following day against Senegal.
Progressive: Progressive-leaning outlets center on France's tournament narrative and challenges, recalling the historic 2002 World Cup shock when Senegal defeated France, while analyzing team preparation concerns and the practical impact of North American time zones on European viewers, alongside the geopolitical context of Iran's participation.
Moderate: Centrist outlets provide comprehensive World Cup coverage, highlighting Spain as the clear favourite based on its Euro 2024 championship while reporting on key matchups and prominent players across multiple groups, without emphasizing team vulnerabilities or external political dimensions.
Conservative: Conservative outlets focus on specific high-stakes matchups with emphasis on star players and their knockout-phase implications.
SEATTLE: Belgium and Egypt drew 1-1 in their World Cup opener on Monday after a second-half Belgian equalizer spoiled Mohamed Salah’s 34th birthday.
Emam Ashour opened the scoring early in the first half in Seattle, before Romelu Lukaku came off the bench after the hour to force Egypt’s Mohamed Hany into an own goal.
With the draw, seven-time Africa Cup of Nations champions Egypt’s wait for a first victory at a World Cup goes on.
This is their fourth participation in the global showpiece and with Group G fixtures to come against Iran and New Zealand, they will hope to break that hoodoo in North America.
For Belgium, this tournament is likely the last chance for the remnants of their golden generation to better their third-placed finish in Russia eight years ago and finally win silverware.
Veterans Kevin De Bruyne, Thibaut Courtois and Lukaku are the main protagonists of that group still involved in Rudi Garcia’s squad.
With all eyes in the Pacific Northwest on Salah and De Bruyne, it was the ex-Manchester City playmaker that created the first moment of note in the match when he dragged a sharp effort narrowly wide in the seventh minute.
However, it was Ashour who upstaged the pair just before the hydration break when he received the ball in a similar position to De Bruyne but his sweetly-struck effort left Courtois no chance as it whistled into the bottom-right corner.
It was just the second time in their history that Egypt had taken the lead in a World Cup match — after Salah opened the scoring in a 2-1 defeat to Saudi Arabia in 2018.
De Bruyne came within inches of levelling early in the second period when he whipped a close-range free-kick over the Egyptian wall, only to see it rocket off the outside of the post.
Salah responded at the other end as he ghosted into the box but had his downward header punched away by Courtois with Ashour getting his follow-up effort all wrong.
The match became stretched as both sides came close on a couple of occasions, including a screaming left-footed volley by Belgian captain Youri Tielemans. With 65 minutes gone, Rudi Garcia decided to send on Lukaku.
The change immediately paid dividends as Belgium’s all-time top goalscorer showed his predatory instincts to dash in on a Thomas Meunier cross, with his presence enough to destabilize Hany who put through his own net. Salah departed the field with 15 minutes remaining as Egypt sought to shut up shop and ultimately held out for a point.
Published in Dawn, June 16th, 2026 ...
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