The 2026 FIFA World Cup has delivered its share of dramatic moments, and the quarterfinal matchup between Spain and Belgium might be the most anticipated fixture of the knockout rounds so far. La Roja, wearing their familiar red, against the Red Devils, draped in black and gold. Two European heavyweights with long histories of near-misses and late-tournament brilliance, both convinced this is finally their year.
How both teams got here
Spain arrived at this stage looking like a team that remembered it used to be very good at this. Their group stage performances were composed and clinical, with a decisive win over Saudi Arabia among the results that signaled genuine intent rather than just participation.
Belgium, meanwhile, arrived in the knockout rounds on the back of an unbeaten run through portions of the tournament that showcased defensive resilience. The Red Devils have conceded sparingly, built around a compact defensive structure that makes them genuinely difficult to break down.
Belgium’s tournament narrative has a particular texture to it. For years, they carried the weight of a so-called Golden Generation, a cohort of world-class talent that repeatedly fell short of the biggest prizes. That era has passed, and this Belgian squad is writing a different kind of story, one built on collective organization rather than individual brilliance.











