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Belgium national football team

The Belgium national football team[b] officially represents Belgium in men's international football since their maiden match in 1904. The squad is under the global jurisdiction of FIFA and is governed in Europe by UEFA—both of which were co-founded by the Belgian team's supervising body, the Royal Belgian Football Association. Periods of regular Belgian representation at the highest international level, from 1920 to 1938, from 1982 to 2002 and again from 2014 onwards, have alternated with mostly unsuccessful qualification rounds. Most of Belgium's home matches are played at the King Baudouin Stadium in Brussels.

Belgium
Nickname(s)
  • De Rode Duivels
  • Les Diables rouges
  • Die Roten Teufel
  • (The Red Devils)
AssociationRoyal Belgian Football Association (RBFA)
ConfederationUEFA (Europe)
Head coachDomenico Tedesco
CaptainKevin De Bruyne
Most capsJan Vertonghen (153)[a]
Top scorerRomelu Lukaku (83)[a]
Home stadiumKing Baudouin Stadium
FIFA codeBEL
First colours
Second colours
FIFA ranking
Current 4 1 (30 November 2023)[1]
Highest1 (November 2015 – March 2016, September 2018 – March 2022[1])
Lowest71 (June 2007[1])
First international
 Belgium 3–3 France 
(Uccle, Belgium; 1 May 1904)
Biggest win
 Belgium 9–0 Zambia 
(Brussels, Belgium; 4 June 1994)
 Belgium 10–1 San Marino 
(Brussels, Belgium; 28 February 2001)
 Belgium 9–0 Gibraltar 
(Liège, Belgium; 31 August 2017)
 Belgium 9–0 San Marino 
(Brussels, Belgium; 10 October 2019)
Biggest defeat
 England Amateurs 11–2 Belgium 
(London, England; 17 April 1909)
World Cup
Appearances14 (first in 1930)
Best resultThird place (2018)
European Championship
Appearances6 (first in 1972)
Best resultRunners-up (1980)
Nations League Finals
Appearances1 (first in 2021)
Best resultFourth place (2021)
Websiterbfa.be

Belgium's national team have participated in three quadrennial major football competitions. It appeared in the end stages of fourteen FIFA World Cup and six UEFA European Championship, and featured at three Olympic football tournament, including the 1920 Summer Olympics which they won. Other notable performances are victories over four reigning world champions—West Germany, Brazil, Argentina and France—between 1954 and 2002. Belgium has long-standing football rivalries with its Dutch and French counterparts, having played both teams nearly every year from 1905 to 1967. The squad has been known as the Red Devils since 1906; its fan club is named "1895".

During the national player career of forward Paul Van Himst, the most-praised Belgian footballer of the 20th century, Belgium finished in third place as hosts at UEFA Euro 1972. After that, they experienced two golden ages with many gifted players. In the first period, which lasted from the 1980s to the early 1990s, the team finished as runners-up at UEFA Euro 1980 and fourth in the 1986 FIFA World Cup. In the second, under guidance of Marc Wilmots and later Roberto Martínez in the 2010s, Belgium topped the FIFA World Rankings for the first time in November 2015 and finished third at the 2018 FIFA World Cup. To date, Belgium is the only national team in the world to top the FIFA ranking without having won a World Cup or a continental trophy (Spain had topped the rankings in late 2008 without winning the World Cup, but had won the European title in 1964 and 2008; while the Netherlands topped the rankings in August 2011 without a World Cup title, but won the European title in 1988).

History edit

Belgium was one of the first mainland European countries to play association football.[3] Its practice in Belgium began on 26 October 1863, after an Irish student walked into the Josephites College of Melle with a leather ball.[4] Initially an elitist pastime,[5] during the following decades association football supplanted rugby as Belgium's most popular football sport.[6] On 1 September 1895, ten clubs for football, athletics, cricket and cycling founded the Belgian sports board Union Belge des Sociétés de Sports Athlétiques (UBSSA);[6][7] a year later UBSSA organised the first annual league in Belgian football.[6]

 
The first Belgium A-squad in 1901 featured four Englishmen.

On 11 October 1900, Beerschot AC honorary president Jorge Díaz announced that Antwerp would host a series of challenge matches between Europe's best football teams.[8] After some organisational problems, on 28 April 1901, Beerschot's pitch hosted its first tournament, in which a Belgian A-squad and a Dutch B-team contested the Coupe Vanden Abeele.[9][10] Belgium won,[11] and beat the Netherlands in all three follow-up matches;[12] FIFA does not recognise these results because Belgium fielded some English players.[12] On 1 May 1904, the Belgians played their first official match, against France at the Stade du Vivier d'Oie in Uccle; their draw left the Évence Coppée Trophy unclaimed.[13] Twenty days later, the football boards of both countries were among the seven FIFA founders.[14][15] At that time, the Belgian squad was chosen by a committee drawn from the country's six or seven major clubs.[16] In 1906, the national team players received the nickname Red Devils because of their red jerseys,[17] and four years later, Scottish ex-footballer William Maxwell replaced the UBSSA committee as their manager.[18] From 1912, UBSSA governed football only and was renamed UBSFA.[c][19][6] During the Great War, the national team only played unrecognised friendlies, with matches in and against France.[20][21]

At the 1920 Summer Olympics, in their first official Olympics appearance, the Red Devils won the gold medal on home soil after a controversial final in which their Czechoslovak opponents left the pitch.[22] In the three 1920s Summer Olympics, they achieved fair results (four wins in seven matches), and played their first intercontinental match, against Argentina.[20] However, over the following decade, Belgium lost all of their matches at the first three FIFA World Cup final tournaments.[20] According to historian Richard Henshaw, "[t]he growth of [football] in Scandinavia, Central Europe, and South America left Belgium far behind".[23] Although World War II hindered international football events in the 1940s, the Belgian team remained active with unofficial matches against squads of other allied nations.[24]

 
In the 1920 Olympics football final at the Olympisch Stadion in Antwerp, Robert Coppée scored for Belgium with a penalty kick.

Belgium qualified for only one of eight major tournaments during the 1950s and the 1960s: the 1954 World Cup. The day before the tournament began, the RBFA was among the three UEFA founders.[25] Dutch journalists considered the draw of the 1954 Belgian team in their opener against England to be the most surprising result of that match day, even more than Switzerland's victory over the Italian "football stars".[26] However, Belgium were eliminated after a loss to Italy in the second (and last) group match.[27] Two bright spots in these decades were wins against World Cup holders: West Germany in 1954, and Brazil in 1963.[20] Between these, Belgium defeated Hungary's Golden Team in 1956.[20] The combination of failure in competitive matches, and success in exhibition matches, gave the Belgians the mock title of "world champion of the friendlies".[28][29]

The team's performance improved during the early 1970s, under manager Raymond Goethals. Fully dressed in white, as the White Devils,[30] Belgium had their first victories at World and European Championships at the 1970 World Cup and Euro 1972.[31][32] En route to that Euro appearance, their first, they eliminated reigning European champions Italy by winning the two-legged quarter-final on aggregate. At the end stage, they finished third by winning the consolation match against Hungary.[32] In 1973, the denial of a match-winning goal in their last 1974 FIFA World Cup qualification match for UEFA Group 3 cost Belgium their appearance at the finals,[33] causing Belgium to become the only nation ever to miss a World Cup final round despite not allowing a goal during the qualifiers.[34] The next two attempts to reach a major finals were also fruitless.[35][36]

Beginning with a second-place finish at Euro 1980,[37] the 1980s and the early 1990s are generally considered as Belgium's first golden age.[38] Coached by Guy Thys, they achieved their spot in the 1980 final with an unbeaten record in the group phase; in the final, they narrowly lost the title to West Germany with the score 1–2.[37] Starting with the 1982 World Cup, and ending with the 2002 World Cup, the national team qualified for six consecutive World Cup end stages and mostly progressed to the second round.[39] During this period, managers Guy Thys, Paul Van Himst and Robert Waseige each guided a Belgian selection past the first round.[40][41][42] In addition to receiving individual FIFA recognitions,[43][44] the team reached the semi-finals of the 1986 World Cup.[45] After reaching the Euro 1980 final, they were unsuccessful at subsequent European Championships, with early exits from their appearances in 1984 and in 2000.[46][47] During the late 1990s, they played three friendly tournaments in Morocco, Cyprus and Japan,[48][49] sharing the 1999 Kirin Cup with Peru in the latter.[50] The greatest talents of the Belgian team during this golden age were retired from international football by 2000.[51] At the eve of the World Cup in 2002, Belgium defeated reigning world and European champions France.[20] During that World Cup, Belgium defeated Russia and tied with co-host Japan and Tunisia to reach the round of 16.[42]

 
Belgium (in red) playing Algeria at the Mineirão at the 2014 World Cup

After the 2002 World Cup, the team weakened with the loss of more veterans and coach Waseige.[52][53] They missed out five successive major finals from UEFA Euro 2004 until UEFA Euro 2012, and went through an equal number of head coaches.[54] A 2005 win over reigning European champions Greece meant nothing but a small comfort.[20] In between, a promising new generation was maturing at the 2007 European U-21 Championship; Belgium's squad qualified for the following year's Summer Olympics in Beijing,[55] where the Young Red Devils squad finished fourth.[56] Seventeen of them appeared in the senior national team,[51] albeit without making an immediate impact. Belgium finished in second (and last) place at the Kirin Cup in May 2009,[57] and lost against the 125th FIFA-ranked Armenian team in September 2009.[1] After Georges Leekens' second stint as national manager,[58][59] his assistant Marc Wilmots became the caretaker in May 2012.[60]

After two matches as interim coach, Wilmots agreed to replace Leekens as manager.[61] Following his appointment, the team's results improved,[62] such that some foreign media regarded it as another Belgian golden generation.[63][64][65] The young Belgian squad qualified as unbeaten group winners for the 2014 World Cup finals,[66] and earned Belgium's second-ever place in a World Cup quarter-finals with a four-match winning streak.[67] Belgium qualified for UEFA Euro 2016 with a match to spare in October 2015,[68] and took the top spot in the FIFA World Rankings for the first time in November 2015,[69] to stay first for five months.[1][70] In the following year, Belgium could not confirm their role as outsider at the European Championship with a quarter-final elimination by the 26th FIFA-ranked Welsh team.[1][71] This prompted the RBFA to dismiss Wilmots.[72] In the 2018 World Cup qualifying allocation, they were seeded first in their group,[73][74] and made the final tournament under Spanish manager Roberto Martínez, becoming the first European team besides hosts Russia to do so.[75] Belgium was eliminated in the semi-finals by eventual champions France, but won the third place play-off against England.[76] On 16 November 2019, for the first time in its history the team topped the World Football Elo Ratings, after a 1–4 away win over Russia during the Euro 2020 qualifiers.[2]

Despite the impressive form in the UEFA Euro 2020 qualifiers as well as being regarded as the biggest contender for the European trophy, the tournament became a complete disappointment for Belgium. Being drawn in Group B alongside Russia, Denmark and Finland, Belgium easily conquered the group with three wins.[77][78][79] In the knockout phase, Belgium first faced reigning champions Portugal in the last sixteen and survived the scare with a thunder strike from Thorgan Hazard to give Belgium a 1–0 win.[80] In the quarter-finals, Belgium once again faced old foe Italy, but Belgium failed to take revenge for their 2016 loss, once again suffering a 1–2 defeat, with the goal being scored by Romelu Lukaku, ending Belgium's campaign on a sad note.[81]

At the 2022 World Cup in Qatar, Belgium were drawn into Group F alongside Croatia, Morocco and Canada. Despite starting their campaign well with a 1–0 victory over Canada, they then suffered a shock 2–0 defeat to Morocco, and following a 0–0 draw with Croatia in their final group game, Belgium were knocked out of the tournament at the group stages for the first time since 1998.[82] Following their elimination from the tournament, Martínez announced that he would be standing down as head coach after six years in charge of the national team.[83]

In February 2023, it was announced that Domenico Tedesco has been appointed as the new head coach of the Belgian national team, replacing Roberto Martinez. Tedesco's first match as the head coach will be the a UEFA Euro 2024 qualifying match against Sweden on the 24th of March. This is Tedesco's first national coaching job, having previously worked at a club level with Schalke 04, Spartak Moscow, and RB Leipzig. Tedesco is contracted until the end of the UEFA Euro 2024 competition.[84]

Team image edit

Kits edit

 
 
 
 
• White away jersey (1970 World Cup), with the stylised lion emblem (1948–80)
• Traditional red home jersey (2018 World Cup), with RBFA emblem (1981-2019)

In home matches, the team's outfield players traditionally wear the colours of the Belgian flag: black, yellow and red.[85][86][87] Red dominates the strip and is often the sole jersey colour.[86][87] The away colours are usually white, black or both;[88] in 2014, the squad introduced a third, yellow kit.[89] Their shirts are often trimmed with tricolores at the margins.[87][90] Since 1981, the RBFA emblem has been the national team's badge;[87][91] the previous badge was a yellow lion on a black shield,[86][87] similar to the escutcheon of the national coat of arms.[92] On 8 November 2019, the Royal Belgian Football Association revealed a new logo, which preserved the main elements of the previous one: the royal crown, the wreath and the Belgian tricolor.[93]

For their first unofficial match in 1901, the Belgian team wore white jerseys with tricoloured bands on the upper arms.[9] Around their third unofficial match in 1902, the choice was made for a "shirt with national colours ... [that would indicate,] with a stripe, the number of times every player has participated in an encounter".[11] Since 1904, Belgium's classic all-red jersey design has been altered twice. In 1904–05, the squad briefly wore satin shirts with three horizontal bands in red, yellow and black; according to sports journalist Victor Boin, the shirts set "the ugliness record".[16] During the 1970s, manager Raymond Goethals chose an all-white combination to improve the team's visibility during evening matches.[30][94]

Six clothing manufacturers have supplied the official team strip. Adidas is the producer since 2014,[95] and closed a sponsorship deal with the RBFA until 2026;[96] it was also the supplier from 1974 to 1980, and from 1982 to 1991.[97] Former kit manufacturers are Umbro (early 1970s),[94][97] Admiral (1981–1982),[d][97] Diadora (1992–1999),[97] Nike (1999–2010) and Burrda (2010–2014).[e][97][99]

Kit supplier Period
  Umbro Early 1970s
  Adidas 1974–1981
  Admiral 1981–1982
  Adidas 1982–1991
  Diadora 1992–1999
  Nike 1999–2010
  Burrda 2010–2014
  Adidas 2014–present

Media coverage edit

 
Gust De Muynck's live coverage during Belgium–Netherlands in 1931

The first live coverage of a Belgian sporting event occurred on 3 May 1931, when journalist Gust De Muynck commentated on the football match between Belgium and the Netherlands on radio.[100] Later, football broadcasts were also televised. As 60 per cent of Belgians speak Dutch and 40 per cent French,[101] commentaries for the national team matches are provided in both languages. The matches are not broadcast in German—Belgium's third official language.[101] During Belgium's tournament appearances in the 1980s and the early 1990s, Rik De Saedeleer crowned himself the nation's most famous football commentator with his emotional and humorous reports.[102]

Initially the matches were transmitted mainly on public television channels: the former BRTN (now VRT) in Dutch, and the RTBF in French. Since 1994, commercial channels such as vtm and its sister channel Kanaal 2, and VIER in Flanders, have purchased broadcasting rights.[19] The Euro 2016 round-of-16 match against Hungary was the most-watched programme in Belgian television history, with an audience of over four million viewers out of 11.3 million Belgian citizens.[101][103][104]

In April 2014, the VRT started transmitting a nine-piece, behind-the-scenes documentary about the national team filmed during the 2014 World Cup qualifiers, titled Iedereen Duivel (Everybody Devil).[105] Cable broadband provider Telenet broadcast an eight-part documentary about individual players titled Rode Helden (Red Heroes).[106]

Side activities edit

 
Illustration of Belgium's game against France in April 1918: some of such unofficial wartime matches served as charity fundraisers.

Multiple events were organised for the fans during the squad's peak popularity in the 2010s. During the 2014 World Cup qualifiers, a string of interactive events called the Devil Challenges were organised.[107] The premise was that small groups of international players would do a favour in return for each of the five comprehensive chores their supporters completed ("colour Belgium red", "gather 500,000 decibels", etc.), all of which were accomplished.[108] In June 2013, the Belgian national team's first ever Fan Day attracted over 20,000 supporters;[109] a second was held after the 2014 World Cup.[110] On the days of Belgium's 2014 World Cup group matches, large dance events titled Dance with the Devils took place in three Belgian cities.[111] This type of happening was repeated during Belgium's Euro 2016 group matches.[112]

Occasionally, the Belgian team directly supported charity. Between 1914 and 1941 they played at least five unofficial matches of which the returns were for charitable purposes: two against France,[21][113] and three against the Netherlands.[114][115] In mid-1986, when the Belgian delegation reached the Mexico World Cup semi-finals, the squad started a project titled Casa Hogar, an idea of delegation leader Michel D'Hooghe.[116] Casa Hogar is a home for street children in the Mexican industrial city of Toluca, to which the footballers donated part of their tournament bonuses.[117] In August 2013, the national team supported four social projects through the charity fund Football+ Foundation, by playing an A-match with a plus sign on the shoulders of their jerseys and auctioning the shirts.[118]

In the 21st century, several national team players acted up against discrimination. In 2002, the national squad held its first anti-racism campaign in which they posed with slogans.[119] A home Euro 2012 qualifier was given the theme of respect for diversity in 2010; this UEFA-supported action was part of the European FARE Action Week.[120] Ex-Red Devil Dimitri Mbuyu—the first black Belgium player (in 1987)[51][121]—was engaged as godfather, and other foreign, current, and former footballers who played in the Belgian top division participated.[122] In 2018, four national team players spoke up against homophobic violence, in a video clip made by organisation Kick It Out.[123]

Nickname, logo and mascot edit

After a 1905 match, a Dutch reporter wrote that three Belgian footballers "work[ed] as devils".[124] A year later Léopold FC manager Pierre Walckiers nicknamed the players Red Devils, inspired by their jersey colour, and the achievement of three successive victories in 1906.[17][20] Because of their white home shirts in the 1970s, they were temporarily known as the White Devils.[30] Since 2012, the team logo is a red trident (or three-pronged pitchfork),[125] an item that is often associated with the devil.[126] Apart from that, the national squad has also had four official anthropomorphous mascots. The first was a lion in team kit named Diabolix,[127] a reference to the central symbol in the Belgian coat of arms that appeared on the team jerseys from 1905 to 1980.[87][128] In accordance with their epithet, the next mascots were a red super-devil and two fan-made modern devils; the most recent one, since 2018, was named "Red".[127][129]

Supporters edit

"Cycling is the traditional national sport of Belgium, but soccer is the most popular."

—Historian Richard Henshaw, 1979[6]

Fans of the Belgian national team display the country's tricolour national flag, usually with an emphasis on the red element. In 2012, local supporter clubs merged into one large Belgian federation named "1895" after the foundation year of the RBFA. One year later, 1895 had 24,000 members.[130] The nationwide interest in the football squad has also been reflected by the occasional presence of Belgian monarchs at their matches since 1914.[131][132][133] One of the greatest moments for the Belgian team and their 12th man was in mid-1986 when the Belgian delegation at the Mexico World Cup received a warm "welcome home". When the World Cup semi-finalists appeared on the balcony of Brussels Town Hall, the adjoining Grand Place square was filled with an ecstatic crowd that cheered as though their squad had won a major tournament.[134]

 
Crowd of Belgian fans in Kaliningrad Stadium at the 2018 World Cup

The team's deterioration after the 2002 World Cup lead to their absence from the end stages of the next five major tournaments, and strained their popularity. Between 2004 and 2010, local journalists called the Belgian footballing nation "mortally ill".[135][136] Of the fans that kept supporting their squad in bad times, Ludo Rollenberg was one of the most loyal. He attended the team's matches worldwide since 1990, missing only the 1999 Japanese Kirin Cup and two other matches by 2006,[137] and was the only supporter to attend their matches in Armenia in 2009.[138]

Just before the kick-off of a 2014 World Cup home qualifier, Belgium's footballers saw a first tifo banner, sized 10.5 by 11.5 metres (34 by 38 ft) depicting a devil in the national colours.[139] The presence of many Belgian players in top leagues abroad, such as the Premier League,[140] and promising results under Marc Wilmots, increased fans' enthusiasm and belief in a successful World Cup campaign.[109][141] Because of this popularity peak, two Belgian monuments were decorated in national colours for the 2014 FIFA World Cup event; the Manneken Pis statue received a child-sized version of the new Belgian uniform,[142] and facets of the Atomium's upper sphere were covered in black, yellow and red vinyl.[143]

Rivalries edit

 
Illustration of a Netherlands–Belgium cup match at Rotterdam's Schuttersveld pitch in 1905

Belgium's main football rivals are its neighbors the Netherlands and France, with which it shares close cultural and political relations.[144][145] The matchup between the Belgian and Dutch team is known as the Low Countries derby, as of May 2018 they have played each other in 126 official matches.[114][146] Belgium won the first four—unofficial—matches against the Netherlands,[11] but lost their first FIFA-recognised contest.[20] The two national teams played each other biannually between 1905 and 1964, except during the World Wars.[20] They have met 18 times in major tournament campaigns, and have played at least 35 friendly cup matches: in Belgium for the Coupe Vanden Abeele, and in the Netherlands for the Rotterdamsch Nieuwsblad-Beker.[10][124] The overall balance favours the Netherlands, with 55 wins against 41 Belgian victories.[146] The Low Countries' squads co-operated in fundraising initiatives between 1925 and 1941; they played five unofficial matches for charity, FIFA and the Belgian Olympic Committee.[114][115][147]

The clash between the Belgian and French sides is nicknamed le Match Sympathique in French ("the Friendly Match");[148] they have contested 74 official matches as of September 2020.[146] The first match between Belgium and France, the Évence Coppée Trophy played in 1904, was the first official match for both teams and the first official football match between independent countries on the European continent.[149] Until 1967, the sides met almost annually.[20] As of September 2020, Belgium have the better record, with 30 wins to France's 25,[146] and France has played most often against Belgium in international football.[146]

Stadium edit

 
 
The Jubilee Stadium on the Heysel Plateau in 1935 (left) and the King Baudouin Stadium in 2013 (right)

Numerous former and current venues in 11 urban areas have hosted Belgium's home matches.[20] Most of these matches have been played in Brussels on the Heysel Plateau, on the site of the present-day King Baudouin Stadium—a multipurpose facility with a seating capacity of 50,122.[150] Its field also hosts the team's final trainings before domestic matches. Since 2007, most physical preparation takes place at the National Football Centre in Tubize,[151] or at Anderlecht's training ground in the Neerpede quarter.[152][153] Apart from Belgian home friendlies, at the international level Belgium's national stadium has also hosted six European Championship matches.[154][155]

In 1930, for the country's centennial, the venue was inaugurated as the Jubilee Stadium with an unofficial match between Belgium and the Netherlands.[114] At that time, the stadium had a capacity of 75,000.[156] In 1946, it was renamed Heysel Stadium after its city quarter. This new name became associated with the tragedy preceding the 1985 European Cup Final between Juventus and Liverpool; 39 spectators died after riots in the then antiquated building.[157][158] Three years after the disaster, plans were unveiled for a renovation;[159] in 1995, after two years of work, the modernised stadium was named after the late King Baudouin.[160] In May 2013, the Brussels-Capital Region announced that the King Baudouin Stadium would be replaced by Eurostadium, elsewhere on the Heysel Plateau;[161] in 2018, however, the plans for the new stadium were cancelled definitively.[162]

Results and fixtures edit

As of 1 December 2022, the complete official match record of the Belgian national team comprises 824 matches: 362 wins, 172 draws and 290 losses.[a][20][167] During these matches, the team scored 1,475 times and conceded 1,297 goals. Belgium's highest winning margin is nine goals, which has been achieved on four occasions: against Zambia in 1994 (9–0), twice against San Marino in 2001 (10–1) and 2019 (9–0), and against Gibraltar in 2017 (9–0).[20] Their longest winning streak is 12 wins, and their highest unbeaten record is 23 consecutive official matches.[f][20]

The following is a list of match results in the last 12 months, as well as any future matches that have been scheduled.

  Win   Draw   Loss   Fixture

2023 edit

24 March 2023 UEFA Euro 2024 qualifying Group F Sweden   0–3   Belgium Solna, Sweden
20:45 Report
  • Lukaku   35', 49', 83'
Stadium: Friends Arena
Attendance: 49,296
Referee: Orel Grinfeld (Israel)
28 March 2023 Friendly Germany   2–3   Belgium Cologne, Germany
20:45
Report
Stadium: RheinEnergieStadion
Attendance: 42,910
Referee: Willy Delajod (France)
17 June 2023 UEFA Euro 2024 qualifying Group F Belgium   1–1   Austria Brussels, Belgium
20:45
Report
Stadium: King Baudouin Stadium
Attendance: 39,237
Referee: Jérôme Brisard (France)
20 June 2023 UEFA Euro 2024 qualifying Group F Estonia   0–3   Belgium Tallinn, Estonia
20:45 Report
Stadium: Lilleküla Stadium
Attendance: 11,772
Referee: John Beaton (Scotland)
9 September 2023 UEFA Euro 2024 qualifying Group F Azerbaijan   0–1   Belgium Baku, Azerbaijan
15:00 Report
Stadium: Dalga Arena
Attendance: 4,500
Referee: Nenad Minaković (Serbia)
12 September 2023 UEFA Euro 2024 qualifying Group F Belgium   5–0   Estonia Brussels, Belgium
20:45
Report Stadium: King Baudouin Stadium
Attendance: 24,127
Referee: Bartosz Frankowski (Poland)
13 October 2023 UEFA Euro 2024 qualifying Group F Austria   2–3   Belgium Vienna, Austria
20:45
Report
Stadium: Ernst-Happel-Stadion
Attendance: 47,000
Referee: Jesús Gil Manzano (Spain)
16 October 2023 UEFA Euro 2024 qualifying Group F Belgium   1–1
(Abandoned)
  Sweden Brussels, Belgium
20:45
Report
Stadium: King Baudouin Stadium
Referee: Maurizio Mariani (Italy)
Note: The match was abandoned at half-time with the score 1–1 due to security reasons, after two Swedish supporters were killed in a terrorist shooting in Brussels.[168] On 19 October 2023, UEFA decided that the half-time score would be considered final and the match would not be resumed.[169]
15 November 2023 Friendly Belgium   1–0   Serbia Leuven, Belgium
20:45
Report Stadium: Den Dreef
Referee: Marian Barbu (Romania)
19 November 2023 UEFA Euro 2024 qualifying Group F Belgium   5–0   Azerbaijan Brussels, Belgium
18:00
Report Stadium: King Baudouin Stadium
Attendance: 30,276
Referee: Gergő Bogár (Hungary)

2024 edit

21–23 March 2024 Friendly Belgium   v   Chile
20:45
26 March 2024 Friendly England   v   Belgium London, England
20:45 Stadium: Wembley Stadium
17 June 2024 UEFA Euro 2024 Belgium   v   Slovakia Frankfurt, Germany
18:00 Report Stadium: Waldstadion
22 June 2024 UEFA Euro 2024 Belgium   v   Romania Cologne, Germany
21:00 Report Stadium: RheinEnergieStadion
26 June 2024 UEFA Euro 2024 TBC v   Belgium Stuttgart, Germany
18:00 Report Stadium: MHPArena

Coaching staff edit

Position Name
Team Manager   Piet Erauw[170]
Assistant Technical Director   Jelle Schelstraete[170]
Head Coach   Domenico Tedesco[170]
Assistant Coach   Andreas Hinkel
  Thomas Schneider
Goalkeeper Coach   Max Urwantschky
Fitness Coach   Vladimir Cepzanovic
Video Analyst   Dylan Vanhaeren
Performance Analysts   Luke Benstead[170]
  Stijn Campo[170]
Performance and Data Analyst   Yannick Euvrard[170]
Team Doctors   Geert Declercq[170]
  Kristof Sas[170]

Coaching history edit

Since 1904, the RBFA, 24 permanent managers and two caretaker managers have officially been in charge of the national team;[g][18][54] this includes one national footballer selector.[18] As of June 2016, a crew of over 20 RBFA employees guides the player group,[173] including their Spanish manager Roberto Martínez, and goalkeeping coaches Erwin Lemmens and Iñaki Bergara.[174][175] Under Marc Wilmots, Belgium reached the top FIFA ranking spot in 2015, which earned him the title of Best Coach of the Year at the 2015 Globe Soccer Awards.[176] Under Guy Thys, the squad achieved record results at World and European championships; World Soccer magazine accordingly proclaimed him Manager of the Year in 1986.[177]

Rather than developing innovative team formations or styles of play, Belgium's managers applied conventional tactics. At the three 1930s World Cups, the Red Devils were aligned in a contemporary 2–3–5 "pyramid".[178][179][180] In 1954, Doug Livingstone's squad played in a 3–2–5 "WM" arrangement during World Cup matches.[27] Throughout most of their tournament matches in the 1970s, the 1980s and the 1990s, the team played in a 4–4–2 formation.[31][40][41] Since Raymond Goethals' stint in the 1970s, a key strength of the Belgian squad has been their systematic use of the offside trap,[181] a defensive tactic that was already intensively applied in the 1960s by Anderlecht coach Pierre Sinibaldi.[182] According to football journalist Wim De Bock, "master tactician" Goethals represented the "conservative, defensive football of the Belgian national team"; he added that in the 1970s, the contrast between the Belgian playing style and the Total Football of their Dutch rivals "could not be bigger".[183]

In an attempt to win a match at the 1998 World Cup, Georges Leekens chose a 4–3–3 arrangement for Belgium's second and third group matches.[184] Robert Waseige, Belgium coach around 2000, said that "above all, [his] 4–4–2 system [was] holy", in the sense that he left good attackers on the bench to keep his favourite formation.[185] Wilmots opted for the 4–3–3 line-up again,[186] with the intention of showing dominant football against any country.[187]

Players edit

Current squad edit

On 10 November 2023, 26 players were named in the squad for the Friendly against Serbia and the UEFA Euro 2024 qualifying match against Azerbaijan on 15 and 19 November 2023 respectively.[188] On 13 November, Zinho Vanheusden left the squad due to injury, while Arnaud Bodart was still absent due to illness and would join only later.[189] One day later, Jorne Spileers received his first call-up to replace Vanheusden.[190] After the match against Serbia, Amadou Onana left the squad due to injury.[191]

Information correct as of 19 November 2023, after the match against Azerbaijan.[192][193]

No. Pos. Player Date of birth (age) Caps Goals Club
1 1GK Thomas Kaminski (1992-10-23) 23 October 1992 (age 31) 0 0   Luton Town
12 1GK Koen Casteels (1992-06-25) 25 June 1992 (age 31) 8 0   VfL Wolfsburg
13 1GK Matz Sels (1992-02-26) 26 February 1992 (age 31) 6 0   Strasbourg
1GK Arnaud Bodart (1998-03-11) 11 March 1998 (age 25) 0 0   Standard Liège

2 2DF Zeno Debast (2003-10-24) 24 October 2003 (age 20) 5 0   Anderlecht
3 2DF Arthur Theate (2000-05-25) 25 May 2000 (age 23) 14 0   Rennes
4 2DF Wout Faes (1998-04-03) 3 April 1998 (age 25) 11 0   Leicester City
5 2DF Jan Vertonghen (1987-04-24) 24 April 1987 (age 36) 153 10   Anderlecht
16 2DF Ameen Al-Dakhil (2002-03-06) 6 March 2002 (age 21) 4 0   Burnley
21 2DF Timothy Castagne (1995-12-05) 5 December 1995 (age 28) 39 2   Fulham
22 2DF Jorne Spileers (2005-01-21) 21 January 2005 (age 18) 0 0   Club Brugge

6 3MF Aster Vranckx (2002-10-04) 4 October 2002 (age 21) 4 0   VfL Wolfsburg
8 3MF Youri Tielemans (1997-05-07) 7 May 1997 (age 26) 65 5   Aston Villa
11 3MF Yannick Carrasco (1993-09-04) 4 September 1993 (age 30) 72 11   Al Shabab
15 3MF Olivier Deman (2000-04-06) 6 April 2000 (age 23) 2 0   Werder Bremen
18 3MF Orel Mangala (1998-03-18) 18 March 1998 (age 25) 12 0   Nottingham Forest
20 3MF Arthur Vermeeren (2005-02-07) 7 February 2005 (age 18) 2 0   Antwerp
3MF Alexis Saelemaekers (1999-06-27) 27 June 1999 (age 24) 12 1   Bologna

7 4FW Jérémy Doku (2002-05-27) 27 May 2002 (age 21) 18 2   Manchester City
9 4FW Leandro Trossard (1994-12-04) 4 December 1994 (age 29) 30 7   Arsenal
10 4FW Romelu Lukaku (vice-captain) (1993-05-13) 13 May 1993 (age 30) 113 83   Roma
14 4FW Dodi Lukebakio (1997-09-24) 24 September 1997 (age 26) 12 2   Sevilla
17 4FW Loïs Openda (2000-02-16) 16 February 2000 (age 23) 14 2   RB Leipzig
19 4FW Johan Bakayoko (2003-04-20) 20 April 2003 (age 20) 9 1   PSV Eindhoven
23 4FW Michy Batshuayi (1993-10-02) 2 October 1993 (age 30) 53 27   Fenerbahçe

Recent call-ups edit

The following footballers were part of a national selection in the past twelve months, but are not part of the current squad.

Pos. Player Date of birth (age) Caps Goals Club Latest call-up
GK Thibaut Courtois (vice-captain) (1992-05-11) 11 May 1992 (age 31) 102 0   Real Madrid v.   Estonia, 20 June 2023 WD

DF Zinho Vanheusden (1999-07-29) 29 July 1999 (age 24) 1 0   Standard Liège v.   Serbia, 15 November 2023 INJ
DF Hugo Siquet (2002-07-09) 9 July 2002 (age 21) 1 0   Cercle Brugge v.   Estonia, 12 September 2023
DF Sebastiaan Bornauw (1999-03-22) 22 March 1999 (age 24) 4 0   VfL Wolfsburg v.   Estonia, 20 June 2023
DF Thomas Meunier (1991-09-12) 12 September 1991 (age 32) 62 8   Borussia Dortmund v.   Germany, 28 March 2023

MF Amadou Onana (2001-08-16) 16 August 2001 (age 22) 9 0   Everton v.   Azerbaijan, 19 November 2023 INJ
MF Mandela Keita (2002-05-10) 10 May 2002 (age 21) 1 0   Antwerp v.   Sweden, 16 October 2023
MF Hans Vanaken (1992-08-24) 24 August 1992 (age 31) 23 5   Club Brugge v.   Estonia, 20 June 2023
MF Mike Trésor (1999-05-28) 28 May 1999 (age 24) 2 0   Burnley v.   Estonia, 20 June 2023
MF Leander Dendoncker (1995-04-15) 15 April 1995 (age 28) 32 1   Aston Villa v.   Estonia, 20 June 2023 INJ
MF Kevin De Bruyne (captain) (1991-06-28) 28 June 1991 (age 32) 99 26   Manchester City v.   Austria, 17 June 2023 INJ
MF Roméo Lavia (2004-01-06) 6 January 2004 (age 19) 1 0   Chelsea v.   Germany, 28 March 2023
MF Dennis Praet (1994-05-14) 14 May 1994 (age 29) 15 2   Leicester City v.   Germany, 28 March 2023

FW Charles De Ketelaere (2001-03-10) 10 March 2001 (age 22) 14 2   Atalanta v.   Sweden, 16 October 2023 INJ

  • PRE Preliminary squad / standby
  • RET Retired from the national team
  • INJ Player injuries
  • ILL Player illness
  • U21 Moved to U21 squad
  • WD Player withdrew from squad due to non-injury issue

Notable edit

 
Paul Van Himst

Between 1904 and 1980, mainly attacking Belgium players were recognised as talented footballers. In the team's first decade, striker Robert De Veen was very productive with 26 goals in 23 international appearances.[194] Richard Henshaw described Alphonse Six as "Belgium's greatest player in the prewar period ... [who] was often called the most skillful forward outside Great Britain".[23] The key player of the victorious 1920 Olympic squad was Robert Coppée, who scored a hat-trick against Spain's Ricardo Zamora,[195] and the penalty in the final.[196] Other outstanding Belgian strikers in the interwar period were former top scorer Bernard Voorhoof and "Belgium's football grandmaster" Raymond Braine,[51][197] considered "one of the greatest players of the era".[198]

Gifted players in the 1940s and the 1950s included centre-back Louis Carré and attackers Jef Mermans, Pol Anoul and Rik Coppens;[23] at the 1954 World Cup, Anoul shone with three goals,[27] and newspaper L'Équipe named Coppens the event's best centre forward.[199] The 1960s and the early 1970s were the glory days of forward and four-time Belgian Golden Shoe Paul Van Himst,[200] later elected Belgian UEFA Golden Player of 1954–2003 and Belgium's Player of the Century by IFFHS.[201][202]

 
Eden Hazard, former team captain and second top scoring player for Belgium.[203]

At the 1965 Ballon d'Or, Van Himst ranked fourth, achieving Belgium's highest ever position at the European football election.[204] Decades after Coppens and Van Himst had retired from playing football, a journalist on a Flemish television show asked them "Who [from both of you] was the best, actually?". Coppens replied: "I will ask Paul that ... If Paul says it was me, then he's right".[205] In 1966, striker Raoul Lambert and defending midfielder Wilfried Van Moer joined the national team;[51] while the UEFA praised Lambert for his skills at Euro 1972,[206] Van Moer won three Golden Shoes and equalled Van Himst's fourth rank at the 1980 Ballon d'Or.[200][207]

Belgium has seen two talented waves since 1980, from which several players in defensive positions gained international fame. In the 1980s and the early 1990s, goalkeepers Jean-Marie Pfaff and Michel Preud'homme were elected best custodians at FIFA World Cups,[43][44] while FIFA recognised midfielders Jan Ceulemans and Enzo Scifo as the propelling forces of Belgium's 1986 FIFA World Cup squad.[43][208] In 2002, after all players of this generation had retired,[51] Marc Wilmots became Belgium's top scorer at the World Cup with five goals.[42][184]

During the 10 years from 2002 to 2012 in which Belgium failed to qualify for major tournaments, another golden generation matured, many of whom gained both prime individual and team awards in foreign European top clubs and competitions.[h] These include defender Vincent Kompany,[209][210] midfielder Kevin De Bruyne who is one of the best attacking midfielders in the world and his generation;[211] and winger Eden Hazard, who has been praised as one of Chelsea F.C.'s greatest players ever[212] and one of his era's best footballers in the world,[213] in the team, he is ranked only after Romelu Lukaku on Belgium's all-time scoring leaderboard.[214][215] Honorable mentions of this golden generation are Thibaut Courtois, Jan Vertonghen, Dries Mertens, and Toby Alderweireld.[216] These players helped Belgium finish at the third place of 2018 FIFA World Cup, the team's best result at the tournament and reach number one on FIFA ranking twice, since 2015.[217][218]

Individual records edit

Most capped players edit

 
Jan Vertonghen is Belgium's most capped player with 152 appearances.

As of 20 June 2023, the RBFA lists 719 players who appeared on the men's senior national team.[51] With 152 caps according to the RBFA, Jan Vertonghen has the most appearances for Belgium.[a][194] Eden Hazard started the most matches as captain (59).[219] Hector Goetinck had the longest career as an international footballer: 17 years, 6 months and 10 days.[51]

As of 19 November 2023. The records are collected based on data from FIFA and RSSSF. Statistics include three matches that are recognised by FIFA.[i]
Players in bold are still active with Belgium.
Rank Player Caps Goals Position Belgium career
1 Jan Vertonghen 153 10 DF 2007–present
2 Axel Witsel 130 12 MF 2008–2022
3 Toby Alderweireld 127 5 DF 2009–2022
4 Eden Hazard 126 33 MF/FW 2008–2022
5 Romelu Lukaku 113 83 FW 2010–present
6 Dries Mertens 109 21 FW 2011–present
7 Thibaut Courtois 102 0 GK 2011–present
8 Kevin De Bruyne 99 26 MF 2010–present
9 Jan Ceulemans 96 23 MF/FW 1977–1991
10 Timmy Simons 94 6 DF/MF 2001–2016

Top goalscorers edit

 
Romelu Lukaku is Belgium's top goalscorer with 83 goals.

Romelu Lukaku is the highest-scoring Belgium player with 83 goals.[a][194] Those who scored the most goals in one match are Robert De Veen, Bert De Cleyn and Josip Weber with five;[51] Lukaku holds the record for the most hat-tricks with four.[51] Belgium's fastest goal after the initial kick-off was scored by Christian Benteke, 8.1 seconds into a match against Gibraltar on 10 October 2016.[219][221]

As of 19 November 2023. The records are collected based on data from FIFA and RSSSF. Statistics include three matches that are unrecognised by FIFA.[j]
Players in bold are still active with Belgium.
Rank Player Goals Caps Ratio Belgium career
1 Romelu Lukaku (list) 83 113 0.73 2010–present
2 Eden Hazard 33 126 0.26 2008–2022
3 Bernard Voorhoof 30 61 0.49 1928–1940
Paul Van Himst 30 81 0.37 1960–1974
5 Marc Wilmots 28 70 0.4 1990–2002
6 Michy Batshuayi 27 53 0.51 2015–present
Joseph Mermans 27 56 0.48 1945–1956
8 Robert De Veen 26 23 1.13 1906–1913
Raymond Braine 26 55 0.47 1925–1939
Kevin De Bruyne 26 99 0.26 2010–present

Competitive record edit

Overview
Event 1st Place 2nd Place 3rd Place 4th Place
FIFA World Cup 0 0 1 1
UEFA European Championship 0 1 1 0
UEFA Nations League 0 0 0 1
Olympic Games 1 0 1 1
Total 1 1 3 3

FIFA World Cup edit

Belgium failed to progress past the first round of their earliest five World Cup participations. After two scoreless defeats at the inaugural World Cup in 1930,[178] the team scored in their first-round knockout matches in the 1934 and 1938 editions—but only enough to save their honours.[179][180] In 1954, they drew with England (4–4 after extra time),[27] and in 1970, they won their first World Cup match, against El Salvador (3–0).[31]

From 1982 until 2002, Belgium qualified for six successive World Cup, and in the tournament finals they advanced beyond the first round five times.[39] In the 1982 FIFA World Cup opener, Belgium beat defending champions Argentina 1–0. Their tournament ended in the second group stage, after a Polish hat-trick by Zbigniew Boniek and a 0–1 loss against the Soviet Union.[40]

 
United States–Belgium in 1930 was the joint first ever World Cup match.

At Mexico 1986, the Belgian team achieved their then best-ever World Cup run at the time. In the knockout phase as underdogs they beat the Soviets after extra time (3–4);[222] the unnoticed offside position of Jan Ceulemans, during the initial ninety minutes, allowed him to equalise (2–2) and force the match into extra time.[223] They also beat Spain, in a penalty shoot-out after a 1–1 draw, but lost to eventual champions Argentina in the semi-finals 2–0, and France in the third-place match (4–2).[45]

In the 1990 FIFA World Cup, Belgium dominated periods of their second-round match against England;[224] Enzo Scifo and Jan Ceulemans hit the woodwork.[225] David Platt's volley in the finals minute of extra time, described as "nearly blind" by Richard Witzig,[226] avoided an apparently goalless draw and led to the sudden elimination of the Belgians.[227]

In 1994, a 3–2 defeat to defending champions Germany saw Belgium go out in the second round again.[41] Afterwards, the entire Belgian delegation criticised referee Kurt Röthlisberger for not awarding a penalty for a foul on Belgian Josip Weber.[228] Three draws in the group stage of the 1998 World Cup were insufficient for Belgium to reach the knockout stage.[184] With two draws, the 2002 FIFA World Cup started poorly for Belgium, but they won the decisive group match against Russia 3–2. In the second round, they faced eventual World Cup winners Brazil; Belgium lost 2–0 after Marc Wilmots' headed opening goal was disallowed due to a "phantom foul" on Roque Júnior, as Witzig named it.[42][229]

In 2014, Belgium beat all their group opponents with a single-goal difference.[67] Thereafter, they played an entertaining round of 16 match against the United States,[230] in which American goalkeeper Tim Howard made 15 saves.[k] However, they defeated the United States 2–1 in extra time.[67] In a balanced quarter-finals, Argentina eliminated Belgium, after a 1–0 victory.[232]

At the 2018 World Cup, Belgium started with five consecutive victories (including group wins over Panama, Tunisia and England). In the fourth, in the round of 16 match against Japan, they suffered a major setback in the second half by being led 0–2. However, Japan, which displayed a very open and offensive game, did not withdraw sufficiently in defense and left a lot of opportunities to Belgium who[233][234][235] turned the tide and eventually won (3–2) with goals from Jan Vertonghen and late substitutes Marouane Fellaini and Nacer Chadli. Belgium then defeated World Cup favourites Brazil 2–1 on the back of an early Fernandinho own goal and a goal by Kevin De Bruyne,[236][237] and reached the semi-finals.[238] Belgium lost to France 0–1 in the semi-finals, as France displays a style of play opposite to that of Japan by basing themselves above all on a rigorous defense, the possession left to the adversary and fast counter-attacks (which aroused criticisms from certain Belgian players on the French style of play[239]); but rebounded to win 2–0 in their second victory over England in the tournament to secure third place and the best ever World Cup result for the Belgian national team. Some players that notably contributed were captain Eden Hazard, Thibaut Courtois and Romelu Lukaku, who were later recognised by FIFA as the tournament's second best player (Silver Ball), best goalkeeper (Golden Glove) and third top scorer (Bronze Boot), respectively.[240]

FIFA World Cup Qualification
Year Host(s) Round Pld W D L GF GA Squad Pos. Pld W D L GF GA
1930   Uruguay Group stage 2 0 0 2 0 4 Squad Participated as invitees
1934   Italy Round of 16 1 0 0 1 2 5 Squad 2nd 2 0 1 1 6 8
1938   France 1 0 0 1 1 3 Squad 2nd 2 1 1 0 4 3
1950   Brazil Did not enter Did not enter
1954    Switzerland Group stage 2 0 1 1 5 8 Squad 1st 4 3 1 0 11 6
1958   Sweden Did not qualify 2nd 4 2 1 1 16 11
1962   Chile 3rd 4 0 0 4 3 10
1966   England Play-off 5 3 0 2 12 5
1970   Mexico Group stage 3 1 0 2 4 5 Squad 1st 6 4 1 1 14 8
1974   West Germany Did not qualify 2nd 6 4 2 0 12 0
1978   Argentina 2nd 6 3 0 3 7 6
1982   Spain Second group stage 5 2 1 2 3 5 Squad 1st 8 5 1 2 12 9
1986   Mexico Fourth place 7 2 2 3 12 15 Squad Play-off 8 4 2 2 9 5
1990   Italy Round of 16 4 2 0 2 6 4 Squad 1st 8 4 4 0 15 5
1994   United States 4 2 0 2 4 4 Squad 2nd 10 7 1 2 16 5
1998   France Group stage 3 0 3 0 3 3 Squad Play-off 10 7 1 2 23 13
2002   South Korea
  Japan
Round of 16 4 1 2 1 6 7 Squad Play-off 10 7 2 1 27 6
2006   Germany Did not qualify 4th 10 3 3 4 16 11
2010   South Africa 4th 10 3 1 6 13 20
2014   Brazil Quarter-finals 5 4 0 1 6 3 Squad 1st 10 8 2 0 18 4
2018   Russia Third place 7 6 0 1 16 6 Squad 1st 10 9 1 0 43 6
2022   Qatar Group stage 3 1 1 1 1 2 Squad 1st 8 6 2 0 25 6
2026   Canada
  Mexico
  United States
To be determined To be determined
2030   Morocco
  Portugal
  Spain
2034   Saudi Arabia
Total Third place 51 21 10 20 69 74 14/22 141 83 27 31 302 147
  Champions    Runners-up    Third place    Fourth place  

UEFA European Championship edit

 
Line-ups of the Euro 1980 finals: Belgium (red) against West Germany

With only six successful qualification campaigns out of sixteen, Belgium's performance in the European Championship does not compare to their World Cup record, yet it holds the highest record compare to their World Cup performance. Belgium has hosted or co-hosted the event twice; they were chosen to accommodate the UEFA Euro 1972 from three candidates,[l] and hosted UEFA Euro 2000 with the Netherlands.[47]

At Euro 1972, Belgium finished third after losing 1–2 against West Germany and beating Hungary 2–1.[32] The team's best continental result is their second place at Euro 1980 in Italy. By finishing as group winners, Belgium reached the finals, to face West Germany. The West German Horst Hrubesch scored first, but René Vandereycken equalised courtesy of a penalty. Two minutes before the regular playing time ended, Hrubesch scored again denying Belgium a first European title.[37]

At Euro 1984, in their last and decisive group match against Denmark, the Belgian team took a 0–2 lead, but the Danes won the match 3–2.[46] Sixteen years later, Belgium automatically reappeared at UEFA's national team tournament as co-hosts. After winning the Euro 2000 opener against Sweden 2–1,[242] two 2–0 losses against eventual runners-up Italy and Turkey eliminated the Belgians from the tournament by the end of the group stage.[47]

In spite of winning with broad margins against the Republic of Ireland (3–0) and Hungary (0–4) at Euro 2016,[243][244] Belgium exited in the quarter-finals. As during the tournament's qualifiers, Wales defeated Belgium. This time by 3–1.[71]

UEFA European Championships Qualification
Year Host(s) Round Pld W D L GF GA Squad Pos. Pld W D L GF GA
1960   France Did not enter Did not enter
1964   Spain Did not qualify Preliminary round 2 0 0 2 2 4
1968   Italy 2nd 6 3 1 2 14 9
1972   Belgium Third place 2 1 0 1 3 3 Squad Quarter-finals 8 5 2 1 13 4
1976   Yugoslavia Did not qualify Quarter-finals 8 3 2 3 7 10
1980   Italy Runners-up 4 1 2 1 4 4 Squad 1st 8 4 4 0 12 5
1984   France Group stage 3 1 0 2 4 8 Squad 1st 6 4 1 1 12 8
1988   West Germany Did not qualify 3rd 8 3 3 2 16 8
1992   Sweden 3rd 6 2 1 3 7 6
1996   England 3rd 10 4 3 3 17 13
2000   Belgium
  Netherlands
Group stage 3 1 0 2 2 5 Squad Qualified as hosts
2004   Portugal Did not qualify 3rd 8 5 1 2 11 9
2008   Austria
   Switzerland
5th 14 5 3 6 14 16
2012   Poland
  Ukraine
3rd 10 4 3 3 21 15
2016   France Quarter-finals 5 3 0 2 9 5 Squad 1st 10 7 2 1 24 5
2020 Pan-European 5 4 0 1 9 3 Squad 1st 10 10 0 0 40 3
2024   Germany Qualified 1st 8 6 2 0 22 4
2028   United Kingdom
  Ireland
To be determined To be determined
2032   Italy
  Turkey
Total Runners-up 22 11 2 9 31 28 7/17 122 65 28 29 232 119
  Champions    Runners-up    Third place/Semi-finalists

UEFA Nations League edit

UEFA Nations League
League phase Finals
Season LG Grp Pos Pld W D L GF GA P/R RK Year Host Pos Pld W D L GF GA Squad
2018–19 A 2 2nd 4 3 0 1 9 6   5th 2019   Portugal Did not qualify
2020–21 A 2 1st 6 5 0 1 16 6   4th 2021   Italy 4th 2 0 0 2 3 5 Squad
2022–23 A 4 2nd 6 3 1 2 11 8   7th 2023   Netherlands Did not qualify
2024–25 A To be determined 2025 To be determined
Total 16 11 1 4 36 20 5th 1/3 2 0 0 2 3 5
  Champions    Runners-up    Third place    Fourth place  

Olympic Games edit

 
Hectic phase during the goal-rich Olympic win against Luxembourg in 1928 (5–3)

Football tournament for senior men's national teams took place in six Summer Olympic between 1908 and 1936. The Belgian squad participated in all three Football at the Summer Olympics in the 1920s and kept the gold medal at home at the 1920 edition.[20][245] Apart from the proper national team, two other Belgian delegations appeared at the Olympic. At the 1900 Summer Olympic, a Belgian representation with mainly students won bronze,[246] and at the 2008 edition, Belgium's U-23 selection placed fourth.[56]

Belgium's 1920 Olympic squad was given a bye into the quarter-finals, where they won 3–1 against Spain, and reached the semi-finals, where they beat the Netherlands 3–0. In the first half of the finals against Czechoslovakia, the Belgians led 2–0.[245] Forward Robert Coppée converted a disputed early penalty, and the action in which attacker Henri Larnoe doubled the score was also a matter of debate.[22][195] After the dismissal of the Czechoslovak left-back Karel Steiner, the discontented visitors left the pitch in the 40th minute. Afterwards, the away team reported their reasons for protest to the Olympic organisation;[22] these complaints were dismissed and the Czechoslovaks were disqualified.[23] The 2–0 score was allowed to stand and Belgium were crowned the champions.[23]

Summer Olympic Games record
Year Host Round Pld W D L GF GA Squad
1896   Greece No Olympic football tournament
1900   France Bronze medal 1 0 0 1 2 6 Squad
1904 to 1912 Did not enter
1920   Belgium Gold medal 3 3 0 0 8 1 Squad
1924   France Round of 16 1 0 0 1 1 8 Squad
1928   Netherlands Quarter-finals 3 1 0 2 9 12 Squad
1932   United States No Olympic football tournament
1936 to 1976 Did not Enter
1980 to 1984 Did not qualify
1988   South Korea Did not Enter
1992 to present See Belgium national under-23 team
Total Gold medal 14 7 0 7 27 37
  Gold medal    Silver medal    Bronze medal

Olympic Games has been an under-23 tournament since 1992 (with three players of over 23 years of age allowed in the squad).

Honours edit

 
 
Belgium's 1920 Olympic champions, and one of the 154 gold medal awarded at these Games of the VII Olympic

See also edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Caps and goals against Romania on 15 (actually 14) November 2012, against Luxembourg on 26 May 2014 and against Czech Republic on 5 June 2017 were counted by RBFA but are not officially recognised by FIFA – the former two due to an excessive number of substitutions according to the Laws of the Game,[163][164][165] the latter because the Belgian and Czech football federations were too late in requesting an official match.[166]
  2. ^ Dutch: Belgisch nationaal voetbalelftal
    French: Équipe nationale belge de football
    German: Belgische Fußballnationalmannschaft
  3. ^ UBSFA was the acronym for the organisation's French name: Union Belge des Sociétés de Football-Association.
    In 1920 it received the title of "Royal Union" for its 25th year of existence, and hence became the Royal Belgian Football Association.[7]
  4. ^ Even in their last match of 1980, against Cyprus on 21 December, Belgium played in an Adidas outfit.[98] This suggests that Admiral's sponsorship started in 1981, contrary to what the 2014 article stated.
  5. ^ The timeline in the 2014 overview article stated the switch from Diadora to Nike happened in 1998. However, the 1999 article focused on this kit sponsor change which took place in mid-1999.
  6. ^ This streak started in September 2016 and does not include the friendly win against Czech Republic on 5 June 2017; this match is not FIFA-recognised since the Belgian and Czech football federations were too late in asking that it would be official.[166]
  7. ^ The interim managers were Louis Nicolay and Franky Vercauteren.[171][172]
  8. ^ Prime individual awards include being elected the season's or year's best player of a competition; prime team awards equal winning a competition. National top divisions, main national cup competitions, UEFA Champions League and UEFA Europa League are considered.
  9. ^ Note that the RBFA does not count caps earned in the Belgian seven Summer Olympics matches, and that it does include Belgium's friendlies on 14 November 2012, 26 May 2014 and 5 June 2017 that are FIFA-recognised.[220]
  10. ^ Note that the RBFA does not count caps earned in the Belgian seven Summer Olympics matches, and that it does include Belgium's friendlies on 14 November 2012, 26 May 2014 and 5 June 2017 that are not FIFA-recognised – the former two due to an excessive number of substitutions according to the Laws of the Game,[165] the latter because of a lacking official request.[166]
  11. ^ FIFA's initial match statistics showed 16 saves, and many news sources continue to use this number. The official FIFA statistics were updated on 5 July 2014 to show 15 saves.[231]
  12. ^ The other bids were from England and Italy,[241] whose teams did not reach the semi-finals.[32]

References edit

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  2. ^ a b Elo rankings change compared to one year ago. "World Football Elo Ratings". eloratings.net. 17 December 2023. Retrieved 17 December 2023.
  3. ^ See:
  4. ^ Vanysacker, Dries (21 May 2015). [Belgian football history began in Ghent]. Eos (in Dutch). Archived from the original on 25 June 2016. Retrieved 13 June 2015.
  5. ^ Colin, François (1 April 2003). [Report. "The chronicle of Belgian football" sketches origins of most popular sport]. De Standaard (in Dutch). Archived from the original on 11 June 2013. Retrieved 29 August 2015.
  6. ^ a b c d e Henshaw 1979, p. 75.
  7. ^ a b [History of the RBFA] (in French). RBFA. Archived from the original on 7 May 2012. Retrieved 31 October 2015.
  8. ^ Guldemont & Deps 1995, p. 64.
  9. ^ a b Fraiponts & Willocx 2003.
  10. ^ a b Verkamman, Matty (9 January 1999). [International football for 'the copper thingy'/Sports Century (2) – 1901]. Trouw (in Dutch). Archived from the original on 25 June 2016. Retrieved 9 April 2015.
  11. ^ a b c Hubert 1980, p. 12.
  12. ^ a b Hubert 1980, p. 13.
  13. ^ . UEFA. 13 August 2013. Archived from the original on 25 June 2016. Retrieved 15 August 2013.
  14. ^ . FIFA. Archived from the original on 25 June 2016. Retrieved 16 May 2014.
  15. ^ Parrish & Nauright 2014, p. xv.
  16. ^ a b Boin 1945.
  17. ^ a b Guldemont & Deps 1995, p. 65.
  18. ^ a b c Mubarak, Hassanin (7 August 2003). . RSSSF. Archived from the original on 29 June 2016. Retrieved 14 September 2013.
  19. ^ a b . RBFA. Archived from the original on 28 June 2016. Retrieved 9 May 2014.
  20. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Stokkermans, Karel. "Belgium – List of International Matches". RSSSF. from the original on 1 July 2016. Retrieved 4 February 2018.
  21. ^ a b "Frankrijk–België" [France–Belgium]. De Telegraaf (in Dutch). 21 March 1916. Retrieved 11 June 2015 – via Delpher.
  22. ^ a b c Fauria í García, Juan (1993). (PDF). ISOH Magazine. 1 (4): 5–7. Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 December 2013. Retrieved 4 May 2014.
  23. ^ a b c d e Henshaw 1979, p. 76.
  24. ^ [Belgium in exile - Belgian government, refugees and soldiers in Great Britain] (PDF). Catalogus van de Gelijknamige Tentoonstelling in Het Algemeen Rijksarchief te Brussel (in Dutch). National Archives of Belgium: 31. Archived from the original (PDF) on 18 December 2016. Retrieved 18 December 2016.
  25. ^ Chaplin, Mark (5 May 2014). . UEFA. Archived from the original on 25 June 2016. Retrieved 28 June 2014.
  26. ^ "België wist Engeland een gelijk spel af te dwingen" [Belgium managed to enforce a draw against England]. Amigoe di Curaçao (in Dutch). 18 June 1954. Retrieved 19 December 2016 – via Delpher.
  27. ^ a b c d . RSSSF. Archived from the original on 6 March 2016. Retrieved 17 August 2015.
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belgium, national, football, team, this, article, about, team, women, team, belgium, women, national, football, team, officially, represents, belgium, international, football, since, their, maiden, match, 1904, squad, under, global, jurisdiction, fifa, governe. This article is about the men s team For the women s team see Belgium women s national football team The Belgium national football team b officially represents Belgium in men s international football since their maiden match in 1904 The squad is under the global jurisdiction of FIFA and is governed in Europe by UEFA both of which were co founded by the Belgian team s supervising body the Royal Belgian Football Association Periods of regular Belgian representation at the highest international level from 1920 to 1938 from 1982 to 2002 and again from 2014 onwards have alternated with mostly unsuccessful qualification rounds Most of Belgium s home matches are played at the King Baudouin Stadium in Brussels BelgiumNickname s De Rode Duivels Les Diables rouges Die Roten Teufel The Red Devils AssociationRoyal Belgian Football Association RBFA ConfederationUEFA Europe Head coachDomenico TedescoCaptainKevin De BruyneMost capsJan Vertonghen 153 a Top scorerRomelu Lukaku 83 a Home stadiumKing Baudouin StadiumFIFA codeBELFirst coloursSecond coloursFIFA rankingCurrent4 1 30 November 2023 1 Highest1 November 2015 March 2016 September 2018 March 2022 1 Lowest71 June 2007 1 First international Belgium 3 3 France Uccle Belgium 1 May 1904 Biggest win Belgium 9 0 Zambia Brussels Belgium 4 June 1994 Belgium 10 1 San Marino Brussels Belgium 28 February 2001 Belgium 9 0 Gibraltar Liege Belgium 31 August 2017 Belgium 9 0 San Marino Brussels Belgium 10 October 2019 Biggest defeat England Amateurs 11 2 Belgium London England 17 April 1909 World CupAppearances14 first in 1930 Best resultThird place 2018 European ChampionshipAppearances6 first in 1972 Best resultRunners up 1980 Nations League FinalsAppearances1 first in 2021 Best resultFourth place 2021 Medal record Men s footballFIFA World Cup2018 Russia TeamUEFA European Championship1980 Italy Team1972 Belgium TeamOlympic Games1920 Antwerp Team1900 Paris TeamWebsiterbfa beBelgium s national team have participated in three quadrennial major football competitions It appeared in the end stages of fourteen FIFA World Cup and six UEFA European Championship and featured at three Olympic football tournament including the 1920 Summer Olympics which they won Other notable performances are victories over four reigning world champions West Germany Brazil Argentina and France between 1954 and 2002 Belgium has long standing football rivalries with its Dutch and French counterparts having played both teams nearly every year from 1905 to 1967 The squad has been known as the Red Devils since 1906 its fan club is named 1895 During the national player career of forward Paul Van Himst the most praised Belgian footballer of the 20th century Belgium finished in third place as hosts at UEFA Euro 1972 After that they experienced two golden ages with many gifted players In the first period which lasted from the 1980s to the early 1990s the team finished as runners up at UEFA Euro 1980 and fourth in the 1986 FIFA World Cup In the second under guidance of Marc Wilmots and later Roberto Martinez in the 2010s Belgium topped the FIFA World Rankings for the first time in November 2015 and finished third at the 2018 FIFA World Cup To date Belgium is the only national team in the world to top the FIFA ranking without having won a World Cup or a continental trophy Spain had topped the rankings in late 2008 without winning the World Cup but had won the European title in 1964 and 2008 while the Netherlands topped the rankings in August 2011 without a World Cup title but won the European title in 1988 Contents 1 History 2 Team image 2 1 Kits 2 2 Media coverage 2 3 Side activities 2 4 Nickname logo and mascot 2 5 Supporters 2 6 Rivalries 3 Stadium 4 Results and fixtures 4 1 2023 4 2 2024 5 Coaching staff 5 1 Coaching history 6 Players 6 1 Current squad 6 2 Recent call ups 6 3 Notable 7 Individual records 7 1 Most capped players 7 2 Top goalscorers 8 Competitive record 8 1 FIFA World Cup 8 2 UEFA European Championship 8 3 UEFA Nations League 8 4 Olympic Games 9 Honours 10 See also 11 Footnotes 12 References 12 1 Bibliography 13 Further reading 14 External linksHistory editMain article History of the Belgium national football team Belgium was one of the first mainland European countries to play association football 3 Its practice in Belgium began on 26 October 1863 after an Irish student walked into the Josephites College of Melle with a leather ball 4 Initially an elitist pastime 5 during the following decades association football supplanted rugby as Belgium s most popular football sport 6 On 1 September 1895 ten clubs for football athletics cricket and cycling founded the Belgian sports board Union Belge des Societes de Sports Athletiques UBSSA 6 7 a year later UBSSA organised the first annual league in Belgian football 6 nbsp The first Belgium A squad in 1901 featured four Englishmen On 11 October 1900 Beerschot AC honorary president Jorge Diaz announced that Antwerp would host a series of challenge matches between Europe s best football teams 8 After some organisational problems on 28 April 1901 Beerschot s pitch hosted its first tournament in which a Belgian A squad and a Dutch B team contested the Coupe Vanden Abeele 9 10 Belgium won 11 and beat the Netherlands in all three follow up matches 12 FIFA does not recognise these results because Belgium fielded some English players 12 On 1 May 1904 the Belgians played their first official match against France at the Stade du Vivier d Oie in Uccle their draw left the Evence Coppee Trophy unclaimed 13 Twenty days later the football boards of both countries were among the seven FIFA founders 14 15 At that time the Belgian squad was chosen by a committee drawn from the country s six or seven major clubs 16 In 1906 the national team players received the nickname Red Devils because of their red jerseys 17 and four years later Scottish ex footballer William Maxwell replaced the UBSSA committee as their manager 18 From 1912 UBSSA governed football only and was renamed UBSFA c 19 6 During the Great War the national team only played unrecognised friendlies with matches in and against France 20 21 At the 1920 Summer Olympics in their first official Olympics appearance the Red Devils won the gold medal on home soil after a controversial final in which their Czechoslovak opponents left the pitch 22 In the three 1920s Summer Olympics they achieved fair results four wins in seven matches and played their first intercontinental match against Argentina 20 However over the following decade Belgium lost all of their matches at the first three FIFA World Cup final tournaments 20 According to historian Richard Henshaw t he growth of football in Scandinavia Central Europe and South America left Belgium far behind 23 Although World War II hindered international football events in the 1940s the Belgian team remained active with unofficial matches against squads of other allied nations 24 nbsp In the 1920 Olympics football final at the Olympisch Stadion in Antwerp Robert Coppee scored for Belgium with a penalty kick Belgium qualified for only one of eight major tournaments during the 1950s and the 1960s the 1954 World Cup The day before the tournament began the RBFA was among the three UEFA founders 25 Dutch journalists considered the draw of the 1954 Belgian team in their opener against England to be the most surprising result of that match day even more than Switzerland s victory over the Italian football stars 26 However Belgium were eliminated after a loss to Italy in the second and last group match 27 Two bright spots in these decades were wins against World Cup holders West Germany in 1954 and Brazil in 1963 20 Between these Belgium defeated Hungary s Golden Team in 1956 20 The combination of failure in competitive matches and success in exhibition matches gave the Belgians the mock title of world champion of the friendlies 28 29 The team s performance improved during the early 1970s under manager Raymond Goethals Fully dressed in white as the White Devils 30 Belgium had their first victories at World and European Championships at the 1970 World Cup and Euro 1972 31 32 En route to that Euro appearance their first they eliminated reigning European champions Italy by winning the two legged quarter final on aggregate At the end stage they finished third by winning the consolation match against Hungary 32 In 1973 the denial of a match winning goal in their last 1974 FIFA World Cup qualification match for UEFA Group 3 cost Belgium their appearance at the finals 33 causing Belgium to become the only nation ever to miss a World Cup final round despite not allowing a goal during the qualifiers 34 The next two attempts to reach a major finals were also fruitless 35 36 Beginning with a second place finish at Euro 1980 37 the 1980s and the early 1990s are generally considered as Belgium s first golden age 38 Coached by Guy Thys they achieved their spot in the 1980 final with an unbeaten record in the group phase in the final they narrowly lost the title to West Germany with the score 1 2 37 Starting with the 1982 World Cup and ending with the 2002 World Cup the national team qualified for six consecutive World Cup end stages and mostly progressed to the second round 39 During this period managers Guy Thys Paul Van Himst and Robert Waseige each guided a Belgian selection past the first round 40 41 42 In addition to receiving individual FIFA recognitions 43 44 the team reached the semi finals of the 1986 World Cup 45 After reaching the Euro 1980 final they were unsuccessful at subsequent European Championships with early exits from their appearances in 1984 and in 2000 46 47 During the late 1990s they played three friendly tournaments in Morocco Cyprus and Japan 48 49 sharing the 1999 Kirin Cup with Peru in the latter 50 The greatest talents of the Belgian team during this golden age were retired from international football by 2000 51 At the eve of the World Cup in 2002 Belgium defeated reigning world and European champions France 20 During that World Cup Belgium defeated Russia and tied with co host Japan and Tunisia to reach the round of 16 42 nbsp Belgium in red playing Algeria at the Mineirao at the 2014 World CupAfter the 2002 World Cup the team weakened with the loss of more veterans and coach Waseige 52 53 They missed out five successive major finals from UEFA Euro 2004 until UEFA Euro 2012 and went through an equal number of head coaches 54 A 2005 win over reigning European champions Greece meant nothing but a small comfort 20 In between a promising new generation was maturing at the 2007 European U 21 Championship Belgium s squad qualified for the following year s Summer Olympics in Beijing 55 where the Young Red Devils squad finished fourth 56 Seventeen of them appeared in the senior national team 51 albeit without making an immediate impact Belgium finished in second and last place at the Kirin Cup in May 2009 57 and lost against the 125th FIFA ranked Armenian team in September 2009 1 After Georges Leekens second stint as national manager 58 59 his assistant Marc Wilmots became the caretaker in May 2012 60 After two matches as interim coach Wilmots agreed to replace Leekens as manager 61 Following his appointment the team s results improved 62 such that some foreign media regarded it as another Belgian golden generation 63 64 65 The young Belgian squad qualified as unbeaten group winners for the 2014 World Cup finals 66 and earned Belgium s second ever place in a World Cup quarter finals with a four match winning streak 67 Belgium qualified for UEFA Euro 2016 with a match to spare in October 2015 68 and took the top spot in the FIFA World Rankings for the first time in November 2015 69 to stay first for five months 1 70 In the following year Belgium could not confirm their role as outsider at the European Championship with a quarter final elimination by the 26th FIFA ranked Welsh team 1 71 This prompted the RBFA to dismiss Wilmots 72 In the 2018 World Cup qualifying allocation they were seeded first in their group 73 74 and made the final tournament under Spanish manager Roberto Martinez becoming the first European team besides hosts Russia to do so 75 Belgium was eliminated in the semi finals by eventual champions France but won the third place play off against England 76 On 16 November 2019 for the first time in its history the team topped the World Football Elo Ratings after a 1 4 away win over Russia during the Euro 2020 qualifiers 2 Despite the impressive form in the UEFA Euro 2020 qualifiers as well as being regarded as the biggest contender for the European trophy the tournament became a complete disappointment for Belgium Being drawn in Group B alongside Russia Denmark and Finland Belgium easily conquered the group with three wins 77 78 79 In the knockout phase Belgium first faced reigning champions Portugal in the last sixteen and survived the scare with a thunder strike from Thorgan Hazard to give Belgium a 1 0 win 80 In the quarter finals Belgium once again faced old foe Italy but Belgium failed to take revenge for their 2016 loss once again suffering a 1 2 defeat with the goal being scored by Romelu Lukaku ending Belgium s campaign on a sad note 81 At the 2022 World Cup in Qatar Belgium were drawn into Group F alongside Croatia Morocco and Canada Despite starting their campaign well with a 1 0 victory over Canada they then suffered a shock 2 0 defeat to Morocco and following a 0 0 draw with Croatia in their final group game Belgium were knocked out of the tournament at the group stages for the first time since 1998 82 Following their elimination from the tournament Martinez announced that he would be standing down as head coach after six years in charge of the national team 83 In February 2023 it was announced that Domenico Tedesco has been appointed as the new head coach of the Belgian national team replacing Roberto Martinez Tedesco s first match as the head coach will be the a UEFA Euro 2024 qualifying match against Sweden on the 24th of March This is Tedesco s first national coaching job having previously worked at a club level with Schalke 04 Spartak Moscow and RB Leipzig Tedesco is contracted until the end of the UEFA Euro 2024 competition 84 Team image editKits edit See also Kit history nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp White away jersey 1970 World Cup with the stylised lion emblem 1948 80 Traditional red home jersey 2018 World Cup with RBFA emblem 1981 2019 In home matches the team s outfield players traditionally wear the colours of the Belgian flag black yellow and red 85 86 87 Red dominates the strip and is often the sole jersey colour 86 87 The away colours are usually white black or both 88 in 2014 the squad introduced a third yellow kit 89 Their shirts are often trimmed with tricolores at the margins 87 90 Since 1981 the RBFA emblem has been the national team s badge 87 91 the previous badge was a yellow lion on a black shield 86 87 similar to the escutcheon of the national coat of arms 92 On 8 November 2019 the Royal Belgian Football Association revealed a new logo which preserved the main elements of the previous one the royal crown the wreath and the Belgian tricolor 93 For their first unofficial match in 1901 the Belgian team wore white jerseys with tricoloured bands on the upper arms 9 Around their third unofficial match in 1902 the choice was made for a shirt with national colours that would indicate with a stripe the number of times every player has participated in an encounter 11 Since 1904 Belgium s classic all red jersey design has been altered twice In 1904 05 the squad briefly wore satin shirts with three horizontal bands in red yellow and black according to sports journalist Victor Boin the shirts set the ugliness record 16 During the 1970s manager Raymond Goethals chose an all white combination to improve the team s visibility during evening matches 30 94 Six clothing manufacturers have supplied the official team strip Adidas is the producer since 2014 95 and closed a sponsorship deal with the RBFA until 2026 96 it was also the supplier from 1974 to 1980 and from 1982 to 1991 97 Former kit manufacturers are Umbro early 1970s 94 97 Admiral 1981 1982 d 97 Diadora 1992 1999 97 Nike 1999 2010 and Burrda 2010 2014 e 97 99 Kit supplier Period nbsp Umbro Early 1970s nbsp Adidas 1974 1981 nbsp Admiral 1981 1982 nbsp Adidas 1982 1991 nbsp Diadora 1992 1999 nbsp Nike 1999 2010 nbsp Burrda 2010 2014 nbsp Adidas 2014 presentMedia coverage edit nbsp Gust De Muynck s live coverage during Belgium Netherlands in 1931The first live coverage of a Belgian sporting event occurred on 3 May 1931 when journalist Gust De Muynck commentated on the football match between Belgium and the Netherlands on radio 100 Later football broadcasts were also televised As 60 per cent of Belgians speak Dutch and 40 per cent French 101 commentaries for the national team matches are provided in both languages The matches are not broadcast in German Belgium s third official language 101 During Belgium s tournament appearances in the 1980s and the early 1990s Rik De Saedeleer crowned himself the nation s most famous football commentator with his emotional and humorous reports 102 Initially the matches were transmitted mainly on public television channels the former BRTN now VRT in Dutch and the RTBF in French Since 1994 commercial channels such as vtm and its sister channel Kanaal 2 and VIER in Flanders have purchased broadcasting rights 19 The Euro 2016 round of 16 match against Hungary was the most watched programme in Belgian television history with an audience of over four million viewers out of 11 3 million Belgian citizens 101 103 104 In April 2014 the VRT started transmitting a nine piece behind the scenes documentary about the national team filmed during the 2014 World Cup qualifiers titled Iedereen Duivel Everybody Devil 105 Cable broadband provider Telenet broadcast an eight part documentary about individual players titled Rode Helden Red Heroes 106 Side activities edit nbsp Illustration of Belgium s game against France in April 1918 some of such unofficial wartime matches served as charity fundraisers Multiple events were organised for the fans during the squad s peak popularity in the 2010s During the 2014 World Cup qualifiers a string of interactive events called the Devil Challenges were organised 107 The premise was that small groups of international players would do a favour in return for each of the five comprehensive chores their supporters completed colour Belgium red gather 500 000 decibels etc all of which were accomplished 108 In June 2013 the Belgian national team s first ever Fan Day attracted over 20 000 supporters 109 a second was held after the 2014 World Cup 110 On the days of Belgium s 2014 World Cup group matches large dance events titled Dance with the Devils took place in three Belgian cities 111 This type of happening was repeated during Belgium s Euro 2016 group matches 112 Occasionally the Belgian team directly supported charity Between 1914 and 1941 they played at least five unofficial matches of which the returns were for charitable purposes two against France 21 113 and three against the Netherlands 114 115 In mid 1986 when the Belgian delegation reached the Mexico World Cup semi finals the squad started a project titled Casa Hogar an idea of delegation leader Michel D Hooghe 116 Casa Hogar is a home for street children in the Mexican industrial city of Toluca to which the footballers donated part of their tournament bonuses 117 In August 2013 the national team supported four social projects through the charity fund Football Foundation by playing an A match with a plus sign on the shoulders of their jerseys and auctioning the shirts 118 In the 21st century several national team players acted up against discrimination In 2002 the national squad held its first anti racism campaign in which they posed with slogans 119 A home Euro 2012 qualifier was given the theme of respect for diversity in 2010 this UEFA supported action was part of the European FARE Action Week 120 Ex Red Devil Dimitri Mbuyu the first black Belgium player in 1987 51 121 was engaged as godfather and other foreign current and former footballers who played in the Belgian top division participated 122 In 2018 four national team players spoke up against homophobic violence in a video clip made by organisation Kick It Out 123 Nickname logo and mascot edit After a 1905 match a Dutch reporter wrote that three Belgian footballers work ed as devils 124 A year later Leopold FC manager Pierre Walckiers nicknamed the players Red Devils inspired by their jersey colour and the achievement of three successive victories in 1906 17 20 Because of their white home shirts in the 1970s they were temporarily known as the White Devils 30 Since 2012 the team logo is a red trident or three pronged pitchfork 125 an item that is often associated with the devil 126 Apart from that the national squad has also had four official anthropomorphous mascots The first was a lion in team kit named Diabolix 127 a reference to the central symbol in the Belgian coat of arms that appeared on the team jerseys from 1905 to 1980 87 128 In accordance with their epithet the next mascots were a red super devil and two fan made modern devils the most recent one since 2018 was named Red 127 129 Supporters edit Cycling is the traditional national sport of Belgium but soccer is the most popular Historian Richard Henshaw 1979 6 Fans of the Belgian national team display the country s tricolour national flag usually with an emphasis on the red element In 2012 local supporter clubs merged into one large Belgian federation named 1895 after the foundation year of the RBFA One year later 1895 had 24 000 members 130 The nationwide interest in the football squad has also been reflected by the occasional presence of Belgian monarchs at their matches since 1914 131 132 133 One of the greatest moments for the Belgian team and their 12th man was in mid 1986 when the Belgian delegation at the Mexico World Cup received a warm welcome home When the World Cup semi finalists appeared on the balcony of Brussels Town Hall the adjoining Grand Place square was filled with an ecstatic crowd that cheered as though their squad had won a major tournament 134 nbsp Crowd of Belgian fans in Kaliningrad Stadium at the 2018 World CupThe team s deterioration after the 2002 World Cup lead to their absence from the end stages of the next five major tournaments and strained their popularity Between 2004 and 2010 local journalists called the Belgian footballing nation mortally ill 135 136 Of the fans that kept supporting their squad in bad times Ludo Rollenberg was one of the most loyal He attended the team s matches worldwide since 1990 missing only the 1999 Japanese Kirin Cup and two other matches by 2006 137 and was the only supporter to attend their matches in Armenia in 2009 138 Just before the kick off of a 2014 World Cup home qualifier Belgium s footballers saw a first tifo banner sized 10 5 by 11 5 metres 34 by 38 ft depicting a devil in the national colours 139 The presence of many Belgian players in top leagues abroad such as the Premier League 140 and promising results under Marc Wilmots increased fans enthusiasm and belief in a successful World Cup campaign 109 141 Because of this popularity peak two Belgian monuments were decorated in national colours for the 2014 FIFA World Cup event the Manneken Pis statue received a child sized version of the new Belgian uniform 142 and facets of the Atomium s upper sphere were covered in black yellow and red vinyl 143 Rivalries edit See also Low Countries derby nbsp Illustration of a Netherlands Belgium cup match at Rotterdam s Schuttersveld pitch in 1905Belgium s main football rivals are its neighbors the Netherlands and France with which it shares close cultural and political relations 144 145 The matchup between the Belgian and Dutch team is known as the Low Countries derby as of May 2018 update they have played each other in 126 official matches 114 146 Belgium won the first four unofficial matches against the Netherlands 11 but lost their first FIFA recognised contest 20 The two national teams played each other biannually between 1905 and 1964 except during the World Wars 20 They have met 18 times in major tournament campaigns and have played at least 35 friendly cup matches in Belgium for the Coupe Vanden Abeele and in the Netherlands for the Rotterdamsch Nieuwsblad Beker 10 124 The overall balance favours the Netherlands with 55 wins against 41 Belgian victories 146 The Low Countries squads co operated in fundraising initiatives between 1925 and 1941 they played five unofficial matches for charity FIFA and the Belgian Olympic Committee 114 115 147 The clash between the Belgian and French sides is nicknamed le Match Sympathique in French the Friendly Match 148 they have contested 74 official matches as of September 2020 update 146 The first match between Belgium and France the Evence Coppee Trophy played in 1904 was the first official match for both teams and the first official football match between independent countries on the European continent 149 Until 1967 the sides met almost annually 20 As of September 2020 Belgium have the better record with 30 wins to France s 25 146 and France has played most often against Belgium in international football 146 Stadium editMain articles Belgium national football team home stadium and King Baudouin Stadium nbsp nbsp The Jubilee Stadium on the Heysel Plateau in 1935 left and the King Baudouin Stadium in 2013 right Numerous former and current venues in 11 urban areas have hosted Belgium s home matches 20 Most of these matches have been played in Brussels on the Heysel Plateau on the site of the present day King Baudouin Stadium a multipurpose facility with a seating capacity of 50 122 150 Its field also hosts the team s final trainings before domestic matches Since 2007 most physical preparation takes place at the National Football Centre in Tubize 151 or at Anderlecht s training ground in the Neerpede quarter 152 153 Apart from Belgian home friendlies at the international level Belgium s national stadium has also hosted six European Championship matches 154 155 In 1930 for the country s centennial the venue was inaugurated as the Jubilee Stadium with an unofficial match between Belgium and the Netherlands 114 At that time the stadium had a capacity of 75 000 156 In 1946 it was renamed Heysel Stadium after its city quarter This new name became associated with the tragedy preceding the 1985 European Cup Final between Juventus and Liverpool 39 spectators died after riots in the then antiquated building 157 158 Three years after the disaster plans were unveiled for a renovation 159 in 1995 after two years of work the modernised stadium was named after the late King Baudouin 160 In May 2013 the Brussels Capital Region announced that the King Baudouin Stadium would be replaced by Eurostadium elsewhere on the Heysel Plateau 161 in 2018 however the plans for the new stadium were cancelled definitively 162 Results and fixtures editSee also Belgium national football team results and Belgium national football team records and statistics As of 1 December 2022 update the complete official match record of the Belgian national team comprises 824 matches 362 wins 172 draws and 290 losses a 20 167 During these matches the team scored 1 475 times and conceded 1 297 goals Belgium s highest winning margin is nine goals which has been achieved on four occasions against Zambia in 1994 9 0 twice against San Marino in 2001 10 1 and 2019 9 0 and against Gibraltar in 2017 9 0 20 Their longest winning streak is 12 wins and their highest unbeaten record is 23 consecutive official matches f 20 The following is a list of match results in the last 12 months as well as any future matches that have been scheduled Win Draw Loss Fixture 2023 edit Sweden nbsp v nbsp Belgium 24 March 2023 UEFA Euro 2024 qualifying Group FSweden nbsp 0 3 nbsp BelgiumSolna Sweden20 45 Report Lukaku nbsp 35 49 83 Stadium Friends Arena Attendance 49 296Referee Orel Grinfeld Israel Germany nbsp v nbsp Belgium 28 March 2023 FriendlyGermany nbsp 2 3 nbsp BelgiumCologne Germany20 45 Fullkrug nbsp 44 pen Gnabry nbsp 87 Report Carrasco nbsp 6 Lukaku nbsp 9 De Bruyne nbsp 78 Stadium RheinEnergieStadion Attendance 42 910Referee Willy Delajod France Belgium nbsp v nbsp Austria 17 June 2023 UEFA Euro 2024 qualifying Group FBelgium nbsp 1 1 nbsp AustriaBrussels Belgium20 45 Lukaku nbsp 61 Report Gregoritsch nbsp 21 Stadium King Baudouin Stadium Attendance 39 237Referee Jerome Brisard France Estonia nbsp v nbsp Belgium 20 June 2023 UEFA Euro 2024 qualifying Group FEstonia nbsp 0 3 nbsp BelgiumTallinn Estonia20 45 Report Lukaku nbsp 37 40 Bakayoko nbsp 90 Stadium Lillekula Stadium Attendance 11 772Referee John Beaton Scotland Azerbaijan nbsp v nbsp Belgium 9 September 2023 UEFA Euro 2024 qualifying Group FAzerbaijan nbsp 0 1 nbsp BelgiumBaku Azerbaijan15 00 Report Carrasco nbsp 38 Stadium Dalga Arena Attendance 4 500Referee Nenad Minakovic Serbia Belgium nbsp v nbsp Estonia 12 September 2023 UEFA Euro 2024 qualifying Group FBelgium nbsp 5 0 nbsp EstoniaBrussels Belgium20 45 Vertonghen nbsp 4 Trossard nbsp 18 Lukaku nbsp 56 58 De Ketelaere nbsp 88 Report Stadium King Baudouin Stadium Attendance 24 127Referee Bartosz Frankowski Poland Austria nbsp v nbsp Belgium 13 October 2023 UEFA Euro 2024 qualifying Group FAustria nbsp 2 3 nbsp BelgiumVienna Austria20 45 Laimer nbsp 72 Sabitzer nbsp 84 pen Report Lukebakio nbsp 12 55 Lukaku nbsp 58 Stadium Ernst Happel Stadion Attendance 47 000Referee Jesus Gil Manzano Spain Belgium nbsp v nbsp Sweden 16 October 2023 UEFA Euro 2024 qualifying Group FBelgium nbsp 1 1 Abandoned nbsp SwedenBrussels Belgium20 45 Lukaku nbsp 31 pen Report Gyokeres nbsp 15 Stadium King Baudouin Stadium Referee Maurizio Mariani Italy Note The match was abandoned at half time with the score 1 1 due to security reasons after two Swedish supporters were killed in a terrorist shooting in Brussels 168 On 19 October 2023 UEFA decided that the half time score would be considered final and the match would not be resumed 169 Belgium nbsp v nbsp Serbia 15 November 2023 FriendlyBelgium nbsp 1 0 nbsp SerbiaLeuven Belgium20 45 Carrasco nbsp 2 Report Stadium Den Dreef Referee Marian Barbu Romania Belgium nbsp v nbsp Azerbaijan 19 November 2023 UEFA Euro 2024 qualifying Group FBelgium nbsp 5 0 nbsp AzerbaijanBrussels Belgium18 00 Lukaku nbsp 17 26 30 37 Trossard nbsp 90 Report Stadium King Baudouin Stadium Attendance 30 276Referee Gergo Bogar Hungary 2024 edit Belgium nbsp v nbsp Chile 21 23 March 2024 FriendlyBelgium nbsp v nbsp Chile20 45 England nbsp v nbsp Belgium 26 March 2024 FriendlyEngland nbsp v nbsp BelgiumLondon England20 45 Stadium Wembley Stadium Belgium nbsp v nbsp Slovakia 17 June 2024 UEFA Euro 2024Belgium nbsp v nbsp SlovakiaFrankfurt Germany18 00 Report Stadium Waldstadion Belgium nbsp v nbsp Romania 22 June 2024 UEFA Euro 2024Belgium nbsp v nbsp RomaniaCologne Germany21 00 Report Stadium RheinEnergieStadion TBC v nbsp Belgium 26 June 2024 UEFA Euro 2024TBCv nbsp BelgiumStuttgart Germany18 00 Report Stadium MHPArenaCoaching staff editPosition NameTeam Manager nbsp Piet Erauw 170 Assistant Technical Director nbsp Jelle Schelstraete 170 Head Coach nbsp Domenico Tedesco 170 Assistant Coach nbsp Andreas Hinkel nbsp Thomas SchneiderGoalkeeper Coach nbsp Max UrwantschkyFitness Coach nbsp Vladimir CepzanovicVideo Analyst nbsp Dylan VanhaerenPerformance Analysts nbsp Luke Benstead 170 nbsp Stijn Campo 170 Performance and Data Analyst nbsp Yannick Euvrard 170 Team Doctors nbsp Geert Declercq 170 nbsp Kristof Sas 170 Coaching history edit Further information List of Belgium national football team managers Since 1904 the RBFA 24 permanent managers and two caretaker managers have officially been in charge of the national team g 18 54 this includes one national footballer selector 18 As of June 2016 update a crew of over 20 RBFA employees guides the player group 173 including their Spanish manager Roberto Martinez and goalkeeping coaches Erwin Lemmens and Inaki Bergara 174 175 Under Marc Wilmots Belgium reached the top FIFA ranking spot in 2015 which earned him the title of Best Coach of the Year at the 2015 Globe Soccer Awards 176 Under Guy Thys the squad achieved record results at World and European championships World Soccer magazine accordingly proclaimed him Manager of the Year in 1986 177 Rather than developing innovative team formations or styles of play Belgium s managers applied conventional tactics At the three 1930s World Cups the Red Devils were aligned in a contemporary 2 3 5 pyramid 178 179 180 In 1954 Doug Livingstone s squad played in a 3 2 5 WM arrangement during World Cup matches 27 Throughout most of their tournament matches in the 1970s the 1980s and the 1990s the team played in a 4 4 2 formation 31 40 41 Since Raymond Goethals stint in the 1970s a key strength of the Belgian squad has been their systematic use of the offside trap 181 a defensive tactic that was already intensively applied in the 1960s by Anderlecht coach Pierre Sinibaldi 182 According to football journalist Wim De Bock master tactician Goethals represented the conservative defensive football of the Belgian national team he added that in the 1970s the contrast between the Belgian playing style and the Total Football of their Dutch rivals could not be bigger 183 In an attempt to win a match at the 1998 World Cup Georges Leekens chose a 4 3 3 arrangement for Belgium s second and third group matches 184 Robert Waseige Belgium coach around 2000 said that above all his 4 4 2 system was holy in the sense that he left good attackers on the bench to keep his favourite formation 185 Wilmots opted for the 4 3 3 line up again 186 with the intention of showing dominant football against any country 187 Players editSee also List of Belgium international footballers and List of Belgium national football team captains Current squad edit On 10 November 2023 26 players were named in the squad for the Friendly against Serbia and the UEFA Euro 2024 qualifying match against Azerbaijan on 15 and 19 November 2023 respectively 188 On 13 November Zinho Vanheusden left the squad due to injury while Arnaud Bodart was still absent due to illness and would join only later 189 One day later Jorne Spileers received his first call up to replace Vanheusden 190 After the match against Serbia Amadou Onana left the squad due to injury 191 Information correct as of 19 November 2023 update after the match against Azerbaijan 192 193 No Pos Player Date of birth age Caps Goals Club1 1 GK Thomas Kaminski 1992 10 23 23 October 1992 age 31 0 0 nbsp Luton Town12 1 GK Koen Casteels 1992 06 25 25 June 1992 age 31 8 0 nbsp VfL Wolfsburg13 1 GK Matz Sels 1992 02 26 26 February 1992 age 31 6 0 nbsp Strasbourg1 GK Arnaud Bodart 1998 03 11 11 March 1998 age 25 0 0 nbsp Standard Liege2 2 DF Zeno Debast 2003 10 24 24 October 2003 age 20 5 0 nbsp Anderlecht3 2 DF Arthur Theate 2000 05 25 25 May 2000 age 23 14 0 nbsp Rennes4 2 DF Wout Faes 1998 04 03 3 April 1998 age 25 11 0 nbsp Leicester City5 2 DF Jan Vertonghen 1987 04 24 24 April 1987 age 36 153 10 nbsp Anderlecht16 2 DF Ameen Al Dakhil 2002 03 06 6 March 2002 age 21 4 0 nbsp Burnley21 2 DF Timothy Castagne 1995 12 05 5 December 1995 age 28 39 2 nbsp Fulham22 2 DF Jorne Spileers 2005 01 21 21 January 2005 age 18 0 0 nbsp Club Brugge6 3 MF Aster Vranckx 2002 10 04 4 October 2002 age 21 4 0 nbsp VfL Wolfsburg8 3 MF Youri Tielemans 1997 05 07 7 May 1997 age 26 65 5 nbsp Aston Villa11 3 MF Yannick Carrasco 1993 09 04 4 September 1993 age 30 72 11 nbsp Al Shabab15 3 MF Olivier Deman 2000 04 06 6 April 2000 age 23 2 0 nbsp Werder Bremen18 3 MF Orel Mangala 1998 03 18 18 March 1998 age 25 12 0 nbsp Nottingham Forest20 3 MF Arthur Vermeeren 2005 02 07 7 February 2005 age 18 2 0 nbsp Antwerp3 MF Alexis Saelemaekers 1999 06 27 27 June 1999 age 24 12 1 nbsp Bologna7 4 FW Jeremy Doku 2002 05 27 27 May 2002 age 21 18 2 nbsp Manchester City9 4 FW Leandro Trossard 1994 12 04 4 December 1994 age 29 30 7 nbsp Arsenal10 4 FW Romelu Lukaku vice captain 1993 05 13 13 May 1993 age 30 113 83 nbsp Roma14 4 FW Dodi Lukebakio 1997 09 24 24 September 1997 age 26 12 2 nbsp Sevilla17 4 FW Lois Openda 2000 02 16 16 February 2000 age 23 14 2 nbsp RB Leipzig19 4 FW Johan Bakayoko 2003 04 20 20 April 2003 age 20 9 1 nbsp PSV Eindhoven23 4 FW Michy Batshuayi 1993 10 02 2 October 1993 age 30 53 27 nbsp FenerbahceRecent call ups edit The following footballers were part of a national selection in the past twelve months but are not part of the current squad Pos Player Date of birth age Caps Goals Club Latest call upGK Thibaut Courtois vice captain 1992 05 11 11 May 1992 age 31 102 0 nbsp Real Madrid v nbsp Estonia 20 June 2023 WDDF Zinho Vanheusden 1999 07 29 29 July 1999 age 24 1 0 nbsp Standard Liege v nbsp Serbia 15 November 2023 INJDF Hugo Siquet 2002 07 09 9 July 2002 age 21 1 0 nbsp Cercle Brugge v nbsp Estonia 12 September 2023DF Sebastiaan Bornauw 1999 03 22 22 March 1999 age 24 4 0 nbsp VfL Wolfsburg v nbsp Estonia 20 June 2023DF Thomas Meunier 1991 09 12 12 September 1991 age 32 62 8 nbsp Borussia Dortmund v nbsp Germany 28 March 2023MF Amadou Onana 2001 08 16 16 August 2001 age 22 9 0 nbsp Everton v nbsp Azerbaijan 19 November 2023 INJMF Mandela Keita 2002 05 10 10 May 2002 age 21 1 0 nbsp Antwerp v nbsp Sweden 16 October 2023MF Hans Vanaken 1992 08 24 24 August 1992 age 31 23 5 nbsp Club Brugge v nbsp Estonia 20 June 2023MF Mike Tresor 1999 05 28 28 May 1999 age 24 2 0 nbsp Burnley v nbsp Estonia 20 June 2023MF Leander Dendoncker 1995 04 15 15 April 1995 age 28 32 1 nbsp Aston Villa v nbsp Estonia 20 June 2023 INJMF Kevin De Bruyne captain 1991 06 28 28 June 1991 age 32 99 26 nbsp Manchester City v nbsp Austria 17 June 2023 INJMF Romeo Lavia 2004 01 06 6 January 2004 age 19 1 0 nbsp Chelsea v nbsp Germany 28 March 2023MF Dennis Praet 1994 05 14 14 May 1994 age 29 15 2 nbsp Leicester City v nbsp Germany 28 March 2023FW Charles De Ketelaere 2001 03 10 10 March 2001 age 22 14 2 nbsp Atalanta v nbsp Sweden 16 October 2023 INJPRE Preliminary squad standby RET Retired from the national team INJ Player injuries ILL Player illness U21 Moved to U21 squad WD Player withdrew from squad due to non injury issueNotable edit nbsp Paul Van HimstBetween 1904 and 1980 mainly attacking Belgium players were recognised as talented footballers In the team s first decade striker Robert De Veen was very productive with 26 goals in 23 international appearances 194 Richard Henshaw described Alphonse Six as Belgium s greatest player in the prewar period who was often called the most skillful forward outside Great Britain 23 The key player of the victorious 1920 Olympic squad was Robert Coppee who scored a hat trick against Spain s Ricardo Zamora 195 and the penalty in the final 196 Other outstanding Belgian strikers in the interwar period were former top scorer Bernard Voorhoof and Belgium s football grandmaster Raymond Braine 51 197 considered one of the greatest players of the era 198 Gifted players in the 1940s and the 1950s included centre back Louis Carre and attackers Jef Mermans Pol Anoul and Rik Coppens 23 at the 1954 World Cup Anoul shone with three goals 27 and newspaper L Equipe named Coppens the event s best centre forward 199 The 1960s and the early 1970s were the glory days of forward and four time Belgian Golden Shoe Paul Van Himst 200 later elected Belgian UEFA Golden Player of 1954 2003 and Belgium s Player of the Century by IFFHS 201 202 nbsp Eden Hazard former team captain and second top scoring player for Belgium 203 At the 1965 Ballon d Or Van Himst ranked fourth achieving Belgium s highest ever position at the European football election 204 Decades after Coppens and Van Himst had retired from playing football a journalist on a Flemish television show asked them Who from both of you was the best actually Coppens replied I will ask Paul that If Paul says it was me then he s right 205 In 1966 striker Raoul Lambert and defending midfielder Wilfried Van Moer joined the national team 51 while the UEFA praised Lambert for his skills at Euro 1972 206 Van Moer won three Golden Shoes and equalled Van Himst s fourth rank at the 1980 Ballon d Or 200 207 Belgium has seen two talented waves since 1980 from which several players in defensive positions gained international fame In the 1980s and the early 1990s goalkeepers Jean Marie Pfaff and Michel Preud homme were elected best custodians at FIFA World Cups 43 44 while FIFA recognised midfielders Jan Ceulemans and Enzo Scifo as the propelling forces of Belgium s 1986 FIFA World Cup squad 43 208 In 2002 after all players of this generation had retired 51 Marc Wilmots became Belgium s top scorer at the World Cup with five goals 42 184 During the 10 years from 2002 to 2012 in which Belgium failed to qualify for major tournaments another golden generation matured many of whom gained both prime individual and team awards in foreign European top clubs and competitions h These include defender Vincent Kompany 209 210 midfielder Kevin De Bruyne who is one of the best attacking midfielders in the world and his generation 211 and winger Eden Hazard who has been praised as one of Chelsea F C s greatest players ever 212 and one of his era s best footballers in the world 213 in the team he is ranked only after Romelu Lukaku on Belgium s all time scoring leaderboard 214 215 Honorable mentions of this golden generation are Thibaut Courtois Jan Vertonghen Dries Mertens and Toby Alderweireld 216 These players helped Belgium finish at the third place of 2018 FIFA World Cup the team s best result at the tournament and reach number one on FIFA ranking twice since 2015 217 218 Individual records editMost capped players edit nbsp Jan Vertonghen is Belgium s most capped player with 152 appearances As of 20 June 2023 update the RBFA lists 719 players who appeared on the men s senior national team 51 With 152 caps according to the RBFA Jan Vertonghen has the most appearances for Belgium a 194 Eden Hazard started the most matches as captain 59 219 Hector Goetinck had the longest career as an international footballer 17 years 6 months and 10 days 51 As of 19 November 2023 The records are collected based on data from FIFA and RSSSF Statistics include three matches that are recognised by FIFA i Players in bold are still active with Belgium Rank Player Caps Goals Position Belgium career1 Jan Vertonghen 153 10 DF 2007 present2 Axel Witsel 130 12 MF 2008 20223 Toby Alderweireld 127 5 DF 2009 20224 Eden Hazard 126 33 MF FW 2008 20225 Romelu Lukaku 113 83 FW 2010 present6 Dries Mertens 109 21 FW 2011 present7 Thibaut Courtois 102 0 GK 2011 present8 Kevin De Bruyne 99 26 MF 2010 present9 Jan Ceulemans 96 23 MF FW 1977 199110 Timmy Simons 94 6 DF MF 2001 2016Top goalscorers edit nbsp Romelu Lukaku is Belgium s top goalscorer with 83 goals See also List of Belgium national football team hat tricks Romelu Lukaku is the highest scoring Belgium player with 83 goals a 194 Those who scored the most goals in one match are Robert De Veen Bert De Cleyn and Josip Weber with five 51 Lukaku holds the record for the most hat tricks with four 51 Belgium s fastest goal after the initial kick off was scored by Christian Benteke 8 1 seconds into a match against Gibraltar on 10 October 2016 219 221 As of 19 November 2023 The records are collected based on data from FIFA and RSSSF Statistics include three matches that are unrecognised by FIFA j Players in bold are still active with Belgium Rank Player Goals Caps Ratio Belgium career1 Romelu Lukaku list 83 113 0 73 2010 present2 Eden Hazard 33 126 0 26 2008 20223 Bernard Voorhoof 30 61 0 49 1928 1940Paul Van Himst 30 81 0 37 1960 19745 Marc Wilmots 28 70 0 4 1990 20026 Michy Batshuayi 27 53 0 51 2015 presentJoseph Mermans 27 56 0 48 1945 19568 Robert De Veen 26 23 1 13 1906 1913Raymond Braine 26 55 0 47 1925 1939Kevin De Bruyne 26 99 0 26 2010 presentCompetitive record editSee also Achievements OverviewEvent 1st Place 2nd Place 3rd Place 4th PlaceFIFA World Cup 0 0 1 1UEFA European Championship 0 1 1 0UEFA Nations League 0 0 0 1Olympic Games 1 0 1 1Total 1 1 3 3FIFA World Cup edit Main article Belgium at the FIFA World Cup Belgium failed to progress past the first round of their earliest five World Cup participations After two scoreless defeats at the inaugural World Cup in 1930 178 the team scored in their first round knockout matches in the 1934 and 1938 editions but only enough to save their honours 179 180 In 1954 they drew with England 4 4 after extra time 27 and in 1970 they won their first World Cup match against El Salvador 3 0 31 From 1982 until 2002 Belgium qualified for six successive World Cup and in the tournament finals they advanced beyond the first round five times 39 In the 1982 FIFA World Cup opener Belgium beat defending champions Argentina 1 0 Their tournament ended in the second group stage after a Polish hat trick by Zbigniew Boniek and a 0 1 loss against the Soviet Union 40 nbsp United States Belgium in 1930 was the joint first ever World Cup match At Mexico 1986 the Belgian team achieved their then best ever World Cup run at the time In the knockout phase as underdogs they beat the Soviets after extra time 3 4 222 the unnoticed offside position of Jan Ceulemans during the initial ninety minutes allowed him to equalise 2 2 and force the match into extra time 223 They also beat Spain in a penalty shoot out after a 1 1 draw but lost to eventual champions Argentina in the semi finals 2 0 and France in the third place match 4 2 45 In the 1990 FIFA World Cup Belgium dominated periods of their second round match against England 224 Enzo Scifo and Jan Ceulemans hit the woodwork 225 David Platt s volley in the finals minute of extra time described as nearly blind by Richard Witzig 226 avoided an apparently goalless draw and led to the sudden elimination of the Belgians 227 In 1994 a 3 2 defeat to defending champions Germany saw Belgium go out in the second round again 41 Afterwards the entire Belgian delegation criticised referee Kurt Rothlisberger for not awarding a penalty for a foul on Belgian Josip Weber 228 Three draws in the group stage of the 1998 World Cup were insufficient for Belgium to reach the knockout stage 184 With two draws the 2002 FIFA World Cup started poorly for Belgium but they won the decisive group match against Russia 3 2 In the second round they faced eventual World Cup winners Brazil Belgium lost 2 0 after Marc Wilmots headed opening goal was disallowed due to a phantom foul on Roque Junior as Witzig named it 42 229 In 2014 Belgium beat all their group opponents with a single goal difference 67 Thereafter they played an entertaining round of 16 match against the United States 230 in which American goalkeeper Tim Howard made 15 saves k However they defeated the United States 2 1 in extra time 67 In a balanced quarter finals Argentina eliminated Belgium after a 1 0 victory 232 At the 2018 World Cup Belgium started with five consecutive victories including group wins over Panama Tunisia and England In the fourth in the round of 16 match against Japan they suffered a major setback in the second half by being led 0 2 However Japan which displayed a very open and offensive game did not withdraw sufficiently in defense and left a lot of opportunities to Belgium who 233 234 235 turned the tide and eventually won 3 2 with goals from Jan Vertonghen and late substitutes Marouane Fellaini and Nacer Chadli Belgium then defeated World Cup favourites Brazil 2 1 on the back of an early Fernandinho own goal and a goal by Kevin De Bruyne 236 237 and reached the semi finals 238 Belgium lost to France 0 1 in the semi finals as France displays a style of play opposite to that of Japan by basing themselves above all on a rigorous defense the possession left to the adversary and fast counter attacks which aroused criticisms from certain Belgian players on the French style of play 239 but rebounded to win 2 0 in their second victory over England in the tournament to secure third place and the best ever World Cup result for the Belgian national team Some players that notably contributed were captain Eden Hazard Thibaut Courtois and Romelu Lukaku who were later recognised by FIFA as the tournament s second best player Silver Ball best goalkeeper Golden Glove and third top scorer Bronze Boot respectively 240 FIFA World Cup QualificationYear Host s Round Pld W D L GF GA Squad Pos Pld W D L GF GA1930 nbsp Uruguay Group stage 2 0 0 2 0 4 Squad Participated as invitees1934 nbsp Italy Round of 16 1 0 0 1 2 5 Squad 2nd 2 0 1 1 6 81938 nbsp France 1 0 0 1 1 3 Squad 2nd 2 1 1 0 4 31950 nbsp Brazil Did not enter Did not enter1954 nbsp Switzerland Group stage 2 0 1 1 5 8 Squad 1st 4 3 1 0 11 61958 nbsp Sweden Did not qualify 2nd 4 2 1 1 16 111962 nbsp Chile 3rd 4 0 0 4 3 101966 nbsp England Play off 5 3 0 2 12 51970 nbsp Mexico Group stage 3 1 0 2 4 5 Squad 1st 6 4 1 1 14 81974 nbsp West Germany Did not qualify 2nd 6 4 2 0 12 01978 nbsp Argentina 2nd 6 3 0 3 7 61982 nbsp Spain Second group stage 5 2 1 2 3 5 Squad 1st 8 5 1 2 12 91986 nbsp Mexico Fourth place 7 2 2 3 12 15 Squad Play off 8 4 2 2 9 51990 nbsp Italy Round of 16 4 2 0 2 6 4 Squad 1st 8 4 4 0 15 51994 nbsp United States 4 2 0 2 4 4 Squad 2nd 10 7 1 2 16 51998 nbsp France Group stage 3 0 3 0 3 3 Squad Play off 10 7 1 2 23 132002 nbsp South Korea nbsp Japan Round of 16 4 1 2 1 6 7 Squad Play off 10 7 2 1 27 62006 nbsp Germany Did not qualify 4th 10 3 3 4 16 112010 nbsp South Africa 4th 10 3 1 6 13 202014 nbsp Brazil Quarter finals 5 4 0 1 6 3 Squad 1st 10 8 2 0 18 42018 nbsp Russia Third place 7 6 0 1 16 6 Squad 1st 10 9 1 0 43 62022 nbsp Qatar Group stage 3 1 1 1 1 2 Squad 1st 8 6 2 0 25 62026 nbsp Canada nbsp Mexico nbsp United States To be determined To be determined2030 nbsp Morocco nbsp Portugal nbsp Spain2034 nbsp Saudi ArabiaTotal Third place 51 21 10 20 69 74 14 22 141 83 27 31 302 147 Champions Runners up Third place Fourth place UEFA European Championship edit Main article Belgium at the UEFA European Championship nbsp Line ups of the Euro 1980 finals Belgium red against West GermanyWith only six successful qualification campaigns out of sixteen Belgium s performance in the European Championship does not compare to their World Cup record yet it holds the highest record compare to their World Cup performance Belgium has hosted or co hosted the event twice they were chosen to accommodate the UEFA Euro 1972 from three candidates l and hosted UEFA Euro 2000 with the Netherlands 47 At Euro 1972 Belgium finished third after losing 1 2 against West Germany and beating Hungary 2 1 32 The team s best continental result is their second place at Euro 1980 in Italy By finishing as group winners Belgium reached the finals to face West Germany The West German Horst Hrubesch scored first but Rene Vandereycken equalised courtesy of a penalty Two minutes before the regular playing time ended Hrubesch scored again denying Belgium a first European title 37 At Euro 1984 in their last and decisive group match against Denmark the Belgian team took a 0 2 lead but the Danes won the match 3 2 46 Sixteen years later Belgium automatically reappeared at UEFA s national team tournament as co hosts After winning the Euro 2000 opener against Sweden 2 1 242 two 2 0 losses against eventual runners up Italy and Turkey eliminated the Belgians from the tournament by the end of the group stage 47 In spite of winning with broad margins against the Republic of Ireland 3 0 and Hungary 0 4 at Euro 2016 243 244 Belgium exited in the quarter finals As during the tournament s qualifiers Wales defeated Belgium This time by 3 1 71 UEFA European Championships QualificationYear Host s Round Pld W D L GF GA Squad Pos Pld W D L GF GA1960 nbsp France Did not enter Did not enter1964 nbsp Spain Did not qualify Preliminary round 2 0 0 2 2 41968 nbsp Italy 2nd 6 3 1 2 14 91972 nbsp Belgium Third place 2 1 0 1 3 3 Squad Quarter finals 8 5 2 1 13 41976 nbsp Yugoslavia Did not qualify Quarter finals 8 3 2 3 7 101980 nbsp Italy Runners up 4 1 2 1 4 4 Squad 1st 8 4 4 0 12 51984 nbsp France Group stage 3 1 0 2 4 8 Squad 1st 6 4 1 1 12 81988 nbsp West Germany Did not qualify 3rd 8 3 3 2 16 81992 nbsp Sweden 3rd 6 2 1 3 7 61996 nbsp England 3rd 10 4 3 3 17 132000 nbsp Belgium nbsp Netherlands Group stage 3 1 0 2 2 5 Squad Qualified as hosts2004 nbsp Portugal Did not qualify 3rd 8 5 1 2 11 92008 nbsp Austria nbsp Switzerland 5th 14 5 3 6 14 162012 nbsp Poland nbsp Ukraine 3rd 10 4 3 3 21 152016 nbsp France Quarter finals 5 3 0 2 9 5 Squad 1st 10 7 2 1 24 52020 Pan European 5 4 0 1 9 3 Squad 1st 10 10 0 0 40 32024 nbsp Germany Qualified 1st 8 6 2 0 22 42028 nbsp United Kingdom nbsp Ireland To be determined To be determined2032 nbsp Italy nbsp TurkeyTotal Runners up 22 11 2 9 31 28 7 17 122 65 28 29 232 119 Champions Runners up Third place Semi finalistsUEFA Nations League edit UEFA Nations LeagueLeague phase FinalsSeason LG Grp Pos Pld W D L GF GA P R RK Year Host Pos Pld W D L GF GA Squad2018 19 A 2 2nd 4 3 0 1 9 6 nbsp 5th 2019 nbsp Portugal Did not qualify2020 21 A 2 1st 6 5 0 1 16 6 nbsp 4th 2021 nbsp Italy 4th 2 0 0 2 3 5 Squad2022 23 A 4 2nd 6 3 1 2 11 8 nbsp 7th 2023 nbsp Netherlands Did not qualify2024 25 A To be determined 2025 To be determinedTotal 16 11 1 4 36 20 5th 1 3 2 0 0 2 3 5 Champions Runners up Third place Fourth place Olympic Games edit Main article Belgium at the Olympics nbsp Hectic phase during the goal rich Olympic win against Luxembourg in 1928 5 3 Football tournament for senior men s national teams took place in six Summer Olympic between 1908 and 1936 The Belgian squad participated in all three Football at the Summer Olympics in the 1920s and kept the gold medal at home at the 1920 edition 20 245 Apart from the proper national team two other Belgian delegations appeared at the Olympic At the 1900 Summer Olympic a Belgian representation with mainly students won bronze 246 and at the 2008 edition Belgium s U 23 selection placed fourth 56 Belgium s 1920 Olympic squad was given a bye into the quarter finals where they won 3 1 against Spain and reached the semi finals where they beat the Netherlands 3 0 In the first half of the finals against Czechoslovakia the Belgians led 2 0 245 Forward Robert Coppee converted a disputed early penalty and the action in which attacker Henri Larnoe doubled the score was also a matter of debate 22 195 After the dismissal of the Czechoslovak left back Karel Steiner the discontented visitors left the pitch in the 40th minute Afterwards the away team reported their reasons for protest to the Olympic organisation 22 these complaints were dismissed and the Czechoslovaks were disqualified 23 The 2 0 score was allowed to stand and Belgium were crowned the champions 23 Summer Olympic Games recordYear Host Round Pld W D L GF GA Squad1896 nbsp Greece No Olympic football tournament1900 nbsp France Bronze medal 1 0 0 1 2 6 Squad1904 to 1912 Did not enter1920 nbsp Belgium Gold medal 3 3 0 0 8 1 Squad1924 nbsp France Round of 16 1 0 0 1 1 8 Squad1928 nbsp Netherlands Quarter finals 3 1 0 2 9 12 Squad1932 nbsp United States No Olympic football tournament1936 to 1976 Did not Enter1980 to 1984 Did not qualify1988 nbsp South Korea Did not Enter1992 to present See Belgium national under 23 teamTotal Gold medal 14 7 0 7 27 37 Gold medal Silver medal Bronze medalOlympic Games has been an under 23 tournament since 1992 with three players of over 23 years of age allowed in the squad Honours edit nbsp nbsp Belgium s 1920 Olympic champions and one of the 154 gold medal awarded at these Games of the VII Olympic FIFA World Cup nbsp Third place 2018 UEFA European Championship nbsp Runners up 1980 nbsp Third place 1972 Olympic Games nbsp Gold medal 1920 nbsp Bronze medal 1900See also edit nbsp Association football portal nbsp Belgium portalBelgium men s national football team results unofficial matches Belgian Congo men s national football team 1948 60 Belgium men s national football B team Belgium men s national youth football team U 15 U 21 squads Belgian First Division A Belgium women s national football team Sport in BelgiumFootnotes edit a b c d e Caps and goals against Romania on 15 actually 14 November 2012 against Luxembourg on 26 May 2014 and against Czech Republic on 5 June 2017 were counted by RBFA but are not officially recognised by FIFA the former two due to an excessive number of substitutions according to the Laws of the Game 163 164 165 the latter because the Belgian and Czech football federations were too late in requesting an official match 166 Dutch Belgisch nationaal voetbalelftalFrench Equipe nationale belge de footballGerman Belgische Fussballnationalmannschaft UBSFA was the acronym for the organisation s French name Union Belge des Societes de Football Association In 1920 it received the title of Royal Union for its 25th year of existence and hence became the Royal Belgian Football Association 7 Even in their last match of 1980 against Cyprus on 21 December Belgium played in an Adidas outfit 98 This suggests that Admiral s sponsorship started in 1981 contrary to what the 2014 article stated The timeline in the 2014 overview article stated the switch from Diadora to Nike happened in 1998 However the 1999 article focused on this kit sponsor change which took place in mid 1999 This streak started in September 2016 and does not include the friendly win against Czech Republic on 5 June 2017 this match is not FIFA recognised since the Belgian and Czech football federations were too late in asking that it would be official 166 The interim managers were Louis Nicolay and Franky Vercauteren 171 172 Prime individual awards include being elected the season s or year s best player of a competition prime team awards equal winning a competition National top divisions main national cup competitions UEFA Champions League and UEFA Europa League are considered Note that the RBFA does not count caps earned in the Belgian seven Summer Olympics matches and that it does include Belgium s friendlies on 14 November 2012 26 May 2014 and 5 June 2017 that are FIFA recognised 220 Note that the RBFA does not count caps earned in the Belgian seven Summer Olympics matches and that it does include Belgium s friendlies on 14 November 2012 26 May 2014 and 5 June 2017 that are not FIFA recognised the former two due to an excessive number of substitutions according to the Laws of the Game 165 the latter because of a lacking official request 166 FIFA s initial match statistics showed 16 saves and many news sources continue to use this number The official FIFA statistics were updated on 5 July 2014 to show 15 saves 231 The other bids were from England and Italy 241 whose teams did not reach the semi finals 32 References edit a b c d e f The FIFA Coca Cola World Ranking FIFA 30 November 2023 Retrieved 30 November 2023 a b Elo rankings change compared to one year ago World Football Elo Ratings eloratings net 17 December 2023 Retrieved 17 December 2023 See Goldblatt 2008 p 120 de Vries 2007 p 57 Kassimeris 2007 p 12 Vanysacker Dries 21 May 2015 Belgische voetbalgeschiedenis begon in Gent Belgian football history began in Ghent Eos in Dutch Archived from the original on 25 June 2016 Retrieved 13 June 2015 Colin Francois 1 April 2003 Report Kroniek van het Belgisch voetbal schetst ontstaan populairste sport Report The chronicle of Belgian football sketches origins of most popular sport De Standaard in Dutch Archived from the original on 11 June 2013 Retrieved 29 August 2015 a b c d e Henshaw 1979 p 75 a b Historique de l URBSFA History of the RBFA in French RBFA Archived from the original on 7 May 2012 Retrieved 31 October 2015 Guldemont amp Deps 1995 p 64 a b Fraiponts amp Willocx 2003 a b Verkamman Matty 9 January 1999 Interlandvoetbal om koperen dingetje Sporteeuw 2 1901 International football for the copper thingy Sports Century 2 1901 Trouw in Dutch Archived from the original on 25 June 2016 Retrieved 9 April 2015 a b c Hubert 1980 p 12 a b Hubert 1980 p 13 Belgium v France a 109 year old rivalry UEFA 13 August 2013 Archived from the original on 25 June 2016 Retrieved 15 August 2013 History of FIFA Foundation FIFA Archived from the original on 25 June 2016 Retrieved 16 May 2014 Parrish amp Nauright 2014 p xv a b Boin 1945 a b Guldemont amp Deps 1995 p 65 a b c Mubarak Hassanin 7 August 2003 Belgium National Team Coaches RSSSF Archived from the original on 29 June 2016 Retrieved 14 September 2013 a b The RBFA s History RBFA Archived from the original on 28 June 2016 Retrieved 9 May 2014 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Stokkermans Karel Belgium List of International Matches RSSSF Archived from the original on 1 July 2016 Retrieved 4 February 2018 a b Frankrijk Belgie France Belgium De Telegraaf in Dutch 21 March 1916 Retrieved 11 June 2015 via Delpher a b c Fauria i Garcia Juan 1993 The 1920 Football Soccer Tournament PDF ISOH Magazine 1 4 5 7 Archived from the original PDF on 28 December 2013 Retrieved 4 May 2014 a b c d e Henshaw 1979 p 76 Belgium in exile Belgische regering vluchtelingen en soldaten in Groot Brittannie Belgium in exile Belgian government refugees and soldiers in Great Britain PDF Catalogus van de Gelijknamige Tentoonstelling in Het Algemeen Rijksarchief te Brussel in Dutch National Archives of Belgium 31 Archived from the original PDF on 18 December 2016 Retrieved 18 December 2016 Chaplin Mark 5 May 2014 The birth of UEFA UEFA Archived from the original on 25 June 2016 Retrieved 28 June 2014 Belgie wist Engeland een gelijk spel af te dwingen Belgium managed to enforce a draw against England Amigoe di Curacao in Dutch 18 June 1954 Retrieved 19 December 2016 via Delpher a b c d World Cup 1954 finals RSSSF Archived from the original on 6 March 2016 Retrieved 17 August 2015 Retro WK 1966 Engeland wint na meest omstreden goal van de eeuw Duivels stranden in testmatch Retro WC 1966 England wins after most controversial goal of the century Devils left stranded in test match voetbalnieuws be in Dutch 31 May 2014 Archived from the original on 25 June 2016 Retrieved 19 August 2015 Bernhart amp Houtman 2014 a b c Lagae Bart 23 May 2002 WK geschiedenis 1970 Witte Duivels smelten weg in Mexico WC history 1970 White Devils melt away in Mexico De Standaard in Dutch Archived from the original on 26 June 2016 Retrieved 26 April 2015 a b c World Cup 1970 finals RSSSF Archived from the original on 1 July 2016 Retrieved 17 August 2015 a b c d Stokkermans Karel Tabeira Martin 31 January 2007 European Championship 1972 RSSSF Archived from the original on 1 July 2016 Retrieved 10 November 2014 Wonderbaarlijke ontsnappingen uit de Oranje historie Miraculous escapes in Oranje history de Volkskrant in Dutch 19 November 2003 Archived from the original on 8 June 2016 Retrieved 16 May 2015 Snyder 2001 Stokkermans Karel Tabeira Martin 20 June 2013 European Championship 1976 RSSSF Archived from the original on 25 June 2016 Retrieved 24 October 2015 Stokkermans Karel Jarreta Sergio Henrique 3 January 2000 World Cup 1978 Qualifying RSSSF Archived from the original on 25 June 2016 Retrieved 24 October 2015 a b c Stokkermans Karel Tabeira Martin 28 March 2007 European Championship 1980 RSSSF Archived from the original on 1 July 2016 Retrieved 27 August 2015 Runciman David 16 June 2014 Why You Should and Should Not be Excited About Belgium s New Golden Generation The New Republic Archived from the original on 26 July 2020 Retrieved 5 May 2015 a b 2014 Fifa World Cup Guide to Belgium s Group H BBC 23 May 2014 Archived from the original on 19 September 2020 Retrieved 12 July 2016 a b c World Cup 1982 finals RSSSF Archived from the original on 1 July 2016 Retrieved 17 August 2015 a b c link, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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