Belgium 0 Slovakia 1: A first major Euro 2024 upset after two disallowed Lukaku goals

Belgium 0 Slovakia 1: A first major Euro 2024 upset after two disallowed Lukaku goals

Carl Anka

How costly were Lukaku’s misses?

As one of the few remaining pillars of Belgium’s golden generation, Lukaku was always going to shoulder a heavy burden this summer. In this transitional squad — top-heavy in some areas and weak in others — he is one of the main men.

But this was an evening during which just about everything went against the 31-year-old.

In the first half alone, he spurned three presentable chances, notably firing straight at Martin Dubravka from close range just three minutes in, following an electric run by Doku.

Then, after the break, there were those two disallowed goals — the first when he was adjudged to be offside following Amadou Onana’s header and the second coming when Openda was somewhat harshly deemed to have handled in the build-up.

Romelu Lukaku, Belgium’s record scorer, thought he had equalised in the second half but the goal was disallowed (Kirill Kudryavtsev/AFP via Getty Images)

Games of this ilk are unusual for Lukaku, who has netted 85 times in just 116 caps en route to becoming his country’s record scorer. But this rare off-day did conjure memories of his last appearance at a major tournament; a 0-0 group stage draw against Croatia in which he missed a hatful of chances and Belgium crashed out of the 2022 World Cup in Qatar.

Lukaku ended the game with a cumulative xG of 0.8 but lacked the touch and composure on this occasion to prevent Belgium falling to a shock defeat. He will need to find his scoring boots soon if they are to avoid another embarrassing early exit.

Patrick Boyland

‘Snickometer’ plays a major role for the first time

For a fleeting moment as the clock ticked towards 90 minutes, Lukaku appeared to have salvaged a point for Belgium. But then came the VAR intervention and a moment of tournament history.

Turkish referee Halil Umut Meler went to the pitchside monitor to review a handball from Openda in the build-up, and was shown footage using UEFA’s new ‘snickometer’ technology, to ascertain whether the RB Leipzig forward had illegally made contact with the ball. The footage showed he had, and what would have been the equalising goal was duly ruled out.

UEFA has been keen to improve the decision-making progress at games, with Roberto Rosetti, their managing director of referees, flagging the rollout of the new technology in a pre-tournament briefing in Munich.

Rosetti explained that the balls used at this tournament would contain microchips that allow precise tracking of contact, essential to the semi-automated offside technology used, but will also allow officials to detect whether, in certain situations, contact has been made at all.

Rather like the technology employed in cricket, the ‘snickometer’ offers a way of detecting whether a player has touched the ball, perhaps with a hand, or whether a player in an offside position has made contact.

This was its first major usage, and came during a key moment in the game.

Much like VAR itself, expect the debate on this one to run and run.

Patrick Boyland

How damaging could this setback be for Belgium?

That Belgium golden generation never quite achieved what their talent promised. A little too early and lacking full-backs for Euro 2016, a little too late and lacking midfield bite for Euro 2020. Current manager Domenico Tedesco is leading a new, younger Belgium side that came into this tournament with reduced ambitions (a quarter-final exit was widely considered a probable outcome in the country’s media) but they were still expected to beat Slovakia comfortably.

“We are all here to enjoy a good start to this competition,” said captain Kevin De Bruyne before the game. “We can focus on positives or negatives from the past but the team is sharp and ready to start this tournament.”

Yet Belgium were limited by long-standing issues. They again had problems at full-back, with Yannick Carrasco struggling to find fluency with Leandro Trossard ahead. Belgium again looked timid in central areas (Axel Witsel was only fit enough for the bench). Youri Tielemans — a second-half substitute brought on to give his side a greater semblance of control in midfield — ended up being booked 80 seconds after his introduction.

On more than one occasion, Belgium attacked a corner with no greater plan than “aim for Amadou Onana”.

Call them unlucky, call the result unfortunate, but Belgium were beaten because they were unconvincing for large sections of the game. They were slow to respond to the aggression of Slovakia’s high press in the first half and thwarted by the streetwise defending of Calzona’s side in the second.

Prior to this game, Belgium had been unbeaten in all 14 fixtures under Tedesco (won 10, drawn four). Romania’s surprise win over Ukraine in the day’s early kick-off ripped up the form book for Group E. This threw it out entirely.

Carl Anka

What did Domenico Tedesco say?

“We can harness this disappointment and make use of this defeat. There are certain positives we can take away from the match.”

Will he need to speak to Lukaku? “No, we’re very honest. He’s been playing for Belgium for a long time and he knows very well how to score goals. He’s shown that. He did score two goals tonight but they were disallowed. If he needs something, I’m here for him. But he’s a top-class player and doesn’t need anything on that score.”

What did Fracesco Calzona say?

“I asked the team to try to play football because we have the quality in the side to do so. Of course, Belgium studied the way we play and initially caused us some problems. We weren’t able to do what we wanted to, especially when it came to building up from the back. But it’s understandable to have some issues because of their quality. The fact we managed to press them high allowed us to score our goal.

“Slovakia is a small country, and yet so many people have travelled here to Germany. Seeing men, women and children with smiles on their faces… perhaps it was an unexpected win for them, too, as it was for us. So it does touch you. It’s a very rewarding experience.”

What next for Belgium?

Saturday, June 22: Romania, Group E (Cologne), 8pm BST, 3pm ET

What next for Slovakia?

Friday, June 21: Ukraine, Group E (Dusseldorf), 2pm BST, 9am ET

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(Top photo: Thomas Kienzle/AFP via Getty Images)

Source link : https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/5564567/2024/06/17/belgium-slovakia-euro-2024-analysis/

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Publish date : 2024-06-17 07:00:00

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