Some World Cup moments need ninety minutes to build. This one needed twenty-three seconds.
In Seattle on Monday, Belgium and Egypt played out a thrilling 1-1 draw in their Group G opener, but the headline wasn’t really about the scoreline — it was about a 33-year-old striker who barely had time to catch his breath before changing the entire complexion of the match.
Salah’s Birthday Assist Sets the Tone

Egypt came out of the gates with intent, and it was Mohamed Salah — celebrating his 34th birthday, no less — who turned provider rather than scorer. He picked out midfielder Emam Ashour, who took a touch and rifled a low, venomous strike from outside the box past Thibaut Courtois in the 19th minute.

It was Ashour’s first-ever international goal, scored in his 30th appearance for the Pharaohs, and for a while it looked like the start of something historic: Egypt, playing in their fourth World Cup, have never once won a match at the tournament. For 45-plus minutes, that streak looked like it was finally about to end.

Belgium, meanwhile, were strangely toothless. Kevin De Bruyne pushed an early effort wide, then watched a gorgeous free-kick in the 53rd minute curl agonizingly off the inside of the post. Jérémy Doku buzzed around looking dangerous, but the final ball just wasn’t coming together. Belgium’s coach Rudi Garcia would later admit only 20% of his team’s shots were on target — and on the balance of play, Egypt deserved their lead.
Then Lukaku Walked On

With the clock reading 66 minutes and Belgium still trailing, Garcia made the call: off came Charles De Ketelaere, on came Romelu Lukaku, who had started the match on the bench amid lingering fitness questions after a season hampered by injury.

What happened next has to be seen to be believed. Just 23 seconds — not minutes, seconds — after stepping onto the pitch, Lukaku surged into the box to meet a driven cross from Thomas Meunier down the right. He didn’t even need to make clean contact. Egypt defender Mohamed Hany, scrambling under pressure with Lukaku bearing down on him, turned the ball into his own net. Game level, 1-1, and Lukaku hadn’t even broken a sweat yet.

It was the kind of moment that swings momentum instantly — sheer physical presence forcing a mistake out of thin air.
Egypt Refused to Fold

Credit where it’s due: Egypt didn’t sit back and protect the point. Omar Marmoush had a goalbound effort deflected narrowly wide as the Pharaohs continued to push, and for a stretch it genuinely felt like either side could nick a winner. Belgium even got a golden chance to snatch all three points themselves — in the 87th minute, Nicolas Raskin whipped in a teasing cross right onto Lukaku’s head, completely unmarked in the middle of the box. Somehow, the header sailed over the bar. The same man who saved Belgium in 23 seconds nearly cost them the win moments later, a reminder that football rarely writes tidy storylines.
What It Means Going Forward

Egypt’s coach Hossam Hassan didn’t sugarcoat his side’s frustration afterward, saying the match showed his team was closer to a win than a draw. He’s not wrong — the Pharaohs out-fought Belgium for long stretches and will rue the missed chance to make history. For Belgium, there’s relief but also a warning sign: this is a golden generation built around De Bruyne, Lukaku, and Courtois, all playing in their fourth World Cup together, and they know time is running short to finally deliver a deep run.

Both sides now sit level on points in Group G, with Iran and New Zealand watching closely to see how the group shapes up. One thing’s for certain: nobody in Seattle will forget the sight of Lukaku turning a football match on its head before he’d even had time to get his bearings.












