Seahawks Were There As Seattle World Cup Dream Turned Into A Nightmare

Seattle's vibrant support couldn't prevent a heartbreaking World Cup exit for the US men's team, as Belgium dashed hopes in a decisive Round of 16 clash.

The Seattle Seahawks showed up in force for a massive night at Lumen Field, but the United States men’s national team left with a brutal ending to its World Cup run.

Belgium knocked the USA out of the Round of 16 with a 4-1 rout that never really felt close, and the scoreline was kind to the Americans. Belgium struck early, struck late, and answered Malik Tillman’s equalizer just 61 seconds after the restart. The defeat ended the U.S. dream of a deep 2026 FIFA World Cup run in Seattle Stadium/Lumen Field.

There had been real hope heading into Monday after FIFA overturned Folarin Balogun’s controversial red card suspension from the win over Bosnia and Herzegovina on Sunday. That decision gave American fans reason to believe the night could turn into something special. Instead, Belgium controlled long stretches and turned the match into a reality check.

The loss carried extra sting because it came at home, and because Belgium had looked vulnerable earlier in the tournament. The Belgians were minutes from elimination against Senegal in the Round of 32 at Seattle Stadium before rallying from a 2-0 deficit to win 3-2 in extra time. Even so, they were the ones who delivered the knockout punch to the Americans, who also helped their own downfall.

Matt Freese’s costly mistake will be remembered as one of the defining moments of the match.

The Seahawks were well represented throughout the night. Head coach Mike Macdonald, general manager John Schneider, Leonard Williams, Brady Russell, and A.J.

Barner were all on hand, helping bring energy to the crowd. Russell even captured his reaction to Tillman’s goal.

The U.S. had just thrilled the nation with a 4-1 win over Paraguay, only to crash out by the same scoreline.

For Seattle, though, the World Cup experience itself was a success. Lumen Field drew praise as a stage for major international soccer, with full stands for every match and weather that cooperated throughout the event. The city’s first World Cup left a strong impression.

Now the grass is set to come up, the turf will return, and the Seahawks are about two months from unveiling their newest Super Bowl banner before opening the 2026 NFL season against the New England Patriots.

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