World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
Gakpo fired the ball into the Moroccan goal in the 72nd minute, his knees slamming directly onto the turf. Under the Monterrey night sky, the Dutch winger remained kneeling on the ground. The orange clad fans in the stands probably thought the game was secure.
Gakpo slammed the ball into the Moroccan net in the 72nd minute, his knees hitting the turf directly. Under Monte Rey's night sky, the Dutch winger knelt there, unable to get up. The orange-clad fans in the stands probably thought the game was sealed.
Diop had other plans. In the 90+1st minute, a header, leveling the score. During stoppage time, set-piece defending, the Dutch reverted to their old habits.
The penalty shootout was a game of Russian roulette; the Dutch pulled the trigger three times in a row, all blanks. In the fourth round, Saibari pushed the ball to the bottom left corner, Morocco took a 3-2 lead to match point. In the fifth round, Bono denied Summerville's shot. 2 to 3. Morocco's substitutes stormed the pitch like mad. The Dutch faced their earliest World Cup exit in history. Three misses from the spot: Kluivert, Timber, Summerville—all went weak at the twelve-yard mark.
Koeman, 63, stood on the sidelines, hair gray, expression like a wooden board. His wife, Bartina, didn't come to Monte Rey. She was back in the Netherlands, doing chemo every Wednesday, with side effects leaving her ill for two straight days.
Michels and Cruyff embedded total football into Dutch football's bones, but Koeman, for his part, set up a five-man defense in a World Cup knockout match.
After the game, Reuters asked him, he replied with "made no apologies." At the press conference, he pivoted: "Everyone around the Dutch national team was calling for a five-man defense." A Dutch coach who dug up total football's ancestral grave, blaming "those around him" after a loss. Cruyff, watching from above, would have to laugh at that buck-passing.
This timid approach started from the group stage. Against Japan, 2-2, the Dutch media called him cowardly, he shot back with "has no regrets." The 5-1 win over Sweden was lively, with Brobbey scoring two in 17 minutes and Gakpo bagging a brace in the second half, but that Swedish defense was already a sieve. Winning 3-1 against Tunisia secured top spot in Group F, with 2 wins and 1 draw for 7 points. Points could mask the shame, but not the ugly play.
In the knockout stage, points couldn't save them. Morocco had 11 shots total, with Opta counting 5 "big chances"—those absolute opportunities you could score with your eyes closed. The tears Gakpo shed on his knees had a shelf life of just twenty minutes.
On June 30, Koeman posted a long message on Instagram. One post packed with two things.
First: "Responsibility rests with me."
Second: His wife Bartina's breast cancer had recurred for a third time. First diagnosed in 2010, relapsed in 2018, another recurrence in 2023, with Dutch media reporting it as metastatic breast cancer. Koeman had revealed on June 8: "She didn't come with me, she's home. Treatment every Wednesday, side effects leave her sick for at least two days." He had even left the training camp mid-way because of it.
Read those two things together, and the tone changes. Was he shouldering the football blame, or escaping a position where he couldn't handle the double pressure? In the same World Cup, Nagelsmann led Germany to a penalty shootout loss against Paraguay in the round of 16, yet chose to stay, tossing out a line at the press conference: "I am not someone who runs away."
Both were eliminated in the first round. The German stayed to fight, the Dutchman handed in his resignation.
Koeman left, but the mess remained. The three who missed in the penalty shootout: Justin Kluivert, Quinten Timber, Summerville—all Black.
Hours after the game, the social media comments sections of these three were overrun, with words far uglier than tactical criticism. The KNVB panicked, directly throwing out the term "criminal investigation" in their statement, vowing to make arrests. They cited the precedent of England after the 2021 European Championship final.
Back then, Rashford, Sancho, and Saka missed penalties and faced online abuse. The UK football policing unit received 600 reports, with 207 classified as criminal offenses, leading to 11 arrests. A 52-year-old man named Scott McCluskey, in a Facebook Live stream, cursed out those three players; the Warrington Magistrates' Court sentenced him to 14 weeks in prison, suspended for 18 months.
The KNVB wanted to replicate that precedent. A country branding itself on "tolerance" found it needed criminal law to clean up after its own players in defeat.
According to Foot Mercato leaks, the shortlist for the new coach includes Slot, Ten Hag, Reiziger, and Bosz. Whoever takes over, the top item on the to-do list isn't changing the formation.
The first priority is dealing with the filth popping up on the phones of Kluivert, Timber, and Summerville.