World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
Bart Verbruggen dived to the right, getting his fingertips to Soufiane Rahimi's penalty. He did what a goalkeeper is supposed to do.
Bart Verbruggen dove to the right, his fingertips grazing Soufiane Rahimi's penalty. The goalkeeper did his job.
The ball slid under him, bounced once, and trickled slowly into the net.
In the World Cup Round of 32 knockout match between the Netherlands and Morocco, second round of the penalty shootout, Verbruggen completed the save, but the scoreboard cruelly credited him with a conceded goal.
Ten penalties taken, five missed. Three hit the woodwork, two of them hitting the same post. Quinten Timber sent the fourth penalty wide, and Crysencio Summerville's fifth was saved by Bounou. The Netherlands lost the shootout 2-3.
The stats from regular time were even more brutal. Netherlands xG: 0.23, Morocco: 1.40. Translated into plain English: given the same attacking opportunities 100 times, Morocco would score 1.4 goals, while the Dutch couldn't even muster 0.3.
With 30% possession, the Netherlands were battered for 120 minutes. Shots were 6 to 11, as they were pinned in their own half. Cody Gakpo's counter-attacking goal in the 72nd minute was the team's only saving grace, until Issa Diop headed in an equalizer in the 90+1st minute, dragging the Dutch into extra time and then the firing squad of the penalty spot.
A team suppressed for 120 minutes stepping up to the spot is essentially playing Russian roulette. Three pulled the trigger, three didn't make it out, and in turn became targets themselves.
Hours after the match, Justin Kluivert's Instagram comments were inundated with monkey emojis and racial slurs. Summerville and Timber's pages were not spared either. Three missed penalties triggered a flood of the same type of abuse.
All three locked their comment sections. The same defensive move, shielding out the monkey emojis and racial abuse. But screenshots had already spread far and wide. Locking the door stops the new influx of abuse, but not what has already been disseminated.
KNVB issued a statement, hammering down four heavy words: disgraceful, discriminatory, racist, hateful. The case was referred to Meld.Online Discriminatie. Last year, this anti-discrimination platform received 2,768 reports, nearly four times the amount from the previous year. It holds the "Trusted Flagger" status under the EU's Digital Services Act, meaning social platforms must prioritize complaint tickets filed in the anti-discrimination field. Sports Minister Mirjam Sterk expressed her "deep regret."
Five years ago in London, the exact same sequence had already played out. In the July 2021 European Championship final, England lost to Italy on penalties. After Marcus Rashford, Jadon Sancho, and Bukayo Saka missed, Instagram was flooded with the same monkey emojis.
British police arrested 11 people. 52-year-old Jonathon Best spewed racial slurs in a Facebook Live stream and was sentenced to 10 weeks in prison. 43-year-old Scott McCluskey pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 14 weeks imprisonment, suspended for 18 months, serving no jail time.
The referral to Meld.Online Discriminatie is just the starting point. Every subsequent stage of police investigation, prosecution, and conviction silently filters out a vast number of cases. Best's 10 weeks in prison represent one of the very few specimens that made it to the end of that assembly line. For these Dutch cases in 2026, it's highly unlikely they will travel much further.
On June 30th, the day after the match, Ronald Koeman announced his resignation.
"Last night I made the decision to end my tenure."
Within 24 hours, the head coach walked out, and three young players were hung on the pillory of social media. Koeman was defending his five-man defense formation the night of the match. The next day he was gone. It was also on this second day that the racist abuse against the players hit its peak.
Tactical collapse and racist online abuse have no causal relationship. They just conveniently crammed themselves into the same 24 hours, stripping Dutch football naked.