World Cup 2026 | Group G, Matchday 2
Sunday, June 21, 2026 — 3:00 p.m. ET | SoFi Stadium, Los Angeles
Watch in Canada: CTV, TSN, TSN+ | En français: RDS
Group G could not be tighter after the opening round: Belgium, Iran, Egypt, and New Zealand all sit on one point, with goal difference doing the only sorting. Belgium’s meeting with Iran at SoFi Stadium is the kind of game that can either separate the pack or keep the entire group stuck in a logjam.
For Canadian viewers, this is a clean afternoon kickoff with real stakes. Both teams need a result, and both will know a second straight draw leaves very little room for error on the final matchday.
Belgium entered the tournament with more expectation than most of the group, but their opener showed how quickly control can disappear when a compact opponent stays organized and punishes mistakes. Iran, meanwhile, proved in their first match that they are comfortable living under pressure and still finding a way back into a game.
Belgium’s draw with Egypt followed a familiar pattern for a strong side that did not turn possession into enough danger. They controlled stretches of the game, but only improved once Romelu Lukaku entered the picture. His brief but game-changing cameo forced the equalizer almost immediately, which will almost certainly increase the pressure to start him this time.
Iran’s opener was more dramatic. They fell behind twice, responded twice, and earned a draw that reflected both resilience and tactical discipline. Ramin Rezaeian was central to their best moments, and Team Melli showed that they can stay composed even when the game turns against them.
Iran do not need to dominate the ball to hurt Belgium. They need enough territory to send service into the area and enough discipline to block central passing lanes. If Belgium move the ball too slowly, Iran can keep the match narrow and uncomfortable.
SoFi Stadium should feel far from neutral. Los Angeles has a large Iranian community, and that can turn a tournament match into something closer to a charged home atmosphere. If Iran start well, the crowd can become part of the story, especially if Belgium begin patiently and fail to create early chances.
That matters because Belgium need rhythm more than resistance. If the game becomes tense, physical, and fragmented, it plays into Iran’s hands. If Belgium score first, the entire match changes shape and the group race opens quickly.
Belgium have the stronger squad, more proven attacking talent, and the deeper bench. Iran have belief, organization, and enough set-piece danger to keep this from becoming comfortable. The most likely path is a tight first half, followed by Belgium finding a breakthrough once De Bruyne and Lukaku are both fully involved.
Prediction: Belgium 2, Iran 1.
That result would put Belgium in a much better position to advance, while Iran would likely need a result in their final group game to stay alive in the hunt for a historic knockout-stage run.
Sunday’s full Group G schedule for Canadian viewers — all times Eastern:
All matches available on CTV, TSN, and TSN+. French-language coverage on RDS.