An explosive second-half display saw the Netherlands and Japan share the spoils in a thrilling 2-2 draw for their opening Group F fixture at Dallas Stadium. In what is already being hailed as the game of the tournament so far, the Samurai Blue showed incredible resilience to claw their way back from a goal down twice.

A Tale of Two Halves
The opening 45 minutes gave little indication of the chaos to follow. Under intense Texas heat, Ronald Koeman’s side dominated nearly 70% of the possession. Donyell Malen repeatedly forced Japan’s goalkeeper, Zion Suzuki, into fine saves to preserve a scoreless deadlock going into the interval.
The match truly ignited five minutes after the restart:
- 51st Minute: Dutch captain Virgil van Dijk rose highest to power home a header from a Ryan Gravenberch delivery, marking his first-ever career World Cup goal.
- 56st Minute: Japan hit back almost instantly. Keito Nakamura unleashed a clinical, tidy finish from just outside the box following a smart layout by Takefusa Kubo.
- 63rd Minute: The Oranje looked to have sealed a statement win when Crysencio Summerville curled a sublime, low beauty past Suzuki to make it 2-1.
Kamada Strikes at the Death
Just as the Dutch attempts to shut up shop seemed successful, Japan’s relentless late pressure bore fruit. In the 89th minute, a swinging corner was met at the near post by substitute Koki Ogawa. The ball deflected off Daichi Kamada and slipped past Bart Verbruggen, sparking wild celebrations on the Japanese bench.
The dramatic result leaves Group F wide open, with Sweden and Tunisia set to square off next to see who can take an early hold of the table.
