The Day

For Belgians, joy; for Brazilians, anguish

Belgium to meet France in World Cup semifinals

- By ROB HARRIS

Kazan, Russia — Neymar used Brazil's famed yellow jersey to shield his anguish. The Belgians, clad in red and dancing in a celebrator­y circle nearby, couldn't hide their relief.

Belgium reached the World Cup semifinals for the first time in 28 years, holding off five-time champion Brazil 2-1 Friday in one of the country's greatest soccer feats.

"We've achieved something that is really beautiful," said Kevin De Bruyne, who scored Belgium's second goal, "and it's not easy."

Belgium eliminated Brazil by successful­ly fusing the attacking potency of De Bruyne and Romelu Lukaku with the creativity of Eden Hazard and the goalkeepin­g exploits of Thibaut Courtois. Plus an own-goal from Brazil.

It all adds up to a semifinal match against France on Tuesday in St. Petersburg.

"Just treasure it and pass it down in the generation­s," Belgium coach Roberto Martinez said, still seemingly in awe of what his team achieved at the Kazan Arena.

Belgium took the lead after a slice of good fortune involving a pair of Manchester City teammates who were on opposing sides. Brazil midfielder Fernandinh­o's trailing right arm inadverten­tly helped Belgium captain Vincent Kompany's header land in his own net in the 13th minute.

De Bruyne then completed a counteratt­ack launched by Lukaku to double the lead in the 31st minute.

As Belgium lost cohesivene­ss in the second half and Brazil's changes stirred the team, substitute Renato Augusto reduced the deficit in the 76th with a header. But it was too late for Brazil to muster an equalizer as Courtois thwarted several efforts to force the game into extra time.

While Belgium's golden generation is finally flourishin­g, Neymar is leading Brazil home after

failing to live up to the expectatio­ns that come with being soccer's most expensive player. Crouching on the field, he pulled his shirt over his face while Belgium exalted in victory.

Humiliated 7-1 by Germany in the semifinals fours year ago on home soil with Neymar out injured, Brazil didn't even get that far this time. Just like defending champion Germany and Argentina before them, the Kazan Arena is where Brazil's World Cup challenge ended.

"Randomness happened and it was cruel to us," Brazil coach Tite said. "It was hard to swallow."

Especially after Brazil conceded only one goal in the previous four games in Russia. But the defense was breached after 13 minutes in Tatarstan. Fernandinh­o's own-goal ensured for the first time since March 2017 that Brazil was trailing in a competitiv­e match. Unlike then — an eventual 4-1 victory over Uruguay — there was no comeback.

Not when Courtois was proving to be an impenetrab­le barrier in the Belgium goal, denying Marcelo's strike before the lead was extended by De Bruyne.

"They were more effective," Tite said, struggling to hold back tears. "Not a superiorit­y in terms of performanc­e, but in terms of effectiven­ess on the pitch."

Belgium held on even after Philippe Coutinho's cross was headed in by Augusto, who managed to evade Kompany and Jan Vertonghen three minutes after replacing Paulinho.

"Sometimes you have to accept that Brazil has got this finesse, that quality, and that they're going to break you down, and (Belgium) just refused to accept that," Martinez said. "This is something special."

Belgium, which finished fourth at the 1986 tournament and has never won the European Championsh­ip, is now on a 24-match unbeaten streak.

Neymar

Criticized for his playacting, Neymar went down lightly under minimal contact from Marouane Fellaini at the start of the second half when Brazil trailed 2-0. But as the referee started to seek a video review, Neymar appeared to urge against it. A booking — if he got one for diving — would have ruled him out the semifinals.

Suspended

Belgium will be without defender Thomas Meunier for the semifinals after tripping Neymar and earning a second yellow card of the tournament.

 ?? ANDRE PENNER/ AP PHOTO ?? Brazil’s Neymar, front, reacts as Belgium’s Axel Witsel celebrates after Brazil is knocked out by Belgium following their quarterfin­al match at the 2018 soccer World Cup in the Kazan Arena in Russia on Friday.
ANDRE PENNER/ AP PHOTO Brazil’s Neymar, front, reacts as Belgium’s Axel Witsel celebrates after Brazil is knocked out by Belgium following their quarterfin­al match at the 2018 soccer World Cup in the Kazan Arena in Russia on Friday.
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