Belgium's Romelu Lukaku celebrates scoring his team's first goal
against Republic of Ireland during their Euro 2016 Group E match at
Stade Matmut Atlantique in Bordeaux on Saturday.
Belgium rediscovered their most
blistering form to batter group E rivals Ireland 3-0 thanks to a brace
from Romelu Lukaku and an Axel Witsel header on Saturday.
The victory of the world's second-ranked team was in stark contrast
to their limp defeat in their opening Euro 2016 match against Italy.
Despite dominating the opening half, it still took until the opening
minutes of the second period for Belgium to take the lead when Lukaku
finished a counter-attack by rifling a shot into the far corner.
Ireland had a brief positive spell but Witsel made it two for Belgium
with a pinpoint header after 61 minutes, and Lukaku completed the rout
with a simple finish after another counter-attack nine minutes later.
With Italy having beaten both the Belgians and Sweden to win the
group, the victory puts Belgium in second place on three points with the
Irish and Sweden stuck on a point apiece.
Coach Marc Wilmots made three changes to the Belgium line-up that
struggled against Italy, and they immediately appeared more vibrant and
cohesive.
Belgium's Axel Witsel heads to score his team's second goal against Ireland.
Their speed and fluidity
improved, with the introduction of Thomas Meunier and Yannick Carrasco
giving them a menace out wide which had been missing in their opener.
Kevin De Bruyne kept his place despite a subdued showing against
Italy and, vastly improved, he set the tone with a searing 13th-minute
corner which Alderweireld headed wide, before finding his range with a
free kick.
Ireland were not without their own threat, as Meunier's adventures down the right flank left space for Shane Long to exploit.
Belgium, though, began to dominate, with De Bruyne's teasing delivery
forcing a diving header from O'Shea on 20 minutes, which inadvertently
set up Eden Hazard to fire over.
Wes Hoolahan then cleared off the line as Toby Alderweireld headed another fine De Bruyne corner goalwards.
As Irish resolve strengthened, Wilmots was again left pondering how
to forge an effective attacking unit from the Golden Generation's wealth
of striking talent.
It took only three second-half minutes for an answer to emerge, as De
Bruyne, the game's outstanding player, tore down the right before
crossing for Lukaku, who opened his body and sent a curling left-foot
effort into the corner of the net.
Republic of Ireland's Stephen Ward and Belgium's Yannick Carrasco compete for the ball.
The goal seemed to release the
pressure on Belgium, who celebrated furiously with Wilmots in the corner
while their supporters threw flares onto the pitch.
Yet Ireland were justifiably left seething as Alderweireld's penalty-box high foot on Long in the build-up went unpunished.
Witsel put the contest beyond the Irish 13 minutes later, arriving in
the box to head the impressive Meunier's cross beyond Randolph, whose
outstretched hand could not quite divert the thumping effort wide.
In the 70th minute, Belgium added a third in a delicious move that
encapsulated the invention and panache that has long been expected from
this talented squad.
Meunier, again influential, dispossessed McClean and sent a long ball forward for Hazard down the right.
The attacker, outrageously lapping the linesman on the outside, raced
to meet the pass before crossing for Lukaku who swept home with aplomb.
This was an emphatic response from Belgium to their critics. With a
dazzling second-half performance, they had finally realised their
potential in a high-profile fixture, reaffirming their title credentials
with clinical precision and real style.
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