Spain enter this quarter-final carrying the calm of a side that knows exactly what it wants. Belgium, by contrast, arrive with more chaos in their boots, but also with the kind of attacking spark that can flip a knockout tie quickly.
La Roja’s rhythm is built on patience, width, and defensive security. They do not need to turn every attack into a storm. They push the game into the opponent’s half, recycle possession, and wait for the moment when a runner or winger opens the lock.
The Red Devils have grown into the tournament after a hesitant start, and that matters. Their forward line looks looser now, more instinctive, and De Ketelaere’s movement gives them a different reference point. Still, this is a tougher defensive puzzle than anything they have solved lately.
The likely rhythm should be fascinating. Spain may dominate the ball and force Belgium to defend for long spells, while Garcia’s side will look for quick releases into space. Corners, cards, and transition fouls could all rise if the game becomes stretched after the break.
History leans toward La Roja, but football rarely travels in straight lines, does it? Belgium have old quarter-final memories against this opponent and enough firepower to make Spain nervous. Even so, the cleaner structure, steadier midfield, and sharper defensive habits make Spain feel slightly safer.