Everyone is talking about Germany. Everyone is watching the USA. But quietly, tucked away at AT&T Stadium in Dallas on Sunday evening, is the match that might actually produce the most football.
Netherlands vs Japan. Group F. And if you know anything about Japan at major tournaments, you already know this is not the straightforward Dutch win the casual viewer might assume.
This is genuinely one of the hardest games of Matchday 4 to predict. The betting markets have it nearly 50-50. That tells you everything.
Article Contents
Netherlands vs Japan Match Details
| Detail | Info |
|---|---|
| Match | Netherlands vs Japan |
| Tournament | FIFA World Cup 2026 — Group F |
| Date | Sunday, June 14, 2026 |
| Kick-off | 4:00 PM ET / 9:00 PM BST / 1:30 AM IST (June 15) |
| Venue | AT&T Stadium, Arlington, Texas |
| TV (India) | Sports18 / JioCinema |
| TV (UK) | ITV / ITVX (free) |
| TV (USA) | Fox Sports / Fubo |
Netherlands — Talented But Inconsistent, As Always
Here’s the thing about the Netherlands. They always have incredible players. And they always, somehow, manage to be slightly less than the sum of their parts at World Cups. Three runner-up finishes — in 1974, 1978, and 2010 — without ever lifting the trophy. It’s become a running joke, but also a genuine football tragedy.
Ronald Koeman’s squad this time around has real quality though. Virgil van Dijk is still one of the best centre-backs on the planet. Frenkie de Jong pulls strings in midfield. Cody Gakpo is electric on the left. And Donyell Malen, coming off an impressive season with Roma, looks set to start up front ahead of the more experienced Memphis Depay.
The warm-up form has been a bit mixed — a 2-1 home win over Norway and a draw against Ecuador in March were fine, but a 1-0 loss to Algeria at home before flying to the USA raised some eyebrows. They did beat Uzbekistan 2-1 in New York right before the tournament, but it was a last-gasp win. There’s a slight sense of unease around this Dutch squad that Koeman will need to address quickly.
One big concern — Wataru Endo, the Liverpool midfielder who would have captained Japan, pulled out of the squad with a long-term foot injury and immediately retired from international football. That’s actually good news for the Netherlands, removing one of Japan’s most important players before a ball is kicked.
Japan — Don’t You Dare Sleep on Them
Seriously. If you haven’t been watching Japan lately, you need to catch up.
This is a team that beat England 1-0 at Wembley in March 2026. At Wembley. They qualified for this World Cup by topping their Asian group with seven wins, two draws and only one defeat — finishing four points clear of Australia. In their last qualifier they beat Indonesia 6-0. These are not fluke results. This is a coherent, well-organised, genuinely dangerous football team.
Hajime Moriyasu has built something really impressive with this Japan side. Their 3-4-2-1 pressing system is one of the most structured in international football right now. When it clicks — and it clicks often — it suffocates opponents and creates real problems on the counter.
The players to watch are Takefusa Kubo, who has been outstanding for Real Sociedad, Daichi Kamada pulling strings in the middle, and striker Ayase Ueda who is clinical in front of goal. Ritsu Doan and Keito Nakamura provide energy from the wide positions.
The big blow is the absence of Wataru Endo — Japan’s captain and most experienced international. Losing him before the tournament is significant. But this squad has depth, and Moriyasu has options.
Netherlands vs Japan Predicted Lineups
Netherlands (4-3-3): Roefs; Dumfries, Van Hecke, Van Dijk, Van de Ven; De Jong, Gravenberch, Reijnders; Summerville, Malen, Gakpo
Japan (3-4-2-1): Suzuki; Tomiyasu, Yoshida, Itakura; J. Ito, Kamada, Tanaka, Nakamura; Kubo, Doan; Ueda
Netherlands vs Japan Key Battles to Watch
Cody Gakpo vs Japan’s right side — Gakpo is Netherlands’ most dangerous creative threat. He loves to come inside and shoot with his right foot. Japan’s right wing-back Junya Ito will have to track him constantly. If Gakpo gets space to run, this match changes.
Frenkie de Jong vs Japan’s press — Japan will press high and press hard. De Jong is brilliant at finding passes under pressure but he can also be forced into mistakes when physical teams get at him. This midfield battle is absolutely key — whoever dominates it likely wins the match.
Takefusa Kubo on the Netherlands defence — Kubo is genuinely one of the most exciting wingers in world football right now and Netherlands’ centre-backs will be uncomfortable if he gets on the ball in behind them. This is the counter-attack threat Japan will base their game plan around.
Netherlands vs Japan Head-to-Head
| Stat | Info |
|---|---|
| Total meetings | 10 |
| Netherlands wins | 6 |
| Japan wins | 2 |
| Draws | 2 |
| Last meeting | Netherlands 4-1 Japan (2022 World Cup) |
The Netherlands won their last meeting 4-1 in Qatar 2022, but that result flatters them a little — Japan actually led that game and were pushing for a win before the Dutch hit them on the counter. Japan know they can live with the Netherlands. They’ve proven it before.
Netherlands vs Japan Score Prediction
This is genuinely a difficult one to call. Netherlands have the better individual talent on paper. Japan have the better system and the bigger motivation as they look to prove themselves on the world stage again.
The most likely outcome, honestly, is a tight match decided by a moment of individual brilliance rather than a tactical masterclass. Gakpo or Malen nicking a goal. Or Kubo finding space at the back post. These are the moments that tend to settle close games like this.
Netherlands will edge it, but Japan will make them seriously uncomfortable for long stretches.
Our prediction: Netherlands 2-1 Japan. Gakpo and Malen on the scoresheet for the Dutch. Ueda pulling one back for Japan.
Why the Netherlands vs Japan Match Actually Matters
Group F also has Sweden and Tunisia. Whoever wins this game goes into Matchday 2 with a massive advantage. Lose and suddenly the group gets very complicated very quickly — both Netherlands and Japan know a defeat here makes qualification a stressful affair.
For Japan in particular, this is a statement opportunity. Beat the Netherlands at AT&T Stadium and suddenly the whole world is paying attention to the Samurai Blue. They’ve done it before against bigger sides. They’ll believe they can do it again.
For the Netherlands — three runner-up finishes and never a trophy. This squad might be their last best chance for a while, with this generation of players at or near their peak. Getting off to a winning start against a dangerous Japan side would set the tone for everything that follows.
For more World Cup 2026 match previews, player profiles, and results coverage, stay with Sports Hail — sportshail.com
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