Belgium and Tunisia meet in an international friendly (Bélgica - Túnez) at 15:00 on 6 June 2026 at the Stade Roi Baudouin in Brussels, a final match-day test ahead of the World Cup.
The kick-off time and venue are fixed: 15:00 on 6 June at the Stade Roi Baudouin. The fixture is listed under International friendlies 2026 and serves as one of the last opportunities for both coaching staffs to evaluate players in a match setting before the tournament.
Tunisia coach Sabri Lamouchi spoke in Brussels on Friday ahead of the game and stressed the quality of the opponent, saying Belgium “have many players capable of making a difference” and that “danger will come from everywhere.” He added that Tunisia intends to treat the game seriously as its final test before the World Cup.
Lamouchi made clear he will tinker with his selection—“we must make some changes”—but he framed those adjustments around fitness. “Some players are in doubt,” he said, and he emphasised restraint: “We will not take any risks.” The coach confirmed the starting XI will not be announced until after the team’s last training session: “After the day’s training, we will make a decision.”
That cautious line defines the immediate storyline for Tunisian fans: Lamouchi wants to field the strongest possible team to press for match sharpness, yet he will pull back on any player whose condition is uncertain. The result is a selection dilemma rather than a straightforward preview of a fixed lineup.
Belgium’s coach has likewise signalled an interest in testing a full-strength side for his own checks, meaning the fixture should offer a robust measure for Tunisia even if Lamouchi opts for cautious changes. For supporters seeking practical details, the venue and kickoff are confirmed and public; the only unresolved element is Tunisia’s starting XI until the post-training announcement.
Logistics: the match takes place at Stade Roi Baudouin in Brussels at 15:00 on 6 June 2026. The timing makes this fixture the last formal dress rehearsal for Tunisia, while Belgium will use the game to verify player roles and combinations ahead of their World Cup campaign.
What matters next is simple and immediate: Lamouchi’s assessment in the final workout. His post-training decision will reveal whether Tunisia sides with ambition—risking marginal players for a stronger XI—or with caution by preserving doubtful players from minutes. The team named after Friday’s final session will be the clearest signal of how Tunisia intends to balance readiness and player safety when they face Belgium at the Stade Roi Baudouin tomorrow.


