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Virgil van Dijk had already scored in the Netherlands’ World Cup opener, but one new tournament rule still left him frustrated after the draw with Japan.
The Dutch captain headed the Netherlands in front at AT&T Stadium in Dallas, only for Japan to fight back in a 2-2 Group F draw. Van Dijk played a strong individual game, but his postgame answer showed his concern went beyond the result.
That is what made the moment interesting. He was not rejecting player safety, but he clearly questioned whether every World Cup match needs the same stoppage, no matter the conditions.
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Virgil van Dijk questions World Cup hydration breaks after Japan draw
Van Dijk YouTube showed the Netherlands captain being asked about a hydration break in an indoor stadium, and his answer focused on commercials and the viewing experience.
Van Dijk said, “I think hydration breaks are really interesting. I was obviously watching almost all of the games up until today. I think every time going to commercials is a bit, not really something that I like.
“I think for the neutral watchers on TV it is also not great. So if it is really hot it would be good to put them in but I think you have to look at it in every game, separately, in my opinion. But I think I have said enough already on that.”
The fuss is not really about water. FIFA’s 2026 World Cup policy has made hydration breaks mandatory in every match, which has created debate because some games are being played indoors or in controlled conditions.
Netherlands Japan draw showed why match rhythm matters to Van Dijk
The timing of Van Dijk’s criticism mattered because the Netherlands had just lost control of a game they twice led. Van Dijk opened the scoring after halftime, and Crysencio Summerville later restored the Dutch advantage.
Japan refused to fade. Keito Nakamura equalized first, before Daichi Kamada struck in the 88th minute from a set-piece situation that Van Dijk admitted was not acceptable for a team with Dutch quality.
Individually, Van Dijk had plenty to like. He scored, played the full match, passed the ball cleanly and remained a major defensive presence despite Japan’s late pressure.
That is why his hydration-break point should not be framed as an excuse. It was a broader complaint about flow, television interruptions and whether player-welfare rules need more flexibility.
Van Dijk’s view was measured, but clear. Hydration breaks make sense in real heat, but the World Cup may not need a one-size-fits-all rule for every stadium.
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