Edouard Mendy:
For every hero there is a villain, and if Gakpo's day summed up the life of a striker, then Mendy's was the perfect counterbalance. Who would be a goalkeeper? The Chelsea man was largely untroubled for 84 minutes, but his first misjudgement would prove costly, as he ran from his line to punch away De Jong's delivery and got nowhere near it, Gakpo heading into the unguarded net. There would be another mistake for the Netherlands' second goal too, Mendy weakly pushing Memphis Depay's tame shot straight into the path of Klaassen, who gleefully accepted his gift. 2-0, game over. Having lost his club place to Kepa Arrizabalaga recently, this was not a night to rebuild Mendy's confidence. He'll need to put it behind him quickly, or his side will be on their way home.
Matthijs de Ligt:
It is fair to say that Louis van Gaal is not short of options to play on the right of his three-man central defence. For this game he selected De Ligt, ahead of the experienced Stefan de Vrij and the up-and-coming Jurrien Timber, but the Bayern Munich man endured a difficult evening against Ismaila Sarr. He was constantly troubled by the Watford man's pace and running power, committing more fouls than any Dutch player. One of them, early in the second half, earned him a yellow card and leaves him walking a disciplinary tightrope for the rest of the group. The Netherlands did, in fairness, finish with a clean sheet, but Timber and De Vrij will feel they are in with a shot of starting against Ecuador. De Ligt will have expected better of himself.
Sadio Mane:
We already knew it, but this game simply served to underline it; Senegal needs Sadio Mane. Badly. Aliou Cisse's side matched the Dutch for the most part. They were strong defensively, with Kalidou Koulibaly particularly good, and had plenty of the ball in midfield, with Idrissa Gueye, Cheikhou Kouyate and Nampalys Mendy bright and energetic. But in the final third? Not much. Senegal had 15 shots but only four on target. Sarr was good, denied a goal by a good Virgil van Dijk block, but much of his best work was away from goal, and neither Dia nor Krepin Diatta offered much. This is a tournament of big-name absences, of course, with the likes of Karim Benzema, Reece James, Paul Pogba, Timo Werner and N'Golo Kante all on the missing list. Mane's absence, though, looks like the one that could be most costly, in terms of his side's prospects.