Leandro Trossard scored twice as Belgium thrashed New Zealand 5-1 at the World Cup on Friday to seal top spot in Group G and a place ​in the round of 32, while the Kiwis bowed out of the tournament.

Belgium finished ‌above Egypt on goal difference after they both finished with five points from three matches, followed by Iran on three points and New Zealand on one. In the other match in the group, Egypt drew 1-1 with Iran.

Belgium ​will next face one of the eight best third-placed teams.

The Belgians dominated from the ​outset and were the only side to threaten in the opening half, enjoying ⁠the bulk of possession.

Trossard thought he had given Belgium the lead in the 11th minute, only ​to see his effort strike the post and bounce to safety.

Minutes later, Belgium were awarded a ​penalty after New Zealand defender Finn Surman was hit on the arm by Trossard's shot. However, following a VAR review, the referee ruled that Surman's arm was in a natural position and overturned the decision.

Belgium's pressure finally told ​in the 28th minute when Trossard converted Kevin De Bruyne's cross from close range, finishing off ​a well-worked move to break the deadlock.

Trossard, 31, doubled Belgium's lead in the 50th minute, again combining effectively with ‌De ⁠Bruyne as he latched on to a through ball, controlled it on his chest and volleyed home from close range.

New Zealand threatened when Elijah Just forced Thibaut Courtois into action in the 54th minute, the goalkeeper diving low to push away their first shot on target.

De Bruyne added a third ​goal soon after, striking ​low from the edge ⁠of the box after being set up by Trossard, taking one touch on to his left foot before driving the ball into the bottom ​corner. The 34-year-old became the oldest player to score for Belgium at ​a World Cup.

The ⁠goal drew chants of 'Oh Kevin De Bruyne' from Belgium fans at BC Place, where both sets of supporters turned out in large numbers.

New Zealand pulled one back through Just in the 84th minute, but ⁠Lukaku restored ​Belgium's three-goal lead with a powerful header before fellow substitute ​Alexis Saelemaekers added a fifth in stoppage time to compound a miserable night for New Zealand, who are still waiting ​for their first World Cup victory.