Tisdale hails outgoing Cureton
Belgium coach Marc Wilmots will approach Friday's World Cup qualifier with Serbia like any other.
His side are top of Group A on 16 points, ahead of Croatia on goal difference, and a win on Friday would guarantee at least second place.
That is not enough to secure a place in Brazil next year as only the group winners are certain of that, but it would represent another step forward for a
talented Belgium side.
"We will play our game as we should do and we will do everything to win," said Wilmots. "This is the last game of the season but for me it is only the seventh
of the 10 finals we have to do.
"We will not qualify and we will not be eliminated [tomorrow]. There will be no need to jump for joy.
"There are three points to take and we will do everything to take them."
Wilmots has had a successful first year in charge of the national team but he puts all their progress down to the quality of the players.
"The talent was already there but the greatest achievement is that players do not think of themselves," he added.
"They are not sulking as they sit on the bench and that's important - if they did it would soon be a problem with me.
"I have made a few changes but players who know their job often make the difference."
The last time the two sides met Belgium won 3-0 in Belgrade, and Serbia's Branislav Ivanovic knows they will have an even more difficult task in Brussels.
"The Belgians enjoyed an emphatic win in the end but they didn't outplay us and we have learned our lessons from the defeat," said the Chelsea defender.
"It's going to be a tough task to beat a talented Belgium in Brussels but we never lose hope."
Second-placed Croatia have an apparently easier job at home to Scotland, who are bottom after taking just two points from six matches.
Their Brazilian-born striker Eduardo is desperate to play in a World Cup in his homeland.
"It is a dream of mine to play in my first, and possibly my last, World Cup in my home town of Rio, close to my friends who support me," the 30-year-old told fifa.com.
"I'm really excited now and have a lot of motivation to do this in what I expect is my last try, so I will do all I can to qualify for Brazil.
"It would mean so much for us to qualify, but we still have a job to do."
The 37-year-old was told by the Football League's longest-serving manager that the Grecians were unable to offer him a deal and he is now looking for a new club ahead of the new campaign.
The former Bristol Rovers forward has been strongly linked with a move to Exeter's npower League Two rivals Cheltenham and Tisdale says that if that is to be his next destination then he wishes him all the best.
"He was another player I would have loved to have kept if I could - we just couldn't do it," Tisdale told the Express & Echo.
"I wish him the best of luck. I hope he doesn't score against us, but I hope he does very well. And if he does go to Cheltenham, or a club similar to Cheltenham, then I am glad he has got a good deal off the back of being with us because he deserves it.
"Part of me is very disappointed that team I was putting together, and looked like it was going to be a good team, is starting to dismantle as it tends to do at Exeter.
"So I am disappointed, but I am very pleased with the contribution he has made."