News, analysis, history, and discussion on all things Verde-Amarela

Tag: World Cup 2026

2026 World Cup: Brazil vs. Haiti

Folks, I have a confession to make: I was in a good mood after the Morocco game on Saturday.

I know, I know. The sky-is-falling reactions extended well beyond our own small and sometimes pessimistic community. Lots of people saw Brazil make countless sloppy giveaways and struggle to get anywhere near Morocco’s passing moves and assumed the worst about our World Cup chances, but I can’t say I did. Blame the fact that I had guests over for the game and was a couple of caipirinhas deep by its end, or blame the Knicks for winning the NBA championship later that night and sending all of New York into an infectious good mood. Either way, I felt all right about things after the game, and in the moment, this was my reasoning:

– The Seleção historically starts a little slow in their first game of the World Cup. On top of that, they’d never before opened their tournament with a game against a top-four team from the previous edition. (In 2002, they opened against Turkey, who would go on to finish third, but had absolutely no previous World Cup pedigree; they hadn’t qualified since the 1950s.)

– A draw still very much leaves Brazil with a good chance of winning the group. It may well come down to which team can rack up a bigger goal difference against Haiti and Scotland, and while this game reinforced wider doubts about the team, I do think we have the talent to beat up on lesser teams.

– This team is still very much a work in progress. Although Morocco very recently replaced their coach, even more recently than us. But they at least have the benefit of much more coherent planning from their federation, don’t they?

– Also, uh, it was really hot, I think the hottest game of the first round so far. That makes things harder, right?

Anyways, I figured I should watch the game again, to see if the doomerism on here was justified or whether my rosy outlook actually owed to something other than drinking a bunch of rosé. (I didn’t actually drink rosé, but the pun was right there.) So I did that, and here are my thoughts…

Continue reading

2026 World Cup: Brazil vs. Morocco

IT IS HERE. The World Cup. The biggest, greediest, most bloated, most extortionate, possibly most confusing, though probably not the most outright evil (yet), World Cup in history.

To say that people are excited would be an overstatement. Here in New York City, a place perhaps best known as the partial namesake of the world-famous New York New Jersey Stadium that will host the final, some bars have put up little flags and streamers, many of which got shredded in a weekend storm, and my local CVS has some World Cup merch. I did see this slightly creepy bust of Lionel Messi in the window of the West 34th Street Macy’s, at least:

Okay, that last paragraph is slightly unfair. Today, the first day of the World Cup itself, I started seeing a fair few people in Manhattan wearing national team gear, and I definitely saw more Brazil shirts than any other. (Though the Knicks are lapping everybody else in the apparel department, especially after that Game 4.) And now that the first games have started, I can’t help but start getting into the spirit of things, even with all the bullshit surrounding the tournament. (That’s how they get you!)

It’s just two days (maybe less by the time you read this) until Brazil’s opener against Morocco, which is being played at that very New York New Jersey Stadium, so close to me and yet so far away (not just because getting there from the city is a fucking nightmare, but because the cheapest ticket I’m seeing on the FIFA website right now is going for $1,384). Since I last checked in, Brazil won their final preparatory friendly against Egypt, a 2-1 win that included a bunch of encouraging signs (a ton of chances created, Endrick’s first Seleção goal for two years) and saw a few old concerns bubble up (we missed a lot of those chances, and Egypt’s goal was the product of yet another defensive fuckup). I’ve already made most of my thoughts on our situation clear, I hope, but I’d like to cover a few last questions and concerns before our debut at the tournament itself.

Before anything else, an up-to-date look at the squad:

Continue reading

The World Cup Looms Over This Match Thread For Brazil vs. Egypt (Friendly)

This is it: Brazil’s last game before the World Cup. One last chance to try new things without their failure causing an immediate crisis. One last chance to test the team’s approach to the Morocco game against an ostensibly comparable opponent.

Brazil vs. Egypt

Huntington Bank Field, Cleveland, Ohio, USA, June 6, 2026

Kickoff: 6:00 PM EDT / 7:00 PM BRT / 10:00 PM GMT

US TV/Streaming: ESPN Deportes, ESPN Unlimited (which I can’t believe they have the gall to charge thirty fucking dollars a month for)

Likely Starting XI: Alisson; Wesley, Marquinhos, Léo Pereira (Gabriel Magalhães), Douglas Santos; Casemiro, Bruno Guimarães; Lucas Paquetá, Igor Thiago, Vini Júnior, Raphinha.

On The Bench: Ederson, Weverton; Bad Danilo, Bremer, Alex Sandro; Good Danilo, Fabinho; Rayan, Endrick, Luiz Henrique, Gabriel Martinelli, Matheus Cunha.

Unavailable: Neymar, possibly Gabriel Magalhães (fatigue).

Notes and Storylines

Continue reading

HE’S BAAAaaaaAAAaaaaAaaack… I guess…

Did you hear? On May 18, Carlo Ancelotti announced the 26 players who will represent Brazil at the World Cup:

  • Goalkeepers: Alisson (Liverpool), Ederson (Fenerbahçe), Weverton (Grêmio).
  • Defenders: Alex Sandro (Flamengo), Bremer (Juventus), Bad Danilo (Flamengo), Douglas Santos (Zenit), Gabriel Magalhães (Arsenal), Ibañez (Al-Ahli), Léo Pereira (Flamengo), Marquinhos (PSG), Wesley (Roma).
  • Midfielders: Bruno Guimarães (Newcastle), Casemiro (Manchester United), Good Danilo (Botafogo), Fabinho (Al-Ittihad), Lucas Paquetá (Flamengo).
  • Forwards: Endrick (Lyon), Gabriel Martinelli (Arsenal), Igor Thiago (Brentford), Luiz Henrique (Zenit), Matheus Cunha (Manchester United), Neymar (Santos), Raphinha (Barcelona), Rayan (Bournemouth) e Vini Jr. (Real Madrid).

There are plenty of questions one could raise. For instance, why are there so many Flamengo players? If Bad Danilo’s justification for inclusion is veteran presence and some shred of versatility rather than his actual ability, surely it would be better to select Thiago Silva, still a much better defender, as the veteran presence and trust that any one of the three other players in the squad with experience at right-back could do at least as good a job as a washed-up almost-35-year-old? Given that several other players (Bento, João Pedro, Andrey Santos) were cut at the last minute seemingly due to poor club form coupled with a lack of Seleção performance, does Gabriel Martinelli’s goal against Croatia in March make up for the fact that he’s lost his starting spot for Arsenal and the only top-flight club side he’s scored against in 2026 was from Kazakhstan? Surely, surely, we can squeeze a sixth midfielder into the squad, you know, just in case playing four up top ends up leaving us colossally outmatched in midfield in a crucial game? Do we really want to rely on Fabinho to cover for Casemiro when he inevitably gets suspended for a knockout game? Why didn’t the technical staff use my absolutely flawless wishlist for reference?

But forget all those questions, because there’s only one thing on everybody’s lips. That’s right, ladies and gents. NEYMAR IS BACK!

Or, uh, well.

Thus far, Neymar’s selection has gone about as badly as it could have. The cheers and chants of “Neymar, Neymar” when his name was announced were a tad embarrassing, whether they were from journalists or just fans in attendance. What was reported ahead of the callup as a minor edema in his calf soon got upgraded to a grade 2 tear with a minimum recovery time of two to three weeks. Not only did this spark a fresh controversy over whether Santos had hidden the nature of his injury in order to help secure his selection, it means that, having already not played for the Seleção since November 2023, Neymar will miss both of Brazil’s preparatory friendlies, all of the training time in between, and may not be available for the World Cup opener against Morocco. Amidst all this, he was the very last player to report to training camp, showing up in his unbelievably expensive custom helicopter, and with the blessing of his teammates has been given the number 10 shirt.

Frankly, the whole saga has made me deeply pessimistic. The Neymar of old was absolutely deserving of the number 10 shirt, and absolutely worth keeping in the team even if it wouldn’t be clear when and if he’d be fit enough to play. That is the Neymar all those cheering fans and journalists, and his fellow players, remember and hope to see again. But at this point, I see that Neymar as almost the object of a cult that can’t accept that that player may no longer exist. They attribute the man powers he no longer has. They allow him indulgences, like the helicopter thing, that were already excessive when he was one of the best players in the world. They refuse to see that even if Neymar heals with no further setbacks and is listed as fit for the Morocco game, it’s vanishingly unlikely that, having not played for Brazil in years, having never trained under Ancelotti before the World Cup itself, and playing cautiously given the risk of hurting his failing body yet again, he will be able to contribute anything at all—not even anything of note. I think it’s very possible that he doesn’t even see the field for Brazil at any point this summer. Perhaps at most he gets a few courtesy minutes at the end of what will hopefully be a blowout win over Haiti, and he may well not be fit enough even for that.

And, yes, I know I just advocated for his inclusion in my last column, and the reasons I gave there are part of why, even now, I’d wait a bit before cutting him. We can cut injured players until June 12, 24 hours before the Morocco game, and if we’ve committed this far, we might as well wait a little longer. Whoever we brought in to replace Neymar would also be a fringe element of the squad, and while there are a couple of players I might like to see brought in, it’s doubtful they could have any more impact on Brazil than could Neymar. Plus, perhaps someone else might have to be cut and thus open the door for the likes of Éderson or João Pedro.

And, I dunno, maybe I’ve gotten a little of the cult Kool-Aid on me. Anyways, we play Panama at the Maracanã tomorrow before setting off for the US, where we play one more preparatory friendly next Saturday against Egypt. For those interested, Brazil will be based in northern New Jersey, training at the NY Red Bulls training facility in Morristown. Given I haven’t managed to get tickets to any of their World Cup games yet (i.e. I’m not willing to pay nine-hundred-plus dollars for the privilege), I may try and cheer them on in training instead.

Brazil vs. Panama

Maracanã, Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil, May 31, 2026

Kickoff: 5:30 PM EST / 6:30 PM BRT / 11:30 PM GMT

US TV/Streaming: None

Starting XI: Alisson; Wesley, Bremer, Léo Pereira, Alex Sandro; Casemiro, Bruno Guimarães; Matheus Cunha, Raphinha, Vini Junior, Luiz Henrique.

Unavailable: Neymar, Gabriel Magalhães, Gabriel Martinelli, Marquinhos. (The former is injured; the latter three just played in the Champions League final.)

Prediction: Panama have sprung the occasional surprise in CONCACAF, and our last two friendlies against them ended in scores of 1-1 and 2-0, so another 2-0 win seems like a safe prediction, but frankly, I hope we’re starting the World Cup push with enough pizzazz to at least score three or four goals in this one.

Where Is Brazil Heading Into 2026?

It is February 2026, and the Brazil national team slumbers still through international football’s comically long (northern hemisphere) winter hibernation. The memories of the Seleção’s last games in November have begun to fade; it is still a little too early to be thinking too hard about the upcoming end-of-March games against France and Croatia. And yet, it is beyond time to be worrying about what the heck will happen at the World Cup in June.

More so than in the leadup to any other World Cup I can remember, it is wildly unclear what, if anything, we should expect from Brazil this summer. The entire cycle since Qatar 2022 has been an unmitigated disaster, with the scandal-ridden CBF administration thrusting one incompetent coach after another into the Seleção job1 to the tune of several historic losses—right up until, somehow, just before his rampant corruption and comical mismanagement finally toppled him, federation president Ednaldo Rodrigues actually managed to sign Carlo Ancelotti as Brazil’s new coach.

Signing one of the best coaches of the 21st century understandably lifted the general mood. Brazil’s results have improved since Ancelotti took over, the team officially qualified for the World Cup with games to spare (though things might still have been hairy if not for the expansion of the World Cup to 48 teams, which increased the number of automatic qualifying spots in CONMEBOL from four to six), and the draw put us in a very winnable group with a potentially clear path through the knockout rounds until (checks notes) oh great, a possible quarterfinal rematch with Croatia.

But I want to delay worrying about that for just a little longer. Instead, I’ll be kicking off 2026 by digging into the current state of the Seleção and the burning questions still surrounding the team ahead of the World Cup.

And what better place to begin than:

So how is Carlo Ancelotti doing?

Is it fair to feel a bit concerned?

Continue reading