Japan led at halftime and looked set to pull off another World Cup upset, but Brazil recovered to win 2-1 at NRG Stadium in Houston, advancing to the Round of 16 of the 2026 World Cup. Casemiro drew Brazil level on 56 minutes, and Gabriel Martinelli sealed the comeback in stoppage time. Carlo Ancelotti’s side dominated possession at 69% and generated 19 shots, yet needed the final whistle to confirm a result that looked far less certain than the stats suggested.

Key Moments
- 29′, K. Sano breaks the deadlock for Japan with a normal goal, rewarding the Samurai Blue’s disciplined defensive shape and sending them into the break ahead against the five-time world champions.
- 46′, Brazil substitute Lucas Paqueta comes on at the start of the second half, signaling Ancelotti’s intent to inject more creativity in the build-up.
- 56′, Casemiro equalizes for Brazil, converting to make it 1-1 and shifting momentum firmly toward the Selecao.
- 66′, Brazil bring on Matheus Cunha as Japan also make a double substitution, introducing R. Doan and K. Nakamura in search of fresh legs to hold the draw.
- 90′, Gabriel Martinelli scores in the 90th minute to complete the comeback and send Brazil through, moments after Casemiro is withdrawn from the field.
Tactical Breakdown
Brazil controlled the match from nearly every measurable angle. Ancelotti’s 4-3-3 generated 19 total shots, 7 on target, and held 69% of the ball across 90 minutes. Their 92% pass accuracy from 682 attempts reflected a side that dictated tempo without ever being troubled defensively. Yet an expected-goals figure of 1.69 xG against Japan’s 0.23 tells its own story: Brazil created enough to win comfortably but executed poorly until the game’s final stages.
The halftime substitution of Lucas Paqueta was the clearest tactical shift. Japan’s 3-4-2-1 had pressed effectively in the first half and disrupted Brazil’s rhythm, forcing Ancelotti to act early. Paqueta’s introduction opened channels centrally, and within 10 minutes of the restart Casemiro had equalized. The introduction of Matheus Cunha just after the hour mark added a second injection of energy, and it was that sustained second-half pressure that eventually broke Japan’s resistance in the 90th minute.
Japan’s game plan was clear and coherent for 45 minutes: sit deep in a 3-4-2-1, limit Brazil to perimeter shots, and exploit any transition opportunity. Kaishu Sano’s 29th-minute goal validated that approach. But with only 5 total shots and 2 on target for the match, Japan had no plan B once Brazil adjusted at halftime. The Samurai Blue conceded 13 fouls, picked up three yellow cards, and gradually ran out of the discipline needed to sustain the low block through 90 minutes.
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Knockout results, aggregate scores across legs; winners in bold, penalty shootouts noted.
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Verdict
Brazil move into the Round of 16 of the 2026 World Cup, though this performance offers Ancelotti limited comfort. A first-half capitulation against a Japan side ranked well below them underscored the Selecao’s vulnerability to organized low-block opposition. Japan, despite the defeat, demonstrated again that they can hurt any team in the world for extended periods, as they showed at previous World Cups. Their tournament ends here, but the manner of the performance ensures Moriyasu’s side leave Houston with their reputation intact.