Morocco grabbed the initiative with the most ferocious opening of the tournament: 21′ Ismael Saibari tucks it in (his first World Cup goal), by which point Morocco had already fired off 12 shots in the first 30 minutes. Brazil didn't panic — 32′ Vinícius Júnior, after a one-two with Bruno Fernandes on the left, cut inside and drove a right-footed shot past Bounou (his 10th international goal) to level it, 1-1 at the break. Both sides eased off in the second half with few chances; late on Alisson made a double reflex save to keep the draw. A point apiece.
| Metric | 🇧🇷 Brazil | 🇲🇦 Morocco | One-line read |
|---|---|---|---|
| Possession | 48% | 44% | Neither side truly in control — the headline game became an open, back-and-forth tug-of-war, unlike the pre-match expectation of Brazil dominating the ball |
| Shots / on target | 12 / 5 | 14 / 4 | Morocco edged the shot count, but 12 of those came in the first 30 minutes; they went quiet after |
| Shot distribution | Even across the match | 12 shots in first 30′ | Morocco are the "opening-storm" type, Brazil grew steadier as the game wore on — two different approaches to game management |
| High-intensity pressing | — | Saibari 100 pressures | Saibari's 100 pressures in one match matched the tournament high — Morocco lean on physical pressing rather than possession |
| Key saves | Alisson late double save | — | There's an element of luck in Brazil's point; the keeper delivered his value |
| Referee / discipline | Referee Slavko Vinčić (Slovenia) · no penalties, duels kept under control | The feared penalty variable never materialized; the headline game was refereed with restraint | |
| Pre-match thesis | Result | Note |
|---|---|---|
| Brazil to win (implied ≈59%) | ✗ Off | 1-1 draw. Brazil didn't even take the win; win probability was overstated |
| Market's "win is fine, by two is hard" (-1.5 only 2.30) | ✓ Hit | Not only no two-goal win — not even a one-goal win; the line's caution on the handicap was entirely correct |
| Morocco's transition kill is repeatable (2-1 in 2023) | ✓ Hit | Saibari scored from an early high press; the path read was accurate |
| Hakimi vs Vinícius — whoever wins sets the tone | ~ Split | Vinícius delivered his individual value with the goal, but Morocco's right flank wasn't blown open; overall a wash |
| More goals in the second half (VSiN's main play) | ✗ Off | Both goals came in the first half; zero in the second |
One of the highest-grade conversations of the group stage: squad values of €1.135bn vs €488m, FIFA #5 vs #7. This is not the usual "giant vs minnow" — Morocco reeled off 19 straight international wins from June 2024 to December 2025, swept African qualifying 8-0, and is the team that beat Brazil 2-1 in a 2023 friendly. But both arrive carrying problems: Brazil is without Neymar for this match (calf; in the squad but missed both warm-ups), and Rodrygo/Estêvão withdrew injured; Morocco's losses are heavier — Aguerd and Ezzalzouli are out for the tournament, Mazraoui's shoulder is a game-time decision, and after Regragui resigned in March, U20 world-champion coach Ouahbi took over on short notice. The odds imply Brazil at ≈59%, but the market keeps stressing one thing: a win, fine; winning by two, hard (Brazil -1.5 at just 2.30).
🆕 Neymar is a game-time decision (calf discomfort, game-time doubtful); if he misses out, Igor Thiago starts as the centre-forward. 🔑 Brazil lose their most creative final pass, replaced by a target-man style, so the way to break down Morocco's low block shifts from "individual unlocking" to "crosses + second balls".
⚠ Morocco's Aguerd (pubalgia) confirmed out of the predicted XI, their best centre-back missing; Mazraoui (shoulder injury) a doubt at left-back.
Odds: Brazil 1.60 (-167) / draw 3.90 (+290) / Morocco 5.00 (+400); predicted Brazil XI: Alisson; Wesley, Marquinhos… Sources: RotoWire · ESPN
The 34-year-old Neymar earned his first call-up under Ancelotti, but a grade-2 calf strain kept him out of both warm-ups and he's expected to miss the opener; per consensus reporting, his realistic return window is the second group game vs Haiti on June 19. Earlier, Rodrygo and Estêvão both withdrew from the tournament injured, and right-back Wesley's injury withdrawal brought Atalanta midfielder Ederson into the squad.
Morocco's injuries cut deeper than Brazil's: first-choice centre-back Nayef Aguerd (groin) and winger Ezzalzouli (knee) are out for the tournament; Mazraoui's shoulder makes him doubtful, decided at kickoff. Up front, El Kaabi — 18 goals in the Greek league — leads the line, with Rahimi expected to fill the left wing. Note: VSiN's earlier projected XI still includes Aguerd, conflicting with the Sports Mole update; we follow the later information and flag it unverified.
Regragui — who took Morocco to the 2022 semi-finals and won the 2025 AFCON (awarded 3-0 after Senegal's walk-off while trailing 0-1 in the final, a disputed coronation) — resigned in March. Successor Ouahbi coached the 2025 U20 World Cup winners and has gone 3 wins, 2 draws in 5 matches in charge (4-0 vs Madagascar on 6/2, 1-1 vs Norway last weekend).
FIFA appointed Slavko Vinčić, with assistants Klančnik/Kovačič. Available data: 444 career matches, 1819 yellows, 39 reds (about 4.1 yellows/game), 88 penalties (0.27/game, roughly 1 every 3 Champions League matches); 2.43 cards/game in the 2025/26 Champions League. He refereed the 2024 Champions League final (Real Madrid vs Dortmund) — Vinícius scored in a final under his whistle. No traceable history with the Brazil/Morocco national teams (no sample).
| Change | Projected | Official | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|---|
| Brazil RB | Danilo | Ibáñez (CB filling in) | Danilo benched; Ancelotti uses a defensive centre-back at RB — intent is to lock Hakimi's channel, not to overlap |
| Brazil LB | Alex Sandro | Douglas Santos | Another veteran full-back dropped; the left side also turns defensive — the whole back line tightens |
| Brazil striker | Igor Thiago / Cunha | Igor Thiago | Suspense resolved: a target man — breaking the low block via crosses + second balls, not Cunha's dropping link-play |
| Morocco holder | Amrabat | Bouaddi (Lille prospect) | Ball-winning experience yields to mobility and progression; the new coach puts his faith in the U20 generation into the XI |
| Morocco striker | El Kaabi | Saibari (dropping false 9) | No pure target man — dropping + second-phase link instead, the very DNA of that 2023 2-1 transition kill |
| Morocco LB | Mazraoui (shoulder doubt) | Mazraoui | Passed his shoulder check and starts — the left side is not forced to downgrade, a plus for Morocco (unverified item cleared) |
| The rest | Brazil 8/11, Morocco's framework match the projection | Both sides' core is still the projected "Plan A" (Aguerd confirmed out, Diop+Riad CB pairing as projected) | |
| Metric | 🇧🇷 Brazil | 🇲🇦 Morocco |
|---|---|---|
| FIFA ranking | #5 (some sources #6 · unverified) | #7 (some sources #8 · unverified) |
| Total squad value | €1.135bn (€43.67m per player) | €488m |
| Qualifying | 5th in CONMEBOL (8W 4D 6L, incl. a 0-1 to Bolivia) | 8 wins from 8 in Africa, first African side to qualify |
| Recent form | 3 straight wins: beat Croatia, 6-2 Panama, 2-1 Egypt (11-4 aggregate) | 19 straight international wins 2024.6–2025.12; 33W 10D 2L in 45 since 2023 |
| 1X2 odds (bet365) | 1.57 (implied ≈59%) | 5.25 (≈18%) · Draw 4.00 (≈23%) |
| Handicap | Brazil -1.5 @2.30 / Morocco +1.5 @1.57; Brazil -1 @2.15 — the market doesn't believe in "win by two" | |
| O/U 2.5 | Over 1.91–2.00 / Under 1.77–1.85 (the under is fancied) | |
| Head-to-head | 2023.3 friendly: Morocco 2-1 Brazil; last competitive meeting was Brazil 3-0 at the 1998 World Cup. Brazil is 7-1 vs African teams at World Cups (only loss: 0-1 Cameroon, 2022) | |
| Who | Role | View / Pick | Direction |
|---|---|---|---|
| Alex Blowers | VSiN | More second-half goals @2.10: a probing first half, then Brazil's bench depth grinds late | Brazil · late |
| Jon Eimer | SportsLine (31-13 in UCL) | Under 2.5 goals: both structures prioritize not losing first | Under |
| Sports Mole | Prediction outlet | Brazil 3-1 — the boldest scoreline on the board | Brazil big |
| Squawka | Data outlet | Brazil win, open game | Brazil win |
| Yahoo / Juvefc | Prediction outlets | Brazil win + Over 2.5 + BTTS | Brazil + over |
| Racing Post | UK stalwart | Brazil win @1.69; also tips Raphinha to score | Brazil win |
| Sportytrader | Prediction site | Both teams to score (BTTS Yes) | Morocco to score |
| AI panel · ChatGPT | NYSportsDay three models | Contrarian cushion: Morocco +1.5 — "Brazil wins, but not by two" | Morocco +1.5 |
| AI panel · Claude | Same | Brazil ML (94% consensus across a 10-model ensemble) | Brazil win |
| AI panel · Gemini | Same | Under 2.5 goals | Under |
| Dimers model | Quant | Brazil 55.9%, under 57%, most likely score 1-0 (14.4%) | Brazil narrow |
| Book | Brazil win | Draw | Morocco win |
|---|---|---|---|
| bet365 | 1.57 | 4.00 | 5.25 |
| Lucky Rebel | 1.63 | 4.10 | 6.00 |
| FanDuel | 1.65 | 3.80 | 5.50 |
| BetOnline (VSiN line) | 1.69 | 3.75 | 5.50 |
| Market | Brazil | Draw | Morocco |
|---|---|---|---|
| Polymarket / Kalshi this match | ≈58.5% | ≈24.5% | ≈17.5% |
| Polymarket Group C winner | 71.5% | Morocco 20.5% | |
| Books, Group C winner | 1.32 (-310, opened -350) | Morocco 5.00-5.50 · Scotland 11-13 · Haiti 101+ | |
| Player | Position/Club | Recent / Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Vinícius Jr | Left winger / Real Madrid | Value ≈€150m+; 16 goals 5 assists in La Liga this season; the duel with Hakimi is the most expensive on the pitch |
| Raphinha | Right winger / Barcelona | 13 goals 3 assists in La Liga this season, Brazil's top scorer of the recent cycle; lines up against a possibly downgraded Moroccan left side |
| Igor Thiago | Striker / Brentford | 25 Premier League goals (a single-season record for a Brazilian); competing with Cunha to start — Ancelotti says "decided", hand unshown |
| Alisson | Goalkeeper / Liverpool | Locked-in starter; Morocco's transition kill goes straight at his one-on-ones |
| Player | Position/Club | Recent / Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Achraf Hakimi (C) | Right-back / PSG | 11 goals 14 assists last season, Champions League winner, African Footballer of the Year; recovered to play the full 120 minutes of the UCL final — at full strength |
| Brahim Díaz | Attacking mid/winger / Real Madrid | 14 goals in 26 caps (scored just last weekend); faces club teammate Vinícius |
| Ayoub El Kaabi | Striker / Olympiacos | 18 goals in 25 Greek-league matches; En-Nesyri not in the projected XI |
| Yassine Bounou | Goalkeeper / Al-Hilal | 2022 penalty-saving hero; the backbone of Morocco's "lose by no more than one" script |
| Dimension | 🇧🇷 Brazil | 🇲🇦 Morocco | Meaning |
|---|---|---|---|
| Corners won per game | 5.2 (last 10) | 6.0 (last 7) | Morocco's figure is inflated by weaker opponents; likely falls vs Brazil |
| Corners conceded per game (opponent) | 3.3 | 2.0 | Sitting deep, Morocco leak fewer corners — compresses the total |
| Attacking focus (wide / central / high press) | Heavily wide: Vinícius/Raphinha bursts + high crossing volume, the main corner driver | Mid-low block, counters down Hakimi's right channel; corners from transition, not siege | Brazil generate corners by sustained siege, Morocco by sporadic counters |
| Set-piece threat | Medium: average aerial height, decent second-ball follow-up | Higher: 2022 semi-final run built on set-pieces and aerial defending; attacking corners are dangerous | Morocco convert efficiently, but get fewer corner chances here |
| Corner-dominance lean | Possession + crossing = likely lead on corner count | Ceding the ball = voluntarily giving up corner volume | Brazil's edge on the corner count is structural |
Mainstream previews publish no explicit dedicated corner line, only team corner averages plus the qualitative note that "Brazil's last 5 games all finished <10.5 corners." From this we give an inferred line (to verify): total corners Over/Under 9.5, conventionally about Over 1.90 / Under 1.90 (European decimal, estimate · to verify); corner handicap Brazil -1.5 (a line, kept as-is), about 1.90 / 1.90 (estimate · to verify). Book/source: team corner averages from SportsGambler pre-match data; the <10.5 note appears in the SportsGambler/Squawka previews.