World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
Houston NRG Stadium, 95th minute. Martinelli kicks the ball into the Japanese goal. The Brazilian bench doesn't erupt in celebration; instead, they look more like a group of people just taken down from the gallows, gasping for breath. Bruno Guimarães with the assist, Martinelli with the shot. 2 1. The five time World Cup champions scrape through by the skin of their teeth, saved by a substitute in the dying seconds.
NRG Stadium, Houston, 95th minute. Martinelli slammed the ball into the Japanese net. The Brazilian bench didn't celebrate; they looked more like a group of people just cut down from the gallows, gasping for air. Bruno Guimarães with the assist, Martinelli with the finish. 2-1. The five-time World Cup champions, saved by a substitute in the dying seconds, clinging to life.
The medical report flashed red as early as the 29th minute. Sano Kaishu intercepted the ball, drove forward alone, and the entire Brazilian midfield seemed frozen in place, watching him fire a low shot from outside the box into the net. First-half possession: 68% to 32%. Passes: 359 to 166. Brazil had the ball. Japan had the knife.
Most Brazilian fans had no idea who Sano Kaishu was before the match. 25 years old, from Tsuyama, Okayama Prefecture. A defensive midfielder sold by Kashima Antlers to Mainz 05 in 2024 for €2.5 million plus add-ons. Transfermarkt now values him at €40 million. A 16x multiplier. Japanese fans call him "Sano Recovery." On that 29th-minute interception, solo run, and strike, he ground Brazil's pride into the dirt. A defensive midfielder scoring that goal? No luck involved. Pure muscle memory.
Moriyasu Hajime dropped two lines at his pre-match press conference in Houston. One: "Brazil are the top favorites to win; we are the dark horses." The other, more cutting: "A few years ago, Japan would have been an easy opponent for Brazil." The 33°C heat in Houston wilted Brazil's star power, but Japan's discipline wound up like a clockwork spring. Whether times have changed or not, over these 95 minutes, Brazil certainly didn't have it easy.
Japan's confidence had a ledger to back it up. October 2025, Ajinomoto Stadium, Tokyo. A friendly. Brazil led 2-0 at halftime, the script seemingly following routine. Then Japan scored three in 19 minutes: Minamino Takumi (52'), Nakamura Keito (62'), Ueda Ayase (71', header). 3-2. In 14 meetings, Japan's first-ever win over Brazil, coming back from 2-0 down, clean and clinical. That slap stung. Eight months later, in the World Cup round of 32, Japan stood before them again. Brazil hoped Tokyo was a fluke. They couldn't even manage a decent half.
Moriyasu's 3-4-2-1 dragged Ancelotti's 4-3-3 into the mud under the sweltering 33°C heat. Japan's high pressing intensity made Brazil stumble from the very start of their buildup. 68% possession, 359 passes—the stats sheet looked pretty, but the ball became meaningless sideways passing once it reached the final third. They worked the ball around like prayer beads, round and round, but couldn't find a gap.
Vinicius Jr. had scored four goals in three group-stage matches, becoming only the fifth Brazilian player in World Cup history to score in all three group games. The four before him: Jairzinho, Romário, Ronaldo, and Rivaldo. But in this match, the Real Madrid winger was isolated into a lonely island. Japan's three-man defense crowded the flanks; every time Vinicius got the ball, opponents were draped on him. Ancelotti's bet on a "new trident"—Vinicius, 19-year-old Bournemouth youngster Rayan, and Matheus Cunha—collectively stalled in the mud. Neymar sat the entire match on the bench. Ancelotti didn't bring him on to gamble; the coaching staff apparently felt the young legs starting were enough to run.
They were far from enough. Japanese goalkeeper Suzuki Zion rubbed salt in the wound. This mixed-race keeper, born in New Jersey with a Ghanaian father and Japanese mother, starter for Parma in Serie A. 72.7% save rate in the group stage, earning a 1-1 draw against Sweden with a string of miraculous saves. Without him, Japan wouldn't have made it to face Brazil.
In the 55th minute, Casemiro headed one in. The assist came from center-back Gabriel Magalhães. A 34-year-old defensive midfielder and a center-back. Two players whose job is to clean up at the back combined to level the score at 1-1. Vinicius, who netted four in the group stage, struggled all match on the wing. The new trident went silent when goals were needed most. It was the defensive midfielder and center-back who stepped up.
Look at the numbers on Brazil's generational transition. Total squad value: €928.2 million, 3.4 times Japan's €270.85 million. Vinicius's market valuation alone matched Japan's entire defensive line. Yet in the knockout stages, the scoreboard relied on a 34-year-old veteran's head and a substitute's flash of brilliance. Casemiro barely celebrated his goal. He knew better than anyone: this wasn't a go-ahead goal, it was a rescue goal. If they didn't equalize, the bill would fall squarely on the forwards.
Japan's total squad value: €270.85 million. Group stage: 5 points. Earned with a 2-2 draw against the Netherlands, a 4-0 win over Tunisia, and a hard-fought 1-1 against Sweden. Match after tough match, they made it to Houston. The goalkeeper gave everything, the defensive midfielder gave everything, the front line gave everything. 94 minutes of high-intensity pressing drained their stamina completely. In the final 60 seconds, their legs were gone. The defensive line loosened, plain and simple. The depth of the bench is a physical gap. €928.2 million vs €270.85 million. Ancelotti had substitutes like Martinelli to gamble on in the final minutes; Moriyasu had no equivalent card to play.
Moriyasu said before the match, "We are dark horse contenders to win the title." It sounded like a locker room pep talk. For 94 minutes, that statement came within a whisker of being true.
A team can play 94 minutes of excellent football, but one kick can erase everything. Japan was 60 seconds away from their second-ever victory over Brazil. 60 seconds away from a World Cup Round of 16 berth.
Brazil won. But a team that scored 7 and conceded 1 in the group stage had to be dragged to the 95th minute in the knockout round, surviving only on a substitute's last-gasp winner. The crown didn't fall, but it tilted. Ancelotti now has far more questions to answer than before the match.
BBC Sport, match report and lineup data
ESPN UK, first-half xG and tactical stats
Transfermarkt, Sano Kaishu player valuation and transfer records
FIFA.com, group stage schedule, scores, and standings
The Guardian, live match report
Yahoo Japan / Gekisaka, Moriyasu pre-match press conference transcript
The Paper, Brazil 3-0 Scotland group stage report (Rayan starting record)
USA Today, Brazil projected lineup vs Japan