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Gabriel Martinelli scores 96th minute winner for Brazil to knock Japan out of World Cup

Tactical report, final score, events, and key fantasy impact for Brazil vs Japan.

Final Score

2 - 1

Brazil vs Japan

Tactical Story

Substitute Gabriel Martinelli scored a stoppage-time winner as Brazil snatched a place in the round of 16 of the World Cup with a 2-1 win over Japan in Houston. Carlo Ancelotti's side were stunned when Japan took the lead with a superb strike from Kaishu Sano after 29 minutes but replied when Casemiro atoned for a poor first-half performance with a fine header. The game appeared to be heading towards extra time after a tense final period but Martinelli, sent on by Ancelotti on 66 minutes, capped the fightback after being played in by Bruno Guimarães.

It was harsh on an obstinate Japan side, who were chasing their country's first World Cup knockout win, but Brazil finished strongly after a lethargic first-half display. Japan were measured throughout, sitting deep and allowing Brazil to control possession early on. The South Americans found it difficult to create openings but did have an early chance as a Guimaraes shot was deflected behind and Matheus Cunha had an effort pushed wide by Zion Suzuki.

Japan's only opportunity in the opening stages came from a free-kick after Junya Ito was felled by Casemiro but Daichi Kamada fired into the wall. Sano, booked early on after catching Vinícius Júnior late, escaped further punishment for a clumsy challenge on Cunha. That was to prove controversial as Sano gave Japan the lead just before the half-hour.

The Mainz midfielder seized on Danilo's loose pass on halfway and powered past Casemiro before burying a low shot beyond Alisson Becker from outside the box. Brazil were rocked and initially reduced to tame long-range efforts from Vinícius and Cunha in response, but Ancelotti's half-time adjustments prompted a change of tempo. Guimaraes tested Suzuki with a strong header and Casemiro had an even better chance moments later but planted his header against Takehiro Tomiyasu on the line when he seemed certain to score.

Ito's clearance led to a quick Japan counter-attack but it came to nothing. Casemiro made no mistake when he got another chance on 56 minutes, firmly heading past Suzuki at the back post from a Gabriel cross. Japan were reeling and Vinicius almost put Brazil ahead when he weaved his way through the area and attempted to flick over Suzuki, but the keeper just managed to touch onto the post.

Japan recovered their composure and held Brazil back for long periods in a tight ending but Brazil eventually found a way through. Five minutes of stoppage time had elapsed when Guimaraes slipped in Martinelli and he bent a shot past Suzuki.

⏱️ Match TimelineLive Events

29'
Goal - Carlo Ancelotti

Carlo Ancelotti's side were stunned when Japan took the lead with a superb strike from Kaishu Sano after 29 minutes but replied when Casemiro atoned for a poor first-half performance with a fine header.

🔔
66'
Match Event

The game appeared to be heading towards extra time after a tense final period but Martinelli, sent on by Ancelotti on 66 minutes, capped the fightback after being played in by Bruno Guimarães.

⚠️
56'
Chance - Casemiro

Casemiro made no mistake when he got another chance on 56 minutes, firmly heading past Suzuki at the back post from a Gabriel cross.

🔔
90+'
Match Event

Five minutes of stoppage time had elapsed when Guimaraes slipped in Martinelli and he bent a shot past Suzuki.

Key Turning Point

Goal! Brazil 0, Japan 1. Kaishu Sano (Japan) right footed shot from outside the box to the bottom left corner following a fast break.

Player of the Match

Trophy

Gabriel Martinelli (Brazil)

Impact Performance

Group Impact

Brazil secure all three points to boost their position in Group FIFA World Cup, while Japan look to bounce back in their next fixture.

Tactical Takeaways

Kaishu Sano, Gabriel Martinelli rewarded fantasy managers with goal returns, while key playmakers picked up assists.

Next Fixtures

Next for Brazil

No more known upcoming fixtures.

Next for Japan

No more known upcoming fixtures.

Pre-match File

Keep the original scouting file with the final analysis so the match reads as one evolving page rather than separate preview and report entries.

Match Metadata

Stage
Round of 32
Date
June 29, 12:00 PM CDT
Venue
NRG Stadium, Houston, Texas

Fixture details can move, so check the final schedule before kickoff.

Winner Plays Who

Quarter-final route

Winner of Côte d'Ivoire vs Norway

The winner moves into the top-right quarter-final. This block stays compact on purpose: use the bracket pillar for the full tree and the linked fixture for the paired branch.

Style Clash

Brazil bring 4 tournament matches, 9 goals for, 2 against; Japan bring 4 tournament matches, 8 goals for, 5 against. The tactical contrast is Brazil utilizes a dynamic, high-tempo attack centered on Vinícius Júnior’s individual brilliance and clinical finishing, frequently exploiting space behind defensive lines through rapid transitions. The team relies on creative playmaking from Bruno Guimarães and Lucas Paquetá to unlock defenses, while demonstrating late-game resilience through effective tactical substitutions. Against that, Japan's defensive read is Japan maintained a disciplined defensive structure, frequently sitting deep to absorb pressure and relying on goalkeeper Zion Suzuki to make critical interventions in high-stakes moments. Despite this organized approach, the team struggled to prevent late-game concessions, ultimately failing to keep a clean sheet across their four tournament matches.

Match Intelligence Board

First 15

What to Watch in the First 15 Minutes

First checkpoint: whether Brazil can establish Brazil early read: whether Casemiro has control around him or Brazil's attackers leave the midfield chasing counters, or whether Japan force the opening into Japan early read: whether Japan's wing-backs and wide attackers pin opponents back or have to defend too deep. The first substitutions and any late lineup changes should be read against the likely starters: Alisson, Gabriel Magalhaes, Douglas Santos for Brazil; Zion Suzuki, Jacob Widell Zetterstrom, Yukinari Sugawara for Japan.

Duel

Key Duel

Vinícius Júnior in Brazil's main attacking lane vs Wataru Endo around Japan's defensive screen. Watch whether Casemiro: Vinicius or Raphinha isolating a full-back after Ancelotti has finally balanced the platform. can pull Japan out of shape before Wataru Endo: A second-half shape change that turns patient defending into a sudden three-goal surge. changes the field position.

Upset Path

The Upset Path

Japan's upset path is to keep the match narrow long enough for one repeatable weapon to matter. The risk for Brazil is not reputation; it is whether their weakest tournament pattern shows up under knockout pressure: The front-four version can become shockingly unbalanced if the forwards do not press, track and protect Casemiro.

Fantasy

Fantasy Teaser

Start with likely minutes and role security rather than reputation. Estevao is the first Brazil check; Kaoru Mitoma is the first Japan check. Confirmed lineup news should override any pre-match lean.

Prediction

Prediction Lens

Brazil are the lean on current team profile and group-stage evidence, but this should be treated as a match-script read rather than certainty. Japan have a live path if their defensive shape survives the first pressure wave.

Neutral Watch

What to Watch if You Are a Neutral Fan

Brazil bring Brazil arrive with history pressing on them: 2026 is both a return to 1994 soil and a test of whether glamour can accept discipline; Japan answer with Japan's identity is now strategic confidence: they do not just play fast, they solve games in real time. For a neutral, the early tell is simple: First checkpoint: whether Brazil can establish Brazil early read: whether Casemiro has control around him or Brazil's attackers leave the midfield chasing counters, or whether Japan force the opening into Japan early read: whether Japan's wing-backs and wide attackers pin opponents back or have to defend too deep. Brazil-Japan hinge: Vinícius Júnior in Brazil's main attacking lane vs Wataru Endo around Japan's defensive screen. Watch whether Casemiro: Vinicius or Raphinha isolating a full-back after Ancelotti has finally balanced the platform. can pull Japan out of shape before Wataru Endo: A second-half shape change that turns patient defending into a sudden three-goal surge. changes the field position.

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