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2026 FIFA World Cup
11JUN

Neymar misses both Brazil World Cup warm-ups

3 min read
09:02UTC

Neymar sat out both of Brazil's pre-tournament friendlies with a grade-2 calf strain. Ancelotti is targeting match two against Haiti on 19 June and says he has no regrets.

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Key takeaway

Neymar missed both Brazil friendlies with a calf strain, and Ancelotti is holding him back for the Haiti match.

Neymar sat out both of Brazil's pre-tournament friendlies, the win over Panama on 31 May and the match against Egypt on 6 June, with a grade-2 calf strain 1. A grade-2 strain is a moderate muscle tear, the middle of a three-level scale, and the same injury whose scan in May put Brazil's 13 June opener in doubt .

Carlo Ancelotti, the Italian managing Brazil, named Neymar in the final 26 over Rodrygo and Thiago Silva , and is now defending that call. He is targeting the second group match, against Haiti on 19 June, rather than the opener against Morocco on 13 June, and told ESPN he has no regrets about taking an injured forward. Best-case recovery returns Neymar around 11 June, two days before Morocco, which is too tight to risk a 34-year-old calf in a tournament opener.

Ancelotti is betting his timeline against the group stage. Hold Neymar to match two and Brazil protect their most fragile asset for the stage where the group is likely already shaped; rush him to the opener and one re-tear ends his tournament before it starts. Ancelotti has chosen the patient path, and the squad has given him reason to: the question of whether Brazil can score without Neymar was answered the same week, in Rio.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Brazil's most famous player, Neymar, was picked for the World Cup squad but has missed both of the team's practice matches because of a calf injury. A grade-2 calf strain is a partial muscle tear, painful enough to stop him running at full speed, but not a complete rupture. The team doctor sets a recovery timeline, and the coach, Carlo Ancelotti, says he is aiming to have Neymar available for Brazil's second match, against Haiti on 19 June. Neymar is 34 and has not played for Brazil since October 2023, when he tore a knee ligament. He spent most of the past two years recovering, and has picked up two more muscle injuries since then. Some sports doctors say that pattern of repeated muscle injuries suggests his body has not fully returned to tournament condition. Ancelotti says he has no regrets about including him.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Neymar's 31-month international absence following his October 2023 ACL, followed by his return to club football at Al-Hilal without recovering full competitive fitness before the World Cup call-up, created the physiological conditions for the calf injury.

Extended periods of reduced training load after ACL reconstruction are associated with compensatory muscular patterns: players unconsciously shift load onto adjacent muscle groups, increasing soft-tissue injury risk in the calf, hamstring and adductor chain.

Ancelotti's selection of Neymar over Rodrygo (who was fit) and Thiago Silva (who brought defensive depth and leadership) committed Brazil to managing a player whose return to form was still structurally incomplete at the point of squad announcement. Neymar's calf strain in late May 2026 followed directly from that incomplete return, with no full competitive minutes at Al-Hilal between his 2025 adductor strain and the World Cup call-up.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    Neymar's repeat soft-tissue profile (ACL in October 2023, adductor in 2025, calf in late May 2026) increases the probability that the 19 June return target slips. Missing both group matches would reduce Brazil's attacking threat without eliminating it, given the 6-2 Panama win showed the squad's depth.

  • Consequence

    Ancelotti's selection of Neymar over Rodrygo removed a fit, in-form attacker from Brazil's group-stage options. If Neymar misses more than the Morocco opener, Brazil plays the group stage with a thinner attacking rotation than the squad Rodrygo would have provided.

First Reported In

Update #13 · USA settle, the machinery does not

ESPN· 3 Jun 2026
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