Skip to content
You can now search across every topic, entity and event.What's new
2026 FIFA World Cup
14JUN

Neymar out as five squads file verdicts

3 min read
11:18UTC

Neymar is out of Brazil's opener and Marcelo Flores out of the tournament, but the United States and France got the clearances they needed, as the eve-of-kickoff medical attrition resolves against the biggest names.

SportDeveloping
Key takeaway

Neymar and Flores are out, but the United States and France won the clearances they needed before kickoff.

Neymar, Brazil's record scorer, is out of the 13 June opener against Morocco with a grade-2 calf strain and is targeting the Haiti fixture on 20 June, the heaviest of five federations' pre-tournament injury verdicts filed in the days before kickoff. The calf problem first flagged during the run-up has now been confirmed as serious enough to rule him out, though head coach Carlo Ancelotti kept him in the squad and leans on Vinicius Junior and Raphinha instead. 1

Canada lost Marcelo Flores for the whole tournament to a ruptured ACL, the anterior cruciate ligament in the knee, one day after naming him , and entered the 11 June squad lock with his replacement confirmed and defender Moise Bombito cleared after an earlier fitness dispute . For the United States, Chris Richards returned to full-contact training after twin ankle ligament tears and is expected to face Paraguay , with the squad-swap window closing on 11 June . France's William Saliba was cleared to play after head coach Didier Deschamps reversed a "very doubtful" back-injury assessment .

Germany completed the only straight swap, Lennart Karl out and Assan Ouedraogo in. The pattern across the five is the same: the deepest squads absorbed the worst news, with Brazil losing Neymar on top of Rodrygo, Estevao and Militao, while the federations with most to prove got the clearances they wanted.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

In the days before the tournament, five countries found out which of their key players were fit or unfit. The most impactful: Neymar, Brazil's record scorer, has a calf injury and will miss at least the first match. He is 34 and has just spent two and a half years recovering from a serious knee injury, and his body remains fragile. France's William Saliba, Arsenal's centre-back, was doubted by Deschamps as late as 9 June before being cleared to play. Canada's Marcelo Flores had his tournament ended entirely by a ruptured knee ligament. The United States' Chris Richards suffered torn ankle ligaments but returned to training just in time to be available. These last-minute fitness dramas are partly caused by the football calendar: club seasons in Europe end very late in May or early June, leaving barely two weeks before a summer World Cup. Players arrive at tournaments carrying fatigue that clubs would normally use the off-season to heal.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The eve-of-tournament injury concentration across five federations reflects a calendar structure that FIFPRO has contested at Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) since 2023: UEFA and the Premier League both refuse to move season-end dates to protect international windows.

The 2025-26 English Premier League season ended on 24 May, eleven days before Brazil's Egypt friendly, and 18 days before the World Cup opener. Players travelling to a June World Cup from English clubs complete roughly 55-60 competitive matches before the tournament's first whistle.

France's Saliba case illustrates a second structural issue: medical communication between club and national team doctors remains voluntary. Arsenal's medical staff assessed Saliba as a back-scare doubt in late May; the information reached Deschamps's medical team through informal channels rather than the FIFA player-release protocol, which creates the 'very doubtful' reversal that followed when the clubs' own physios shared imaging data directly.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    Neymar's grade-2 calf strain in a player with prior ACL history carries a 28-35% recurrence rate within six weeks per FIFPRO data, which would end his 2026 participation entirely.

  • Consequence

    Brazil open Group C against Morocco, the 2022 semi-finalists, without Neymar, Rodrygo, Estevao, and Militao: four of Ancelotti's first-choice attacking and defensive options. Morocco, with their full squad available, enter the fixture as effective co-favourites.

First Reported In

Update #18 · 0 Days to Go: the football finally starts

ESPN· 11 Jun 2026
Read original
Causes and effects
This Event
Neymar out as five squads file verdicts
The last fortnight of injury questions closes with the heaviest losses falling on the marquee players, reshaping three opening line-ups before a ball is kicked.
Different Perspectives
Football Supporters Europe / broadcast critics
Football Supporters Europe / broadcast critics
The VAR transparency failure in Santa Clara on 13 June arrives alongside Football Supporters Europe's active Article 102 complaint against FIFA on ticket pricing; the missing offside graphic adds a second accountability line, reinforcing the argument that FIFA's expanded referee powers require an equivalent expansion in public explanation.
Scotland national team
Scotland national team
John McGinn's deflected 28th-minute goal ended 36 years without a World Cup win and 28 years without a World Cup appearance; Scotland top Group C after one round and face Brazil next, a fixture that is already a live knockout indicator.
FIFA / Gianni Infantino
FIFA / Gianni Infantino
FIFA's three-hour delay in explaining the missing VAR graphic during Qatar vs Switzerland, and the technical-outage justification that followed, drew a live television rebuke from Gary Neville and added a governance failure to an institutional record already carrying active ethics complaints and US attorney-general subpoenas.
Canada Soccer
Canada Soccer
Cyle Larin's 78th-minute equaliser, 121 seconds after coming off the bench, ended a 40-year run of World Cup losses stretching across 1986 and 2022. The point is modest in table terms but historically significant for a federation hosting its first World Cup.
Mohamed Ouahbi / Morocco
Mohamed Ouahbi / Morocco
Ouahbi's senior international debut produced a dominant spell against Brazil before a crowd of 80,663 and a point the 2022 semi-finalists can build on. His squad's tactical cohesion under a new coach in a first match is the most credible signal that Morocco remain genuine contenders.
Carlo Ancelotti / Brazil
Carlo Ancelotti / Brazil
Ancelotti said his side were nervous after being held by Morocco; with Neymar targeting the Haiti fixture on 19 June, Brazil's next match is already against Scotland, who lead the group. The margin for error has closed on matchday one.