Skip to content
You can now search across every topic, entity and event.What's new
2026 FIFA World Cup
4JUL

Scotland top Group C, Brazil next

3 min read
10:34UTC

John McGinn scored his second decisive goal in two matches as Scotland beat Morocco 1-0 on 19 June, topping Group C before a 24 June decider against a Neymar-less Brazil.

SportDeveloping
Key takeaway

Scotland top Group C and face a Neymar-less Brazil on 24 June in a live qualification decider.

Scotland beat Morocco 1-0 at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough on 19 June, John McGinn scoring his second decisive goal in two matches after his winner against Haiti , the nation's first World Cup win since 1990 1. Scotland lead Group C on six points and now face Brazil on 24 June with the group on the line.

That fixture has tilted toward Scotland. Brazil sit on one point and remain without Neymar, ruled out of the entire group stage with a calf injury . Neymar will not travel to Philadelphia for the Haiti match and stays at Brazil's New Jersey base, though he trained briefly with teammates on Wednesday for the first time, with medical staff still targeting the knockout rounds rather than the group 2.

The absence reshapes the decider. Brazil's attack runs through Neymar's ability to create from deep, and without him the side has scored once in two matches against opponents Scotland would expect to match. A Scotland win over a Brazil missing its talisman would rank among the tournament's biggest upsets, and the format makes the stakes blunt: the group winner advances directly while Brazil now risk a group-stage exit they have not suffered since 1966.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Scotland are one of four teams in Group C of the 2026 World Cup, alongside Brazil, Morocco, and Haiti. They had not won a World Cup match for 36 years before this tournament, but have now won both of their group matches ; first against Haiti, and now against Morocco. John McGinn, Scotland's midfielder, scored the only goal against Morocco on 19 June at Gillette Stadium in Massachusetts. With six points from two games, Scotland are top of their group and need only a draw in their final match ; against Brazil on 24 June ; to qualify for the knockout rounds. Brazil are without their most famous player, Neymar, who is injured and will not play in the group stage. This makes the Scotland-Brazil match even more evenly balanced than it would normally be.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Scotland's structural advantage in Group C derives from two compounding factors. First, Brazil entered the tournament without Neymar for the group stage and drew their opening match, leaving them on one point ; a position that requires them to beat Scotland on 24 June to guarantee qualification, while Scotland only need a draw.

Second, Scotland's squad preparation under Steve Clarke has prioritised defensive structure and set-piece delivery over expansive attacking football. This approach is specifically effective against tournament teams like Morocco that rely on transition and individual quality in wide areas ; Brazil have more central attacking depth, but the fundamental tactical challenge Scotland will pose on 24 June is the same: compact shape, McGinn delivery from midfield, set-piece threat.

Morocco's failure to score in two matches is rooted in a dependency on wide spaces that Scotland's narrow defensive block consistently denied them.

What could happen next?
  • Opportunity

    A draw for Scotland against Brazil on 24 June guarantees their knockout qualification regardless of Morocco vs Haiti result ; removing the pressure of a must-win scenario.

  • Risk

    Brazil, under pressure needing a win, will likely play more openly against Scotland than their previous matches, potentially exposing Scotland's limited attacking depth.

First Reported In

Update #23 · Canada rout nine-man Qatar 6-0

ESPN· 19 Jun 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
Spain
Spain
Spain face France on Tuesday for the second semi-final place, the last unresolved tie in the bracket.
France
France
France already through to the other semi-final, await Tuesday's result against Spain to know who plays the England-Argentina winner in the final.
Switzerland
Switzerland
Switzerland reached their first World Cup quarter-final since 1954 and led Argentina before Breel Embolo's second yellow card left them a man down for the last half-hour. They expect the run to raise expectations for the next cycle rather than close a chapter.
Norway
Norway
Norway leaned on Erling Haaland to reach a first modern-era quarter-final, and he nearly took them further before a disallowed goal and England's late double ended the run. Their tournament closes as the best World Cup performance in the country's history.
Argentina national team
Argentina national team
Argentina broke down a 10-man Switzerland late, extending Scaloni's run of reaching every semi-final he has managed since 2019. Messi will make his first World Cup appearance against England, a fixture Argentine coverage framed around that unbroken run rather than the personal narrative.
England
England
England needed a 93rd-minute Bellingham winner to see off Norway, the third straight knockout tie settled in its closing stages rather than controlled. They travel to Atlanta as favourites but with Declan Rice a fitness doubt and Jarell Quansah suspended.