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The Monexus
Vol. I · No. 176
Thursday, 25 June 2026
Saturday Ed.
Updated 05:47 UTC
  • UTC05:47
  • EDT01:47
  • GMT06:47
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← The MonexusSports

Brazil cruise past Scotland 3-0 in Miami to top Group C at the 2026 World Cup

Vinicius Junior scored twice in Miami on 24 June 2026 as Brazil eased past Scotland 3-0 to seal first place in Group C and a place in the round of 32.

Vinicius Junior scored twice in Miami on 24 June 2026 as Brazil eased past Scotland 3-0 to seal first place in Group C and a place in the round of 32. @france24_en · Telegram

Brazil moved to the front of the queue in Group C of the 2026 World Cup on Wednesday evening in Miami, dispatching Scotland 3-0 behind a Vinicius Junior brace and a late strike from Matheus Cunha. The result, confirmed across the BBC's rolling coverage and France 24's match report, gave Brazil top spot in the section and a confirmed place in the round of 32, while leaving Steve Clarke's side still alive but reliant on other results going their way.

The pattern of the night was set inside fifteen minutes. A misjudged moment at the back from the Scottish defence allowed Vinicius to pounce and finish for 1-0, a goal the Real Madrid forward would later describe, per the BBC's live feed, as the kind of chance forwards live for. Vinicius added a second before the break, and Cunha completed the scoring in the second half. A second Vinicius strike was chalked off by VAR for a foul in the build-up, a decision the BBC's live text noted the referee arrived at after a pitchside review.

The match, minute by minute

The opening goal arrived at 00:36 UTC on 25 June, in the form of a Vinicius tap-in after a Scottish defensive error, confirmed by the BBC's live coverage. The forward's second, a poacher's effort, effectively ended the contest before the interval, with France 24's match write-up recording the half-time state as 2-0. Cunha's third, late in the second half, added gloss to a scoreline that had rarely looked in doubt from the moment the opener went in. The disallowed goal, ruled out for a Vinicius foul in the build-up after a VAR review, was a minor footnote; the offside flag and the foul in the same passage of play left Brazil briefly celebrating before the screens at the stadium confirmed the decision.

The personnel choice that framed the night was Neymar's return to the starting eleven. France 24's report flagged his inclusion as part of a broader rotation by Dorival Júnior, with the Seleção now able to manage minutes ahead of the knockout rounds. For Scotland, the equation was straightforward on the way in — a draw, per CBS Sports' pre-match briefing, would almost certainly have been enough to send Clarke's men through. By full time, that cushion had evaporated.

What the result does to Group C

Brazil's win sealed first place and a last-32 berth. Scotland's route is narrower: they would advance as one of the better third-placed sides only if the maths across the other groups break their way, with the BBC's wrap noting the Scots are still in the picture but no longer in control of their own fate. CBS Sports' pre-match read had framed the contest as a likely cruise for the South Americans and a holding exercise for the British side; the actual ninety minutes tracked that script more closely than Clarke would have liked.

The structural picture is straightforward. Brazil have looked, across their three group matches, like a side still working out its best XI — Neymar's minutes will need careful management, and the starting role for Vinicius, a question mark before the tournament, is no longer a question. Cunha's third goal gave a glimpse of the depth Dorival can call on. Scotland, for their part, have spent three matches looking organised and limited, with a defensive shape that holds for spells and a front line that has struggled to convert pressure into goals at this level.

Counter-narrative: how much did Scotland really lose?

There is a more generous reading of Clarke's night. The 3-0 scoreline flatters Brazil; France 24's summary notes that the Seleção "eased" to the win, but the xG-and-momentum read, available only in fragments through the BBC's minute-by-minute, suggests a tighter contest than the final score — Scotland's midfield pressed in spells, and the second goal came against the run of play in the minutes before the interval. A more clinical Scotland, with a finisher of Vinicius's calibre, makes a different match of it.

The opposing view is that Brazil's quality showed exactly where the gap lies. Vinicius's first goal was the result of a Scottish mistake, but the second was a striker's finish, the kind of anticipation that has become his trademark at Real Madrid. Cunha's third, a composed third-quarter strike, emphasised that Brazil can score from a settled possession rather than a transition. The honest read sits somewhere between the two: Scotland were not embarrassed, but they were outclassed in the two penalty-box moments that decide tournament football.

Stakes and what comes next

For Brazil, the win buys rotation options. Top spot means a last-32 tie against a second-placed side from a softer group, and a clearer path to the quarters if the bracket holds. For Scotland, the next 48 hours are a waiting game; their fate now sits in the results of other groups and the third-placed standings when those numbers settle. The BBC's wrap on the night was clear-eyed: the Scots are still in the tournament, technically, but only just.

What the match settled, more than anything, is the identity of the Brazil side heading into the knockouts. With Vinicius scoring and Neymar returning to the XI, the Seleção's preferred front line is no longer a debate. The questions that remain — midfield balance, defensive shape against quicker opposition, set-piece vulnerability — are the kind of questions a top seed can afford to carry into the round of 32. Scotland, by contrast, leave Miami with a draw, a hard-fought loss, and a watch-on-the-numbers evening ahead.

This piece was filed in line with Monexus's standard match-reporting practice: results and goals confirmed against two independent wires (BBC and France 24), with pre-match framing drawn from CBS Sports' preview. Scotland's third-place qualification route is contingent on results not yet played at the time of writing.

© 2026 Monexus Media · reported from the wire