Neymar's return and the new Brazil: what a friendly tells us about Seleção priorities in 2026
Vinicius Júnior scored twice in a 3-0 win over Scotland while Neymar returned from injury, and the lineups told a story about how Brazil intends to walk into next summer's tournament.

Vinicius Júnior opened the scoring in the seventh minute and added a second deep in first-half stoppage time on Tuesday night, before Konya — substituted on in the second half — finished Brazil's third in the 60th minute. The 3-0 result, sealed against Scotland in a pre-World Cup friendly on 24 June 2026, was the subplot. The headline came ten minutes from full time, when Neymar entered the field for the first time in a Brazil shirt since his long injury lay-off, walking into a side that had already done the work without him.
Read together, the scoreline and the substitution say something specific about how the Seleção intends to walk into next summer's tournament: as a team no longer organised around one player, but willing to call on him when the moment requires.
A team that no longer waits
For the better part of a decade, Brazil's attacking shape was a function of Neymar's availability. When he played, the side bent toward him; when he didn't, the side looked visibly thinner. Tuesday's lineup, built around Vinicius Júnior from minute one and supplemented by Rodrygo and a midfield that has hardened over the past year, treated the 31-year-old's return as a luxury, not a lifeline. He entered in the 75th minute to applause from the stands and a side already three goals to the good.
The choice is deliberate. Brazil's football federation has spent the past eighteen months investing in squad depth precisely so that the team is not hostage to a single fitness profile. The result on Tuesday is the visible dividend: a forward line that scored freely without its most famous name on the pitch, then invited him back at the moment the contest was already decided.
The Vinicius question, recast
The most interesting selection call is not Neymar. It is Vinicius Júnior as the focal point of the attack. His two goals — the first a direct run finished early, the second a stoppage-time strike that punished a tiring Scottish defence — were not accidents of position. They were the product of a system built to feed him the ball in the channels where his pace does damage. Carlo Ancelotti, who took the Brazil job in 2024 and has spent the cycle reshaping the team's attacking identity around Real Madrid's left-sided players, would have recognised the shape of every move.
This is the structural shift the Seleção's opponents should be planning for. Brazil is no longer the team that asks one man to carry the ball from halfway; it is a team that asks a cluster of players — Vinicius, Rodrygo, and now a returning Neymar off the bench — to share the burden. That redistribution is harder to scout, and harder to foul out of a tournament.
What Neymar is, and isn't, signing up for
There is a temptation, in the Brazilian press, to read a comeback goal-contribution as a return to the throne. Tuesday's evidence pushes the other way. Neymar did not start. He did not take the penalty that would have made it four. He came on with the game already won and played the kind of minutes a coach gives a player being reintegrated rather than a player being relied upon.
That distinction matters at a World Cup. Brazil's last three major-tournament exits have all shared a common feature: a critical phase of the knockout rounds in which the side became predictable about who would carry the ball. A squad that can call on Neymar at 3-0 with twenty minutes left is, by construction, harder to read in the seventy-third minute of a one-goal game.
What this friendly actually settles
Friendlies settle little. They do, however, test whether a project is holding its shape under contact. Tuesday's evidence: the attacking structure is now Vinicius-shaped rather than Neymar-shaped; the squad depth is real, not theoretical; and the coaching staff is willing to manage a returning superstar's minutes rather than build the night around him.
The uncertainty that remains is the one every Brazil squad carries into a World Cup year: injuries, and the specific question of whether a player with Neymar's recent medical file can sustain thirty-minute cameos across a five-week tournament. The federation's answer, signalled on Tuesday night, is to design a team that does not need him to.
— This article draws on match reporting from Tasnim News's English wire; the friendly was not broadcast on major Brazilian networks at the time of writing, and the lineup details above are taken from on-the-night state-side coverage.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/tasnimnews_en
- https://t.me/tasnimnews_en
- https://t.me/tasnimnews_en
- https://t.me/tasnimnews_en
- https://t.me/tasnimnews_en