Brazil 1-1 Morocco — FIFA World Cup 2026: Saibari Stuns Selecao Before Vinicius Fires Back in Pulsating Group C Draw


Brazil and Morocco played out a dramatic 1-1 draw in their FIFA World Cup 2026 Group C opener at MetLife Stadium. Ismael Saibari gave Morocco the lead before Vinicius Junior’s stunning equalizer. Full match report, goals, stats and analysis

FIFA World Cup 2026 | Group C | MetLife Stadium, East Rutherford, New Jersey
Brazil 1–1 Morocco
Goals: I. Saibari 21′ (MAR) | V. Júnior 32′ (BRA)
Attendance: 82,000+ |

Published: June 14, 2026 |  Author: Hemim SK


When Brazil and Morocco met at the 2026 FIFA World Cup, the world expected a statement from the five-time champions. Instead, it was the Atlas Lions who delivered one first — and the draw that followed sent a message loud enough to echo across every World Cup group.

Morocco 1, Brazil 0. And for eleven minutes at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey, the world held its breath.

Ismael Saibari’s composed 21st-minute chip over Liverpool goalkeeper Alisson Becker was the defining early moment of the tournament — a moment of attacking class from a Moroccan side that has absolutely earned its seat at football’s top table. Brazil, managed by Carlo Ancelotti in his debut World Cup match as a coach, responded through Vinicius Júnior’s breathtaking curler eleven minutes later. From there, neither side could find a winner, and the Group C standings opened up in the most fascinating way possible.

After 90 minutes at the home of the New York Giants, the scoreboard read: Brazil 1–1 Morocco. Morocco top Group C. Brazil sit second. Scotland and Haiti are watching on.


How It Unfolded

Morocco Set the Tempo

Few anticipated Morocco to pin Brazil back in the opening exchanges of a World Cup group game. But that is exactly what they did, with Ayyoub Bouaddi, Neil El Aynaoui and Azzedine Ounahi executing a disciplined high press from the first whistle, squeezing space in the Selecao’s midfield and forcing errors.

Achraf Hakimi rattled the energy inside MetLife Stadium in the 7th minute, forcing Alisson into an early alert. Brazil — without the injured Neymar — looked unsettled, their passing slow and their shape vulnerable to Morocco’s athletic transitions.

Saibari’s Chip Shocks the World (21′)

Then came the goal. And what a goal.

Brahim Diaz — the Real Madrid midfielder with the vision to see the pass no one else expected — threaded a perfectly weighted through ball into the channel to release Ismael Saibari. The PSV Eindhoven midfielder found himself one-on-one with Alisson, and without a moment’s hesitation, clipped a delicate, lobbed finish over the advancing goalkeeper. The ball arced through the New Jersey night air and kissed the back of the net.

Morocco 1–0 Brazil. Madness in the stands. A roar from every neutral in the 82,000-strong crowd. The Atlas Lions had arrived — again.

Vinicius Reminds Everyone Why He’s Different (32′)

Brazil, to their immense credit, didn’t panic. Instead, they found their greatest individual to settle the nerves.

Bruno Guimarães — excellent throughout the first half — found Vinicius Júnior in space on the left wing. The Real Madrid winger controlled, cut inside on his right foot, shifted past his marker with an electric dribble, and unleashed a curling, powerful strike that gave Morocco goalkeeper Yassine Bounou absolutely no chance. The ball rocketed into the roof of the net.

Vinicius celebrated wildly. Ancelotti pumped his fists on the touchline. Brazil 1–1 Morocco.

It was a reminder that for all the structure and tactical intelligence Morocco possess, Brazil have a player capable of changing any game in a single touch.

A Second Half of Tension and Attrition

The second half was a different kind of football. Both sides had bitten off chunks of each other in the opening 45 minutes, and the fatigue and tactical wariness showed.

Ancelotti was forced into early changes — Casemiro and Ibáñez, both booked in the first half, made way for Fabinho and Danilo at the break to prevent risking ten men. Morocco brought on Soufiane Rahimi for the goal-scorer Saibari as the game entered its final quarter.

Raphinha went close for Brazil, forcing an excellent reaction stop from Bounou. Lucas Paquetá’s late volley was also brilliantly parried. Morocco’s Mohamed Ouahbi — only appointed manager three months ago — kept his side compact and dangerous on the break, with Brahim Diaz and the newly introduced Rahimi threatening to snatch a famous winner.

Neither goalkeeper was finally beaten again. The whistle blew at 1–1.

Read Next :Australia vs Türkiye – FIFA World Cup 2026: Predicted Lineups, How to Watch Free, Match Preview


Match Stats at a Glance

Stat Brazil 🇧🇷 Morocco 🇲🇦
Goals 1 1
Goal Scorers Vinicius Júnior (32′) Ismael Saibari (21′)
Shots 12 11
Half-Time Score 1–1 1–1
Venue MetLife Stadium, New Jersey

Player of the Match: Brahim Diaz 🇲🇦

He didn’t score, but Brahim Diaz was the architect of Morocco’s best moments. The assist for Saibari’s opener was a pass of elite quality — the kind of ball that requires confidence, vision and split-second execution all at once. He was Morocco’s constant threat until his substitution, and his performance announced himself as one of the tournament’s early stars.


The Big Picture: What This Means for Group C

# Team Played Pts GD
1 Morocco 🇲🇦 1 1 0
2 Brazil 🇧🇷 1 1 0
3 Haiti 🇭🇹 0
4 Scotland 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿 0

Morocco’s 2022 World Cup semi-final wasn’t a fairy tale fluke — it was the emergence of a genuine world football power. Sitting top of Group C after opening their campaign against the five-time world champions confirms that Ouahbi’s side are a serious threat in this tournament.

Brazil, without Neymar and still finding their rhythm under a first-time international manager in Ancelotti, will be relieved to have a point. Vinicius Júnior’s quality — and his ability to conjure a goal from nothing — remains their greatest asset. But they must improve if Morocco or any other major side faces them in the knockouts.

For Scotland and Haiti, who play their own Group C opener tonight, the group picture has suddenly become intriguing. A point from Haiti vs Scotland means both of the smaller nations could, in theory, still push for a top-three finish. In the expanded 48-team format, even third place can advance.

Read More :Haiti vs Scotland – FIFA World Cup 2026: Predicted Lineups, How to Watch Free, Match Preview


Journalist’s Verdict

This was the match the opening day of the 2026 World Cup deserved — two tactically intelligent, technically accomplished teams producing an absorbing 90 minutes that could have gone either way. Morocco’s fearlessness was the story of the first half. Brazil’s individual quality was the story of the second.

The real winner was the neutral fan. And it proved, once again, that this expanded World Cup — stretched across the USA, Canada and Mexico — has the quality and drama to match its extraordinary scale.

Score: Brazil 1–1 Morocco
Next up: Brazil vs Haiti (June 19) | Morocco vs Scotland (June 19)


Article published June 14, 2026. All statistics sourced from live match data at MetLife Stadium, East Rutherford, New Jersey.

Brazil vs Morocco: Confirmed Lineups With Cunha and Endrick BOTH Benched in Shock Team News — World Cup 2026

Brazil vs Morocco: Confirmed Lineups

Brazil vs Morocco: Confirmed Lineups for World Cup 2026 — Cunha and Endrick both benched in a shock team news update. Vinicius Jr, Raphinha and Casemiro start for Brazil. Hakimi captains Morocco. Full preview and prediction.

Published: June 14, 2026 |  Author: Hemim SK

The match the entire football world has been waiting for is hours away. Brazil vs Morocco. The 2022 World Cup quarter-final rematch. MetLife Stadium. 6pm ET. And the confirmed lineups have just dropped a genuine shock.

Carlo Ancelotti has left both Matheus Cunha and Endrick — two of Brazil’s most talked-about attacking options — on the bench. Instead Vinicius Jr, Igor Thiago and Raphinha form the front three, with Casemiro, Bruno Guimaraes and Lucas Paqueta controlling midfield.

For Morocco, Walid Regragui‘s side line up with Achraf Hakimi at right-back, Brahim Diaz in an advanced role and Youssef En-Nesyri leading the line — exactly the kind of organised, dangerous setup that beat Brazil on penalties in Qatar 2022.

The lineups are confirmed. The rematch is hours away. Here is everything you need to know.

Brazil vs Morocco — Match Facts

Date: Saturday June 13, 2026
Kickoff: 6pm ET / 11pm BST / Midnight CET (June 14)
Venue: New York New Jersey Stadium (MetLife Stadium), East Rutherford, New Jersey
Group: C
TV USA: FS1 (English) / Telemundo (Spanish)
TV UK: ITV1 / ITVX
TV Brazil: TV Globo / SporTV
TV Morocco: Arryadia / beIN Sports


Confirmed Brazil Lineup — 4-3-3

Goalkeeper: Alisson

Defence:
Danilo Santos (right back)
Marquinhos (centre back)
Gabriel (centre back)
Ibanez (left back)

Midfield:
Bruno Guimaraes
Casemiro
Lucas Paqueta

Attack:
Vinicius Jr (left wing)
Igor Thiago (striker)
Raphinha (right wing)

THE SHOCK — Cunha and Endrick BOTH Benched

This is the headline of Brazil’s team news tonight. Matheus Cunha — the Manchester United forward who has been one of the form players in the Premier League — does not start. Endrick — the 19-year-old Real Madrid sensation who many expected to be Brazil’s breakout star of this tournament — also does not start.

Instead Carlo Ancelotti has gone with Igor Thiago as his central striker — a more direct, physical option who provides a different kind of threat to either Cunha or Endrick. The decision suggests Ancelotti wants height, physical presence and aerial ability to combat Morocco’s experienced and well-organised defensive line, which conceded zero goals in two pre-tournament matches against Burundi and Madagascar.

Vinicius Jr and Raphinha — both confirmed starters — remain the primary creative and goalscoring threats from wide areas. Their understanding, built over seasons together at club and international level, gives Brazil width and pace that Morocco’s defence must respect from the first minute.


Confirmed Morocco Lineup — 4-3-3 / 4-2-3-1 Hybrid

Goalkeeper: Bounou (Yassine Bounou)

Defence:
Achraf Hakimi (right back)
Diop (centre back)
Riad (centre back)
Mazraoui (left back)

Midfield:
El Aynaoui
Bouaddi

Attack:
Ounahi (left)
El Khannouss (central attacking midfield)
Brahim Diaz (right)
Saibari (striker / false nine)


Morocco’s Tactical Set-Up — What to Expect

Morocco’s lineup confirms exactly the kind of disciplined, organised approach that defined their historic run to the 2022 semi-finals. Achraf Hakimi at right-back is both their defensive anchor on that side and one of their primary attacking outlets — his ability to bomb forward and create overlaps with Brahim Diaz gives Morocco a genuine threat down the right.

Yassine Bounou — Morocco’s hero goalkeeper from the 2022 penalty shootout against Spain — starts in goal once again. His experience in high-pressure knockout-style situations is exactly the calm presence Morocco need against Brazil’s attacking talent

El Khannouss in the number 10 role is the key creative outlet — the Leicester City midfielder has technical quality that can unlock defences and his partnership with Brahim Diaz and Saibari up front gives Morocco multiple ways to threaten on the counter-attack.

The midfield pairing of El Aynaoui and Bouaddi is built for defensive discipline first — exactly the foundation that allowed Morocco to concede zero goals in 120 minutes against Brazil in 2022 before winning on penalties.


Three Key Battles to Watch Tonight


Vinicius Jr vs Mazraoui

Vinicius Jr’s pace and dribbling against Morocco’s left-back Mazraoui is the most dangerous individual matchup for Brazil. If Vinicius gets isolated one-on-one in space he is capable of beating almost any defender in the world. Morocco’s defensive shape will likely look to double up on him whenever possible — meaning Brazil’s other attackers need to exploit the space this creates.

Achraf Hakimi vs Raphinha

The reverse situation on the other flank. Hakimi is one of the best attacking right-backs in the world but defending against Raphinha’s directness and pace is a serious test even for him. If Hakimi commits forward too often, Raphinha has the speed to punish Morocco in behind.

Casemiro and Bruno Guimaraes vs El Khannouss

The Brazilian double pivot against Morocco’s most creative outlet. If Casemiro and Guimaraes can deny El Khannouss space and time on the ball, Morocco’s attacking threat is significantly reduced. If El Khannouss finds pockets of space between Brazil’s midfield and defensive lines, Morocco’s counter-attacks become dangerous.


Why Leaving Out Cunha and Endrick Is So Significant

Both players have been heavily discussed in the build-up to this World Cup. Cunha’s Premier League form has been excellent. Endrick’s emergence at Real Madrid has made him one of the most talked-about teenage talents in world football.

Ancelotti’s decision to start neither of them — opting instead for the more experienced Raphinha and the physical profile of Igor Thiago alongside Vinicius Jr — suggests a manager prioritising tactical balance and physical presence over individual flair for this specific opponent.

It is a decision that will be scrutinised heavily depending on the outcome. If Brazil win comfortably, Ancelotti’s tactical reading of Morocco will be praised. If Brazil struggle to break down Morocco’s defence — as they did in 2022 — questions about whether Cunha or Endrick’s directness and unpredictability could have made the difference will follow immediately.


The 2022 Shadow

Every team news update, every tactical decision, every individual battle tonight happens in the shadow of December 5, 2022 — the night Morocco eliminated Brazil on penalties at the Al Thumama Stadium and became the first African and Arab nation to reach a World Cup semi-final.

Achraf Hakimi’s Panenka penalty. Vinicius Jr’s heartbreak. Marquinhos hitting the post in the shootout. These images are part of both nations’ football histories now.

Tonight at MetLife Stadium — the venue that hosts the World Cup Final on July 19 — both sets of players carry that history with them. Brazil seeking redemption. Morocco seeking to prove 2022 was not a one-off miracle but the emergence of a genuinely elite football nation.

How to Watch Brazil vs Morocco Tonight

USA: FS1 (English) and Telemundo (Spanish) — also on Fubo streaming
UK: ITV1 and ITVX — free to air
Brazil: TV Globo and SporTV
Morocco: Arryadia (free to air) and beIN Sports
Worldwide: FIFA+ where local rights allow




Prediction

With Cunha and Endrick on the bench, Brazil’s attacking pattern relies heavily on Vinicius Jr and Raphinha’s individual quality combined with Igor Thiago’s physical presence in the box. Morocco’s defensive discipline — as shown in 2022 and in their pre-tournament clean sheets — means Brazil may need a moment of individual brilliance rather than a flowing team goal.

Morocco’s counter-attacking threat through Hakimi, Brahim Diaz and El Khannouss gives them genuine ability to score against Brazil’s high defensive line.

This match could very easily repeat the tactical stalemate of 2022 — tight, tense, low on clear chances, decided by a single moment.

Prediction: Brazil 2-2 Morocco

A tight, tense rematch. Vinicius Jr or Raphinha to find a moment of magic for Brazil. Morocco to find an equaliser on the counter through their disciplined defensive-to-attacking transition. Honours even in the most anticipated group stage match of the tournament.


NEED TO KNOW 
What is Brazil’s confirmed lineup vs Morocco?
Brazil’s confirmed XI: Alisson (GK); Danilo Santos, Marquinhos, Gabriel, Ibanez (defence); Bruno Guimaraes, Casemiro, Lucas Paqueta (midfield); Vinicius Jr, Igor Thiago, Raphinha (attack).

Why are Cunha and Endrick benched for Brazil vs Morocco?
Carlo Ancelotti has opted for Igor Thiago as a more physical central striker option alongside Vinicius Jr and Raphinha, leaving both Matheus Cunha and Endrick on the bench. The decision appears to prioritise physical presence and tactical balance against Morocco’s well-organised defence.

What is Morocco’s confirmed lineup vs Brazil?
Morocco’s confirmed XI: Bounou (GK); Hakimi, Diop, Riad, Mazraoui (defence); El Aynaoui, Bouaddi (midfield); Ounahi, El Khannouss, Brahim Diaz (attacking midfield); Saibari (striker).

What time is Brazil vs Morocco today?
Brazil vs Morocco kicks off at 6pm Eastern Time on Saturday June 13. That is 11pm British Summer Time and midnight Central European Time (June 14). At MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey.

Did Morocco beat Brazil at the 2022 World Cup?
Yes — Morocco beat Brazil in the 2022 World Cup quarter-finals on penalties after a 0-0 draw following extra time. Achraf Hakimi scored the winning penalty with a Panenka. Morocco became the first African and Arab nation to reach a World Cup semi-final.

Who is Morocco’s goalkeeper vs Brazil?
Yassine Bounou — known as Bono — starts in goal for Morocco. He was the hero of Morocco’s 2022 penalty shootout win over Spain and remains their first-choice goalkeeper.

Is Endrick playing for Brazil vs Morocco?
No — Endrick has been left on the bench for Brazil’s match against Morocco, with Carlo Ancelotti opting for Igor Thiago as the starting striker alongside Vinicius Jr and Raphinha.

Conclusion

Brazil vs Morocco. 6pm ET. MetLife Stadium. The 2022 rematch with a twist nobody expected — Cunha and Endrick both on the bench.

Vinicius Jr and Raphinha carry Brazil’s attacking hopes. Hakimi and El Khannouss carry Morocco’s counter-attacking threat. Bounou — the hero of 2022 — is back between the posts.

This is the match of the group stage. Kickoff in hours. Do not miss it.


Read next: Qatar 1-1 Switzerland — Khoukhi’s Stoppage Time Drama — World Cup 2026 Result

Related: Brazil World Cup 2026 Schedule — Full Selecao Group C Guide
Related: Morocco World Cup 2026 Schedule — Atlas Lions Complete Group C Campaign
Related: World Cup 2026 Day 3 Preview — Full Schedule for Today


Was leaving out Cunha and Endrick the right call by Ancelotti — and who do you think wins the Brazil vs Morocco rematch tonight? Tell us in the comments below