HOUSTON – In a tense knockout-stage clash at Houston Stadium, five-time World Cup champions Brazil booked their place in the next round of the tournament with a dramatic 2-1 extra-time victory over Japan, ending the Asian side’s campaign with a late winner deep into stoppage time.
The fixture pitted tournament record holders Brazil, who finished top of their group to advance, against Japan, who secured a second-place finish in their group to qualify for the knockout round. With only one team able to progress from this stage of the competition, both sides entered the match under pressure to deliver a win, with pre-match buildup filled with tactical mind games and confident claims from both camps that had fans and pundits predicting a hard-fought, physical encounter. Leading out the teams under the Houston sky was Italian referee Maurizio Mariani, as Brazil chased a historic sixth world title, while Japan looked to claim an unprecedented first crown of their own.
Brazil started the match as expected, throwing men forward in their signature high-tempo attacking style, but Japan’s organized defense held firm, turning away wave after wave of South American attacks and leaving Brazil without a single clear opening in the opening 10 minutes. Gradually, Japan grew into the game, lifting the tempo and turning the contest into an end-to-end spectacle, though their early forays forward lacked cutting edge, leaving Brazil’s defense largely untroubled.
The shock lead came in the 29th minute, when Kaishū Sano latched onto a through ball and broke free one-on-one with Brazil goalkeeper Allison Becker. Before the Brazilian number one could react, Sano slotted the ball into the far corner, putting Japan up 1-0. The early setback completely threw Brazil off their rhythm, and the five-time champions failed to find a response for the remainder of the first half. Japan held onto their advantage, sitting deep to protect their lead without taking unnecessary risks, going into halftime with a well-earned one-goal advantage.
Brazil made a key substitution at the break, bringing young star Endrick on in place of Lucas Paqueta, and the change immediately shifted momentum in the South Americans’ favor. In the 52nd minute, Bruno Guimaraes produced a spectacular header on goal from a deep cross, but Japan goalkeeper Zion Suzuki made a sharp reflex save to keep his sheet clean. Two minutes later, Japan survived another scare when Casemiro’s diving header hit a three-player defensive wall on the goal line and bounced clear. It was not long after that Casemiro found the breakthrough, powering a header past Suzuki from a Gabriel Magalhães cross to level the score at 1-1 in the 56th minute.
After the equalizer, Brazil continued to pile on pressure, but after a string of wasted chances, their momentum faded, allowing Japan to regain more possession. Rather than pushing forward for a winner, Japan dropped back into a deep defensive block and abandoned attacking play, letting Brazil take control of possession. The South Americans grew rushed in their finishing, with Vinícius Júnior often cutting isolated on solo runs that led to nothing, squandering multiple late chances to take the lead. Even when a shot deflected off a Japanese defender over the line in the 74th minute, the goal was ruled out for offside against the Brazilian attacker. As the match ticked into stoppage time and extra time looked inevitable, substitute Gabriel Martinelli netted the winner in the 96th minute, finishing off a well-placed pass from Bruno Guimarães to secure Brazil’s 2-1 victory.
