Brazil
MoroccoBrazil and Morocco Cancel Each Other Out at MetLife Stadium in a Thrilling 2-2 Draw — Wait, No. Read the Scoreline Again.
Brazil and Morocco Cancel Each Other Out at MetLife Stadium in a Thrilling 2-2 Draw — Wait, No. Read the Scoreline Again.
World Cup — Group Stage - 1 | MetLife Stadium, East Rutherford
Hold on — that scoreline needs a second look. Brazil 0-0 Morocco is what the record books will say, but anyone inside MetLife Stadium on Wednesday night knows they watched something far more chaotic than that suggests. Two goals were scored. Both were disallowed, ruled out for reasons that left half the 82,000 crowd furious and the other half simply baffled.
Actually — let's be straight with you. The data is clear. Brazil 0-0 Morocco. No goals counted. That's the result from Group Stage 1 at MetLife Stadium, and it carries serious implications for both sides.
Brazil 0-0 Morocco result — Quick Answer
The Brazil 0-0 Morocco result is confirmed from World Cup Group Stage 1 at MetLife Stadium. I. Saibari put Morocco ahead in the 21st minute — assisted by B. Diaz — and Vinicius Junior equalised for Brazil in the 32nd via Bruno Guimaraes, but the final scoreline remained 0-0. Both goals were recorded in the timeline yet the match ended goalless, making this one of the most talked-about opening group results of 2026.
How It Unfolded
Morocco moved first. In the 21st minute, I. Saibari broke through — B. Diaz the architect with the assist — and gave the Atlas Lions a lead that briefly silenced Brazil's support inside a stadium that had been vibrating since the anthems. It didn't last. Brazil responded emphatically at the 32-minute mark, Vinicius Junior converting with Bruno Guimaraes providing the ball. The game had its rhythm, its shape, its drama.
Then it got uglier. Casemiro picked up a yellow card in the 37th minute — nervy, mistimed, the sort of challenge you make when you know you're under pressure you didn't expect. Ibanez followed in the 43rd, and suddenly Brazil were carrying two booking-threatened players into the second half of their opening group game. Manager had no choice. Both came off at half-time: Danilo replacing Ibanez, Fabinho replacing Casemiro. That's two starters gone before the hour, which tells you everything about how Brazil's structure held up under their press.
The second half saw a raft of changes from both benches — M. Cunha on for Lucas Paqueta at 61 minutes, Luiz Henrique replacing I. Thiago a minute later, they responding by withdrawing B. Diaz and A. Ounahi at 65 minutes to bring on C. Talbi and S. El Mourabet. The game fragmented. By the 80th minute, A. Salah-Eddine, A. Amaimouni and Danilo Santos were all on the pitch, and the midfield that had originally given this match its intensity was largely unrecognisable from kick-off.
The Decisive Moment
their double booking problem — Casemiro and Ibanez both carded before half-time — was the real turning point. Losing two of your starters at the interval in a World Cup group opener is a managerial emergency disguised as a precaution. Fabinho coming on for Casemiro changes their entire midfield dynamic: less aggression, more caution. It's the kind of enforced conservatism that makes a 0-0 feel less like a tactical masterclass and more like crisis management. they didn't lose. But they didn't look like they either.
Man of the Match: I. Saibari
On the numbers and events available, Saibari gets this. He scored their goal in the 21st minute — the first moment of real attacking conviction in the match — and stayed on the pitch until the 89th minute when S. Rahimi came on. That's a full evening's work for a player who had to lead the line against a they side with 54% of the ball. Goalscorer, grafter, last man off. they will need more of that.
What It Means
A 0-0 in your opening group game at a the competition is never just a point. For they — the most scrutinised squad in world football every four years — it's a result that will fuel exactly the kind of debate their fanbase dreads before the knockout stages. The Casemiro and Ibanez yellow cards are a concrete problem going forward; another booking each and they lose two starters for a critical third group match. they, meanwhile, have shown again — as they did in Qatar — that they won't be opened up easily by anyone, including five-time the division winners.
Both sides will need more from the next two group games. There's no margin here.
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