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SportSaturday, June 13, 2026

Brazil Launch World Cup Bid Against Morocco Without Neymar as Group C Takes Shape

Carlo Ancelotti's Brazil face African champions Morocco, while Haiti and Scotland end decades-long World Cup absences in a packed Saturday of group-stage action.

The most anticipated fixture of the opening weekend unfolded at New Jersey’s MetLife Stadium on Saturday, as five-time champions Brazil began their quest for a sixth World Cup title against a Morocco side that reached the semi-finals in 2022. Carlo Ancelotti’s debut as Brazil head coach at a World Cup was overshadowed by the confirmed absence of the injured Neymar, a calf problem keeping the 34-year-old forward out of at least the opener and possibly the entire group phase. Ancelotti, who won the 1994 World Cup as Italy’s assistant coach and has subsequently claimed every major club honour, described the role as a “special” honour and a “great responsibility”, urging his squad to meet the expectations of a country that has not lifted the trophy since 2002. From Rabat, the mood was one of quiet defiance: Moroccan coach Mohamed Ouahbi insisted his team would not fear Brazil, pointing to the Atlas Lions’ recent record of eliminating Spain and Portugal en route to the historic fourth-place finish in Qatar.

Elsewhere in Group C, Haiti and Scotland returned to the World Cup stage after remarkably long absences, meeting at Boston’s Gillette Stadium. Haiti’s last appearance came in 1974, their sole previous qualification, while Scotland ended a 28-year wait dating back to France 1998. For Haiti, the match carried deep symbolic weight, the team having played all its home qualifiers on neutral soil in Curaçao due to the country’s political and security crises. Scotland’s manager Steve Clarke warned his side to be wary of Haiti’s attacking threat, while the Scots were boosted by the recovery of Napoli midfielder Scott McTominay from a stomach illness. Both teams understand that a positive result is essential if they are to challenge Brazil and Morocco in one of the tournament’s most competitive groups.

The day’s earlier kick-off saw Qatar, the 2022 hosts who lost all three group games on home soil, take on Switzerland in Santa Clara. Under Julen Lopetegui, Qatar are still searching for a first World Cup victory, while Switzerland arrived confident after topping their European qualifying group. Later, Australia and Turkey were due to open Group D in Vancouver, with co-hosts United States having already thrashed Paraguay 4-1 to set an early marker. Viewers across the globe followed the action via a patchwork of broadcasters—from CazéTV and Globo in Brazil to TVRI in Indonesia and Fox in the United States—underscoring the tournament’s sprawling reach.

Viewed from São Paulo, the pressure on Ancelotti reflects a nation’s anxiety to end a 24-year drought that is already the longest without a title since Brazil’s first triumph in 1958. Yet analysts in Europe note that the Italian’s club pedigree offers no guarantee at international level, where preparation time is limited and the emotional weight of a nation is different from that of a Champions League campaign. With Neymar’s fitness uncertain and the group stage still in its infancy, the opening weekend has already exposed the fragility of reputations and the ambition of newcomers in the expanded 48-team format. The question hanging over New York was not simply whether Brazil could beat Morocco, but whether this Seleção can finally carry the burden that has crushed its predecessors.

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 1 languages

24%
ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Stampa latinoamericanaStampa arabo levante-Maghreb
Stampa latinoamericana/ mercato
trionfopragmatismo

Latin American outlets frame the match as the dawn of Ancelotti's era, highlighting Brazil's squad value of over 900 million euros and the confidence to end a 24-year World Cup drought. Neymar's absence is treated as a manageable wrinkle, and the memory of the 1994 trauma is invoked to fuel the ambition. The narrative is one of poised triumph and pragmatic optimism.

Stampa arabo levante-Maghreb
trionfourgenza

Arab press from the Levant and Maghreb casts this as the first marquee clash of the tournament, an opportunity for Morocco to validate its growth against Brazil's might. There is pride in the 2022 semi-final run and a rallying call to fear no opponent, framing the match in a historic, long-term narrative of African-Arab football emergence.

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Upd. 03:45 PM1 language · 5 outlets
5 outlets|1 language|3 min read
Saturday, June 13, 2026

Brazil Launch World Cup Bid Against Morocco Without Neymar as Group C Takes Shape

Carlo Ancelotti's Brazil face African champions Morocco, while Haiti and Scotland end decades-long World Cup absences in a packed Saturday of group-stage action.

The most anticipated fixture of the opening weekend unfolded at New Jersey’s MetLife Stadium on Saturday, as five-time champions Brazil began their quest for a sixth World Cup title against a Morocco side that reached the semi-finals in 2022. Carlo Ancelotti’s debut as Brazil head coach at a World Cup was overshadowed by the confirmed absence of the injured Neymar, a calf problem keeping the 34-year-old forward out of at least the opener and possibly the entire group phase. Ancelotti, who won the 1994 World Cup as Italy’s assistant coach and has subsequently claimed every major club honour, described the role as a “special” honour and a “great responsibility”, urging his squad to meet the expectations of a country that has not lifted the trophy since 2002. From Rabat, the mood was one of quiet defiance: Moroccan coach Mohamed Ouahbi insisted his team would not fear Brazil, pointing to the Atlas Lions’ recent record of eliminating Spain and Portugal en route to the historic fourth-place finish in Qatar.

Elsewhere in Group C, Haiti and Scotland returned to the World Cup stage after remarkably long absences, meeting at Boston’s Gillette Stadium. Haiti’s last appearance came in 1974, their sole previous qualification, while Scotland ended a 28-year wait dating back to France 1998. For Haiti, the match carried deep symbolic weight, the team having played all its home qualifiers on neutral soil in Curaçao due to the country’s political and security crises. Scotland’s manager Steve Clarke warned his side to be wary of Haiti’s attacking threat, while the Scots were boosted by the recovery of Napoli midfielder Scott McTominay from a stomach illness. Both teams understand that a positive result is essential if they are to challenge Brazil and Morocco in one of the tournament’s most competitive groups.

The day’s earlier kick-off saw Qatar, the 2022 hosts who lost all three group games on home soil, take on Switzerland in Santa Clara. Under Julen Lopetegui, Qatar are still searching for a first World Cup victory, while Switzerland arrived confident after topping their European qualifying group. Later, Australia and Turkey were due to open Group D in Vancouver, with co-hosts United States having already thrashed Paraguay 4-1 to set an early marker. Viewers across the globe followed the action via a patchwork of broadcasters—from CazéTV and Globo in Brazil to TVRI in Indonesia and Fox in the United States—underscoring the tournament’s sprawling reach.

Viewed from São Paulo, the pressure on Ancelotti reflects a nation’s anxiety to end a 24-year drought that is already the longest without a title since Brazil’s first triumph in 1958. Yet analysts in Europe note that the Italian’s club pedigree offers no guarantee at international level, where preparation time is limited and the emotional weight of a nation is different from that of a Champions League campaign. With Neymar’s fitness uncertain and the group stage still in its infancy, the opening weekend has already exposed the fragility of reputations and the ambition of newcomers in the expanded 48-team format. The question hanging over New York was not simply whether Brazil could beat Morocco, but whether this Seleção can finally carry the burden that has crushed its predecessors.

Source divergence

Sport · 5 outlets · 1 language

24%Low

How sources tell the same facts differently.

How They Split

Favorable86%
Critical14%

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 1 languages

ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Stampa latinoamericanaStampa arabo levante-Maghreb
Stampa latinoamericana/ mercato
trionfopragmatismo

Latin American outlets frame the match as the dawn of Ancelotti's era, highlighting Brazil's squad value of over 900 million euros and the confidence to end a 24-year World Cup drought. Neymar's absence is treated as a manageable wrinkle, and the memory of the 1994 trauma is invoked to fuel the ambition. The narrative is one of poised triumph and pragmatic optimism.

Stampa arabo levante-Maghreb
trionfourgenza

Arab press from the Levant and Maghreb casts this as the first marquee clash of the tournament, an opportunity for Morocco to validate its growth against Brazil's might. There is pride in the 2022 semi-final run and a rallying call to fear no opponent, framing the match in a historic, long-term narrative of African-Arab football emergence.

This story appeared in

5 outlets · 1 language

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