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SportFriday, June 26, 2026

Brazil protest disallowed Vinícius goal, using Messi incident as evidence of VAR inconsistency

The Brazilian FA formally complained to FIFA after Vinícius Júnior had a goal ruled out against Scotland, arguing the intervention broke the tournament’s own VAR philosophy and citing a similar unpunished challenge in Argentina’s win over Austria.

Brazil sealed top spot in World Cup Group C with a commanding 3-0 victory over Scotland in Miami, a result built on two goals from Vinícius Júnior and a late strike by Matheus Cunha. Yet the night’s defining flashpoint was a goal that did not stand. With Brazil already a goal up, Vinícius dispossessed defender Jack Hendry on the edge of the area and finished past goalkeeper Angus Gunn, only for Mexican referee César Ramos to be sent to the monitor by the VAR. After review, Ramos ruled that the forward had committed a foul in winning the ball, wiping out what would have been a first-half double. Vinícius, who had scored the opener, was seen on camera calling the decision “a disgrace”.

The disallowed effort triggered an immediate formal protest from the Brazilian Football Confederation (CBF). In a letter to FIFA president Gianni Infantino, CBF president Samir Xaud argued that the intervention contradicted the tournament’s stated approach of limiting VAR to “clear and obvious errors” and respecting the on-field official’s original call. To reinforce the point, the letter drew a direct comparison with a sequence from Argentina’s group match against Austria, in which Alexis Mac Allister won the ball from Xaver Schlager in the build-up to Lionel Messi’s opening goal. On that occasion, Egyptian referee Amin Omar allowed play to continue and the goal stood, a decision that Austrian players and media later criticised. Brazilian officials contend that both incidents involved similar levels of contact and should have been treated identically.

The CBF also raised concerns about the appointment of Ramos, noting that he had officiated Brazil’s 2018 group-stage draw with Switzerland, when a goal was allowed to stand despite a foul on defender Miranda. The letter suggested that FIFA should avoid assigning the same referee to Brazil matches after previous controversies. While the protest is not expected to alter the result, it reflects a broader push from South American federations for greater consistency in the application of video review. Argentine outlets, reporting on the Brazilian complaint, highlighted the irony of a Seleção protest leaning on a goal scored by their arch-rivals.

On the pitch, Vinícius’s performance was otherwise decisive. He now has four goals in three group matches, becoming the first Brazilian since Ronaldo and Rivaldo in 2002 to score in every group game at a World Cup. Head coach Carlo Ancelotti, speaking after the match, praised the forward’s contribution and dismissed suggestions that he had unlocked a new version of the player, stating simply: “Vini is top. He is one of the best in the world.” Asian media, particularly in Indonesia, focused on Vinícius’s individual brilliance and his growing status as Brazil’s attacking talisman.

Brazil advance to a round-of-32 tie against Japan in Houston on 29 June, while Scotland face an anxious wait to see if they can avoid a familiar group-stage exit. The VAR debate, however, is likely to linger as the knockout phase begins.

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 2 languages

54%
ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Latin American pressSub-Saharan African press
Latin American press/ Market
OutragePragmatism

Brazil's football federation formally complained to FIFA over Vinícius' disallowed goal, pointing to a similar incident where Mac Allister's challenge before Messi's goal went unpunished. The protest demands consistent VAR standards and highlights perceived double standards.

Sub-Saharan African press/ Anglophone
TriumphDetachment

Vinicius Junior sparkled with a brace as Brazil swept past Scotland 3-0 to win Group C and reach the last 32. The Real Madrid star's dominant display was the story, with no mention of the disallowed goal controversy.

Broaden your view

Read more
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Upd. 02:19 PM2 languages · 3 outlets
3 outlets|2 languages|3 min read
Friday, June 26, 2026

Brazil protest disallowed Vinícius goal, using Messi incident as evidence of VAR inconsistency

The Brazilian FA formally complained to FIFA after Vinícius Júnior had a goal ruled out against Scotland, arguing the intervention broke the tournament’s own VAR philosophy and citing a similar unpunished challenge in Argentina’s win over Austria.

Brazil sealed top spot in World Cup Group C with a commanding 3-0 victory over Scotland in Miami, a result built on two goals from Vinícius Júnior and a late strike by Matheus Cunha. Yet the night’s defining flashpoint was a goal that did not stand. With Brazil already a goal up, Vinícius dispossessed defender Jack Hendry on the edge of the area and finished past goalkeeper Angus Gunn, only for Mexican referee César Ramos to be sent to the monitor by the VAR. After review, Ramos ruled that the forward had committed a foul in winning the ball, wiping out what would have been a first-half double. Vinícius, who had scored the opener, was seen on camera calling the decision “a disgrace”.

The disallowed effort triggered an immediate formal protest from the Brazilian Football Confederation (CBF). In a letter to FIFA president Gianni Infantino, CBF president Samir Xaud argued that the intervention contradicted the tournament’s stated approach of limiting VAR to “clear and obvious errors” and respecting the on-field official’s original call. To reinforce the point, the letter drew a direct comparison with a sequence from Argentina’s group match against Austria, in which Alexis Mac Allister won the ball from Xaver Schlager in the build-up to Lionel Messi’s opening goal. On that occasion, Egyptian referee Amin Omar allowed play to continue and the goal stood, a decision that Austrian players and media later criticised. Brazilian officials contend that both incidents involved similar levels of contact and should have been treated identically.

The CBF also raised concerns about the appointment of Ramos, noting that he had officiated Brazil’s 2018 group-stage draw with Switzerland, when a goal was allowed to stand despite a foul on defender Miranda. The letter suggested that FIFA should avoid assigning the same referee to Brazil matches after previous controversies. While the protest is not expected to alter the result, it reflects a broader push from South American federations for greater consistency in the application of video review. Argentine outlets, reporting on the Brazilian complaint, highlighted the irony of a Seleção protest leaning on a goal scored by their arch-rivals.

On the pitch, Vinícius’s performance was otherwise decisive. He now has four goals in three group matches, becoming the first Brazilian since Ronaldo and Rivaldo in 2002 to score in every group game at a World Cup. Head coach Carlo Ancelotti, speaking after the match, praised the forward’s contribution and dismissed suggestions that he had unlocked a new version of the player, stating simply: “Vini is top. He is one of the best in the world.” Asian media, particularly in Indonesia, focused on Vinícius’s individual brilliance and his growing status as Brazil’s attacking talisman.

Brazil advance to a round-of-32 tie against Japan in Houston on 29 June, while Scotland face an anxious wait to see if they can avoid a familiar group-stage exit. The VAR debate, however, is likely to linger as the knockout phase begins.

Source divergence

Sport · 3 outlets · 2 languages

54%Medium

How sources tell the same facts differently.

How They Split

Favorable13%
Neutral25%
Critical62%

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 2 languages

ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Latin American pressSub-Saharan African press
Latin American press/ Market
OutragePragmatism

Brazil's football federation formally complained to FIFA over Vinícius' disallowed goal, pointing to a similar incident where Mac Allister's challenge before Messi's goal went unpunished. The protest demands consistent VAR standards and highlights perceived double standards.

Sub-Saharan African press/ Anglophone
TriumphDetachment

Vinicius Junior sparkled with a brace as Brazil swept past Scotland 3-0 to win Group C and reach the last 32. The Real Madrid star's dominant display was the story, with no mention of the disallowed goal controversy.

This story appeared in

3 outlets · 2 languages

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