
Brazil’s injury-time winner sinks Japan and a famed statistical oracle
Gabriel Martinelli’s 96th-minute strike overturned a Japanese lead and a widely publicised prediction, sending Brazil into the last sixteen.
The decisive blow landed six minutes into stoppage time at Houston’s NRG Stadium. With the score locked at 1-1 and extra time looming, a high press from teenage substitute Rayan forced a turnover deep in Japan’s half. Bruno Guimarães threaded a pass through to Gabriel Martinelli, and the Arsenal forward kept his composure to slot home a 2-1 victory that carried Brazil into the round of sixteen. The goal completed a comeback that had begun in the 56th minute, when Casemiro rose to head in an equaliser, cancelling out Kaishu Sano’s 29th-minute opener for a Japan side that had threatened to make the pre-match forecasts look prescient.
Those forecasts belonged to Joachim Klement, a German economist whose statistical model had correctly named the last three world champions. Before the tournament, Klement projected that Japan would eliminate Brazil at the first knockout hurdle, arguing that the current Brazilian generation was not at its peak while the Japanese squad possessed collective strength and balance. The prediction gained wide currency in the Brazilian and international press, not least because Klement’s model had already missed several group-stage calls—South Korea and the Czech Republic failed to advance from Group A, Qatar was tipped to finish second in Group B but exited without a point, and Ecuador was expected to be runner-up in Group E but placed third after beating Germany. On the pitch, Brazil dominated possession but defended loosely, allowing Japan to exploit errors and repeatedly threaten a second goal. The late intervention of Martinelli, however, rendered the model’s knockout-stage projection moot.
Neymar, who spent the entire match on the bench, delivered the most public riposte. It was the first time in his World Cup career that he was available but not used; coach Carlo Ancelotti later explained the forward had been reserved for a possible extra-time scenario. After the final whistle, Neymar posted on social media: “Sr. Joachim klement … favor tentar na proxima copa” (“Mr. Joachim Klement… please try again at the next World Cup”). The message, laced with a winking emoji, was shared widely and framed in Brazilian media as a light-hearted rebuke to the data-driven prophecy.
Klement himself has long cautioned that his model explains only about half of a match’s outcome, with the rest down to luck, form on the day, and officiating decisions. European analysts note that his broader tournament forecast—a Netherlands triumph over Portugal in the final—remains intact, though the model’s aura of invincibility has been dented. For Brazil, the immediate consequence is a round-of-sixteen fixture on Sunday at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey against the winner of the Norway–Ivory Coast tie, a match that will test whether the late drama in Houston has forged a sharper edge in Ancelotti’s side.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
2 editorial groups · 1 languages
Martinelli's 96th-minute goal secures Brazil's place in the round of 16, reaffirming the Seleção's dominance. Neymar, with his characteristic irony, mocks a German economist, once again showcasing his unconventional personality. The victory is celebrated as a national triumph, focusing on the team's strength and the players' charisma.
The news of Martinelli's goal and Neymar's joke finds no place in Southeast Asian media, which prioritize domestic stories. If reported at all, it is treated as a routine sports result, without emphasis or commentary. Attention is elsewhere, on local issues of greater relevance.
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