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SportTuesday, June 30, 2026

Martinelli’s Stoppage-Time Strike Sends Brazil Past Japan in World Cup Thriller

A 95th-minute goal from Gabriel Martinelli completed a dramatic 2-1 comeback, ending Japan’s hopes of a first knockout victory and propelling Brazil into the last 16.

Brazil survived a severe examination of their World Cup credentials in Houston, where Gabriel Martinelli’s goal deep into added time snatched a 2-1 victory over Japan and a place in the round of 16. The five-time champions had trailed for much of the contest and were seconds from extra time when Bruno Guimarães threaded a pass through a tiring Japanese defence and Martinelli, on as a second-half substitute, steered a low finish beyond goalkeeper Zion Suzuki. The strike, timed at 95 minutes, was the latest winning goal in a World Cup knockout match in normal time since records began in 1966.

Japan had taken a deserved lead in the 29th minute, punishing a loose Brazilian pass in midfield. Kaishu Sano intercepted, drove into space and beat Alisson Becker with a crisp right-footed shot from outside the area — his first international goal. The Samurai Blue, organised in a compact 5-4-1 block, frustrated Brazil’s star-studded attack for the remainder of the half, with Vinícius Júnior and Matheus Cunha finding little room. Japanese media later noted that the team had executed their game plan almost perfectly, forcing the South Americans into uncharacteristic errors and carrying a 1-0 advantage into the interval.

The second half, however, belonged to Brazil’s experience and Carlo Ancelotti’s tactical adjustments. The Italian coach urged patience at the break and shifted the approach, instructing his side to deliver more crosses into the box. The equaliser arrived in the 56th minute when Casemiro — who had been booked early and was walking a disciplinary tightrope — rose to head home a pinpoint delivery from Gabriel Magalhães. The goal transformed the mood, and Brazil began to dominate possession and territory. Vinícius Júnior came agonisingly close to a spectacular second, his curling effort tipped onto the post by Suzuki, but the decisive blow was delayed until Martinelli’s late intervention. Ancelotti later revealed he had held Neymar in reserve for a possible extra-time scenario, a decision that proved unnecessary.

Reaction from the two camps reflected the contrasting emotions. Japanese coach Hajime Moriyasu, speaking to reporters in Houston, said he was “devastated” but insisted the gap between his side and the elite was narrowing. “Brazil is a top-tier team and we are definitely approaching that level,” he said, a sentiment echoed across Asian media outlets that highlighted Japan’s progress since their 4-1 loss to the same opponent in 2006. Brazilian commentators, meanwhile, praised the team’s mental fortitude. Casemiro, named man of the match, described the victory as a product of “calmness and patience,” while Ancelotti called it Brazil’s “most complete” performance of the tournament so far. The coach’s own restrained reaction — he barely celebrated Martinelli’s goal — was widely interpreted as a mark of respect for a Japanese side that had pushed his team to the limit.

Brazil advance to a round-of-16 meeting with the winner of the Ivory Coast–Norway tie, scheduled for 5 July at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey. For Japan, the wait for a first knockout-stage victory at a World Cup continues, but the performance in Houston reinforced a growing belief that the gap to the traditional powers is closing. Moriyasu, whose own future was the subject of immediate speculation in Japanese media, said the experience would be used “to build a much stronger team” for the future.

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 3 languages

50%
ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Latin American pressSoutheast Asian press
Latin American press
TriumphPragmatism

Brazil snatched a dramatic last-minute victory against Japan, securing a spot in the round of 16. The win is celebrated as a testament to the team's resilience and the enduring strength of Brazilian football on the world stage.

Southeast Asian press
SkepticismDetachment

Japan suffered a heartbreaking last-minute defeat to Brazil, exiting the World Cup in the group stage. The loss is seen as another instance of Asian teams falling short on the global stage, prompting reflection on tactical shortcomings.

Broaden your view

Read more
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Upd. 10:43 AM3 languages · 4 outlets
4 outlets|3 languages|3 min read
Tuesday, June 30, 2026

Martinelli’s Stoppage-Time Strike Sends Brazil Past Japan in World Cup Thriller

A 95th-minute goal from Gabriel Martinelli completed a dramatic 2-1 comeback, ending Japan’s hopes of a first knockout victory and propelling Brazil into the last 16.

Brazil survived a severe examination of their World Cup credentials in Houston, where Gabriel Martinelli’s goal deep into added time snatched a 2-1 victory over Japan and a place in the round of 16. The five-time champions had trailed for much of the contest and were seconds from extra time when Bruno Guimarães threaded a pass through a tiring Japanese defence and Martinelli, on as a second-half substitute, steered a low finish beyond goalkeeper Zion Suzuki. The strike, timed at 95 minutes, was the latest winning goal in a World Cup knockout match in normal time since records began in 1966.

Japan had taken a deserved lead in the 29th minute, punishing a loose Brazilian pass in midfield. Kaishu Sano intercepted, drove into space and beat Alisson Becker with a crisp right-footed shot from outside the area — his first international goal. The Samurai Blue, organised in a compact 5-4-1 block, frustrated Brazil’s star-studded attack for the remainder of the half, with Vinícius Júnior and Matheus Cunha finding little room. Japanese media later noted that the team had executed their game plan almost perfectly, forcing the South Americans into uncharacteristic errors and carrying a 1-0 advantage into the interval.

The second half, however, belonged to Brazil’s experience and Carlo Ancelotti’s tactical adjustments. The Italian coach urged patience at the break and shifted the approach, instructing his side to deliver more crosses into the box. The equaliser arrived in the 56th minute when Casemiro — who had been booked early and was walking a disciplinary tightrope — rose to head home a pinpoint delivery from Gabriel Magalhães. The goal transformed the mood, and Brazil began to dominate possession and territory. Vinícius Júnior came agonisingly close to a spectacular second, his curling effort tipped onto the post by Suzuki, but the decisive blow was delayed until Martinelli’s late intervention. Ancelotti later revealed he had held Neymar in reserve for a possible extra-time scenario, a decision that proved unnecessary.

Reaction from the two camps reflected the contrasting emotions. Japanese coach Hajime Moriyasu, speaking to reporters in Houston, said he was “devastated” but insisted the gap between his side and the elite was narrowing. “Brazil is a top-tier team and we are definitely approaching that level,” he said, a sentiment echoed across Asian media outlets that highlighted Japan’s progress since their 4-1 loss to the same opponent in 2006. Brazilian commentators, meanwhile, praised the team’s mental fortitude. Casemiro, named man of the match, described the victory as a product of “calmness and patience,” while Ancelotti called it Brazil’s “most complete” performance of the tournament so far. The coach’s own restrained reaction — he barely celebrated Martinelli’s goal — was widely interpreted as a mark of respect for a Japanese side that had pushed his team to the limit.

Brazil advance to a round-of-16 meeting with the winner of the Ivory Coast–Norway tie, scheduled for 5 July at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey. For Japan, the wait for a first knockout-stage victory at a World Cup continues, but the performance in Houston reinforced a growing belief that the gap to the traditional powers is closing. Moriyasu, whose own future was the subject of immediate speculation in Japanese media, said the experience would be used “to build a much stronger team” for the future.

Source divergence

Sport · 4 outlets · 3 languages

50%Medium

How sources tell the same facts differently.

How They Split

Favorable25%
Neutral6%
Critical69%

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 3 languages

ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Latin American pressSoutheast Asian press
Latin American press
TriumphPragmatism

Brazil snatched a dramatic last-minute victory against Japan, securing a spot in the round of 16. The win is celebrated as a testament to the team's resilience and the enduring strength of Brazilian football on the world stage.

Southeast Asian press
SkepticismDetachment

Japan suffered a heartbreaking last-minute defeat to Brazil, exiting the World Cup in the group stage. The loss is seen as another instance of Asian teams falling short on the global stage, prompting reflection on tactical shortcomings.

This story appeared in

4 outlets · 3 languages

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