Brazil needed a response, and Brazil delivered one in the loudest possible way. At Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia, the five-time world champions thumped Haiti 3-0 in a performance that was as much about redemption as it was about result. Matheus Cunha bagged a brace, Vinícius Júnior was everywhere that mattered, and by the time the dust settled, Brazil had reminded everyone exactly why they’re always part of the World Cup conversation.
A Point to Prove
Let’s set the scene. Brazil had limped out of their tournament opener with a shaky 1-1 draw against Morocco, a result that left manager Carlo Ancelotti publicly apologizing to fans. The pressure was real, the questions were louder, and Neymar — still sidelined — wasn’t walking through that door to save the day. This was Vinícius’s stage to claim, and claim it he did.

“I’m at my best level — physically, technically and mentally,” Vinícius said afterward, and on this night, the football backed up every word.
Cunha Catches the Wave — Twice

The breakthrough came when Vinícius bent a shot toward goal that Haitian keeper Johny Placide could only parry back into danger. Lurking right where he needed to be was Matheus Cunha, who slammed the rebound home to make it 1-0.

Cunha celebrated by flinging his arms out wide, mimicking a surfer riding the perfect wave — fitting, because Brazil were about to catch one themselves.

Thirteen minutes later, Vinícius turned provider again, slicing a gorgeous through-ball into space for Cunha to run onto. One touch, one connection, and Cunha drilled it high past a helpless Placide for 2-0. This time the celebration got even better — Cunha dropped to his stomach and mimed a swimming stroke, all but telling Haiti they were already underwater.
Vinícius Saves the Best for Last

If Cunha was the finisher, Vinícius was the architect — and he wasn’t done contributing himself. Deep into first-half stoppage time, he latched onto a long ball played over the top, danced past a despairing Placide one-on-one, and calmly slotted home Brazil’s third. One goal, two assists, man of the match honors that were never in doubt. At 25, soon to be 26, Vinícius is playing like a man determined to drag this Brazil side to glory on his own back if he has to.
A Worrying Moment Amid the Celebration

It wasn’t all smiles in Philadelphia, though. Right in the middle of Brazil’s first-half blitz, the mood turned tense when Raphinha went down without contact in the 39th minute, clutching his right leg and immediately waving for the medical staff. He’d been quiet for Brazil’s second goal, and the reason became painfully clear —

he was withdrawn moments later, replaced by 19-year-old Rayan, who earned his World Cup debut under far from ideal circumstances.

Raphinha walked off under his own power, but his face told the real story. The Brazilian federation later confirmed it was his right hamstring — very familiar territory for the winger, who’d already battled three hamstring setbacks over the past year, including one suffered against France just months before the tournament. Vinícius didn’t hide his concern afterward, admitting it looked like the same injury Raphinha had dealt with before. With Neymar already missing the squad through a calf issue, losing Raphinha too — even temporarily — is the last thing Ancelotti needs as Brazil chase a sixth star.
A Tale of Two Anthems
Off the pitch, the atmosphere told its own beautiful story. Philadelphia, home to thousands of Brazilian immigrants, became a cauldron of color and noise. Haitian supporters sang their traditional battle cry with pride and defiance, while Brazilian fans answered back with chants celebrating their football royalty. Two proud footballing nations, two completely different journeys, sharing one unforgettable night under the lights.
Heartbreak for History-Makers

There’s no sugarcoating it, though — this result was brutal for Haiti. The Caribbean nation had made it back to the World Cup for the first time in 52 years, an emotional achievement for a country that’s endured so much. But after losing their opener to Scotland and now falling to Brazil, Haiti became the first team eliminated from the 2026 tournament.

It’s a heavy blow, but their qualification alone is a story that deserves celebrating — they got here, they fought, and they gave their fans a World Cup to call their own, however brief.
Where It Leaves Group C

Brazil now sit top of Group C on goal difference, level on points with a red-hot Morocco side, setting up a mouth-watering finale between the two when they meet in Miami Gardens. Ancelotti will be thrilled with the response, but he knows the real tests are still coming. For now, though, Brazil can breathe again — the Seleção are back, and they look dangerous.
Man of the Match: Vinicius Jr













