Breaking News

MARTINELLI STRIKES IN THE 96TH MINUTE AS BRAZIL EDGES JAPAN TO REACH LAST 16

By Sachit Subba Football • Jun 29, 2026 19:23 PM • 69 views

 MARTINELLI STRIKES IN THE 96TH MINUTE AS BRAZIL EDGES JAPAN TO REACH LAST 16

Seleção survive a massive scare from a disciplined Samurai Blue, turning around a first-half deficit to seal their place in the knockout rounds in the dying seconds.

It is the kind of cruel, uncompromising theatre only the World Cup can script. With the clock deep into the sixth minute of stoppage time, Japan looked set to earn a historic point against the five-time world champions. Instead, one lapse in concentration turned their evening into heartbreak, sending Carlo Ancelotti’s Brazil into the round of 16 in dramatic fashion.

Gabriel Martinelli was the hero, producing a cool finish in the 96th minute to seal a 2-1 comeback victory after Ao Tanaka was dispossessed on the edge of his own penalty area. Bruno Guimarães was the architect, quickly recycling the loose ball to feed Martinelli, who composed himself with a sharp first touch before clipping his shot precisely past the despairing dive of Zion Suzuki and in off the far post.

The goal triggered relief on the Brazilian bench, but it was harsh on a brilliant Japan side that had tactically stymied the South American giants for long stretches.

A First-Half Blueprint from the Samurai Blue

For the opening 45 minutes, Japan did not merely contain Brazil; they dictated the game. With disciplined defensive blocks and explosive transitional speed, the Samurai Blue repeatedly disrupted Brazil's midfield rhythm.

The breakthrough came from a rare unforced error by the Seleção backline. Danilo, under minimal pressure, underhit a square pass across the defensive third. Kaishu Sano anticipated the mistake, intercepted the ball, and skipped past a lunging challenge from Casemiro. With Brazil scrambling, Sano drove forward and unleashed a low strike from the edge of the area that flew into the bottom corner, leaving Ederson stranded.

Brazil looked rattled. Ancelotti’s calm gave way to animated gesticulations from the technical area as his side struggled for fluency before the interval, frequently running into a wall of blue jerseys.

The Second-Half Resurgence

Whatever was said in the Brazilian dressing room clearly had the desired effect. The Seleção emerged with greater intensity, moving the ball far more quickly and stretching the Japanese lines.

Ten minutes into the half, the pressure told. Gabriel advanced down the flank and floated a cross to the back post. Casemiro, making amends for his first-half slip, timed his run perfectly to rise above his marker and power a header past Suzuki to restore parity.

Suddenly, the momentum flipped. Three minutes after the equaliser, the crowd thought they were witnessing one of the great individual goals in tournament history. Vinícius Júnior picked up the ball 40 yards from goal, nutmegged his marker, and exploded into the penalty box. After twisting another Japanese defender inside out, the Real Madrid star poked a shot toward the far corner, only for Suzuki to make a magnificent fingertips save and deflect the ball onto the woodwork.

Heartbreak at the Death

To their credit, Japan weathered the storm. Head coach Hajime Moriyasu adjusted his shape, and the Samurai Blue sucked the tempo out of the game, limiting Brazil to speculative efforts as the match entered its final phase.

But elite international football is decided by the thinnest margins. With seconds remaining, Tanaka attempted to play his way out of trouble on the corner of his own box. Brazil closed the space, won possession, and, within three passes, Martinelli had broken Japanese hearts.

For Japan, it is a devastating result that leaves their knockout-stage hopes hanging in the balance, despite a performance that mirrored their famous giant-killing exploits in recent tournaments. For Ancelotti and Brazil, it is a reminder of their vulnerability—but more importantly, a testament to the championship DNA that keeps them alive in the hunt for a sixth star after a 2-1 win.

Leave a Comment

0 Comments

No comments yet. Be the first to leave one!

Related Articles