
No previous meetings between these teams.
-
1
Matheus Cunha2 - 2
Vinícius Júnior2 - 3John McGinn1
-
1
Scott McTominay4 - 2
Vinícius Júnior4 - 3
Raphinha3 - 4John McGinn3
- 5Lawrence Shankland2
- 6Ben Gannon-Doak2
- 7
Marquinhos2 - 8
Igor Thiago2 - 9
Matheus Cunha2 - 10
Lucas Paquetá2
-
1
Douglas Santos6 - 2Lewis Ferguson5
- 3
Bruno Guimarães4 - 4
Casemiro3 - 5Ryan Christie3
- 6Jack Hendry2
- 7
Matheus Cunha2 - 8
Roger Ibañez2 - 9
Lucas Paquetá2 - 10
Endrick1
-
1
Bruno Guimarães1 - 2
Lucas Paquetá1 - 3
Vinícius Júnior1
-
1
Raphinha3 - 2
Lucas Paquetá3 - 3
Vinícius Júnior3 - 4Andy Robertson3
- 5Ben Gannon-Doak2
- 6
Bruno Guimarães2 - 7Aaron Hickey2
- 8John McGinn2
- 9Ché Adams1
- 10Kenny McLean1
-
1
Gabriel Magalhães159 - 2
Marquinhos156 - 3Jack Hendry120
- 4Lewis Ferguson101
- 5Grant Hanley96
- 6
Douglas Santos87 - 7Andy Robertson81
- 8
Danilo78 - 9
Lucas Paquetá76 - 10
Casemiro64
-
1
Ben Gannon-Doak4 - 2Scott McTominay3
- 3
Lucas Paquetá2 - 4
Vinícius Júnior2 - 5
Raphinha1 - 6
Alisson Becker1 - 7
Bruno Guimarães1 - 8
Danilo1 - 9
Roger Ibañez1 - 10John McGinn1
-
1
Lucas Paquetá4 - 2Lewis Ferguson4
- 3
Casemiro2 - 4Kieran Tierney2
- 5
Danilo2 - 6Nathan Patterson2
- 7Ryan Christie2
- 8Andy Robertson2
- 9Grant Hanley1
- 10
Éderson Silva1
Scotland face the greatest test in their modern history when they meet Brazil in Group C at the 2026 World Cup on Wednesday. Kick-off is scheduled for 11pm (UK time) on Wednesday 24th June at Hard Rock Stadium, Miami Gardens.
Steve Clarke’s side produced a spirited opening campaign, beating Haiti 1-0 before suffering a narrow 1-0 defeat to Morocco. Three points from their first two games leaves Scotland’s knockout qualification in their own hands. Only a result against Brazil will seal it. For this generation of Scottish players, Wednesday represents a defining moment.
Scotland vs Brazil predictions & betting tips
| Our Prediction | Odds & Bookmaker | Confidence | Why We’re Backing It |
|---|---|---|---|
| Player to be Booked – Grant Hanley | 13/5 @ bet365 (27.8%) | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ | Grant Hanley faces the sternest examination of his World Cup campaign when he lines up against Matheus Cunha and Vinícius Júnior on Wednesday. The Hibernian defender has accumulated bookings at a consistent rate throughout his career when tasked with containing elite forwards in tight spaces. Brazil’s front line will run directly at Hanley from the first whistle, and Clarke’s defensive setup demands physicality and aggression from his centre-backs. Hanley will need to make interventions early and often to keep Brazil’s attack at bay. At 38 years old, he cannot rely on pace to recover, making cynical challenges more likely. The combination of elite opposition, defensive pressure and Hanley’s combative style makes a booking a genuinely compelling proposition. |
| Scott McTominay 2+ shots on target and Vinicius Junior 2+ shots on target | 18/1 @ Spreadex (5.3%) | ⭐⭐ | Scott McTominay offers Scotland’s best route to goal, driving late into the box with the technique and determination to test Alisson on the counter. Vinícius Júnior, meanwhile, is the standout individual talent at this tournament and will torment Scotland’s defence all evening. |
Odds correct at time of writing. Please gamble responsibly.
How both teams head into Scotland vs Brazil
Scotland
Scotland arrive in Miami carrying the weight of history and the hope of a nation. Clarke’s side beat Haiti 1-0 on matchday one thanks to John McGinn’s decisive goal. A 1-0 defeat to Morocco followed — a match settled inside 70 seconds by Ismael Saibari’s early strike. Clarke felt his side deserved at least one penalty in that game. Scotland did not register a single shot on target against Morocco but showed they could compete physically against a top-ten side.
The Scots enter this fixture knowing exactly what they need. A win sends them into the knockout rounds for the first time in their history across nine World Cup appearances. A draw could also suffice depending on Morocco’s result against Haiti. Clarke’s side have proven they can be difficult to break down. They have conceded just once in 180 minutes at this tournament, and that defensive resilience gives them a platform.
Scotland have never beaten Brazil in 11 attempts. But this squad – built around the experience of Robertson, McGinn and McTominay – carries a collective belief that previous generations simply did not possess. Clarke will set his side to frustrate, stay compact and hit Brazil hard on the counter. One moment of quality could change everything.
Brazil
Carlo Ancelotti’s side top Group C on four points and need only to match or better Morocco’s score against Haiti to confirm top spot. That relative comfort could prove a double-edged sword against a Scotland side playing for their lives.
The Selecao have not been at their devastating best in Florida. A 1-1 draw with Morocco suggested defensive frailties that Clarke will have studied in detail. The 3-0 win over Haiti restored some confidence, with Matheus Cunha’s brace underlining his growing influence as Brazil’s focal point in attack. Vinícius Junior remains the most dangerous player on the pitch whenever he receives the ball in space.
Raphinha has been ruled out with a hamstring injury sustained against Haiti. His absence is a significant blow to Brazil’s attacking options. Ancelotti has enough quality to cover that loss, but Raphinha’s creativity and work rate will be missed in Miami. Brazil’s recent World Cup history also carries a warning — their last three group-stage defeats have all come on matchday three. Scotland will know that statistic well.
Scotland team news
Clarke faces a fitness dilemma ahead of the biggest game in recent Scottish football history. Scott McKenna, Aaron Hickey and Lewis Ferguson all missed training over the weekend with a calf issue, an unspecified knock and fatigue respectively. All three could return in some capacity on Wednesday, with Ferguson likely to continue in central midfield if fit.
Andy Robertson captains the side at left-back and his attacking threat from wide areas remains Scotland’s most reliable creative outlet. John McGinn and Scott McTominay both start in advanced midfield positions. McGinn scored the winner against Haiti and carries enormous confidence into this fixture.
Clarke is expected to continue with either a 3-4-2-1 or 4-4-1-1 shape depending on his approach to managing Brazil’s wide threat. Che Adams leads the line as the central striker ahead of Lawrence Shankland and Lyndon Dykes on the bench. Ben Gannon-Doak could return to the starting line up to add some pace to their counter attacks.
Brazil team news
Ancelotti must reshuffle his attacking options following Raphinha’s hamstring injury. The Barcelona winger is ruled out for the remainder of the group stage, depriving Brazil of their most creative wide outlet. His replacement will be confirmed closer to kick-off.
Matheus Cunha leads the line after his brace against Haiti and starts again in Miami. Vinícius Junior continues on the left and remains Brazil’s single most dangerous attacking threat when given space to run. Casemiro and Bruno Guimaraes anchor the midfield and will be tasked with cutting off Scotland’s counter-attacking routes.
Gabriel and Marquinhos continue at centre-back. Ancelotti has no other confirmed injury concerns ahead of Wednesday. Brazil’s squad depth means Raphinha’s absence is manageable — but it does hand Scotland a slight psychological advantage heading into kick-off.

Head-to-Head
Scotland and Brazil have met five times previously, four of those contests being at the World Cup. Brazil claimed a 4-1 win in 1982, a 1-0 win in 1990, and a 2-1 win in France 1998 – that last defeat ending Scotland’s most recent World Cup campaign. Their only non-defeat came at West Germany 1974, a 0-0 draw. Brazil have scored nine goals and conceded just two across those five meetings.
| Date | Result | Competition |
|---|---|---|
| 27/03/11 | Brazil 2-0 Scotland | Friendly |
| 10/06/98 | Brazil 2-1 Scotland | World Cup |
| 20/06/90 | Brazil 1-0 Scotland | World Cup |
| 18/06/82 | Brazil 4-1 Scotland | World Cup |
| 18/06/74 | Scotland 0-0 Brazil | World Cup |
Can Scotland make history or will Brazil break hearts?
Scotland enter this fixture knowing that history beckons. A win sends them into the knockout rounds for the first time ever. A draw could also advance them depending on Morocco’s result. Brazil need nothing more than a point to confirm top spot, but Ancelotti will not set up passively.
We’re backing Grant Hanley to pick up a booking at 13/5 with bet365. The defender could be given a torrid time by Brazil’s attackers and a booking looks a safe bet.
For a bigger price, we’re looking at the shots on target market. Scott McTominay and Vinicius Junior to have 2+ shots on target each at 18/1 with Spreadex looks overpriced.
Read more: