Lucky Rebel Sportsbook · FIFA World Cup 2026 · Group C
Brazil
The Samba Boys
Five stars. Twenty-two World Cups. One obsession.
Every four years the world picks a side. Some back the defending champions. Some back whoever’s got the best midfielder. Most back whoever their dad backed. But there’s always a second team. Always. And for half the planet, that second team is Brazil.
It isn’t loyalty. It isn’t geography. It’s something older than both. It’s the way they play. The way they’ve always played. Jogo bonito. The beautiful game. Not a slogan. A philosophy. A religion. A way of seeing football that was born on the streets and beaches of Rio and Sao Paulo and never quite made it into a coaching manual because you can’t coach it. You either feel it or you don’t.
Brazil have appeared at every single World Cup since 1930. All twenty-two of them. No other nation can say that. They’ve won five. No other nation can say that either. They are the only team in history to have lifted the trophy on three different continents. The only team to have produced both Pelé and Ronaldo. The only team good enough to lose a World Cup semi-final 7-1 on home soil and still be taken seriously four years later.
Group C Fixtures
Three games. All at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena. Morocco are ranked eighth in the world and arrive with four wins from their last five. Scotland qualified for their first World Cup since 1998 and will be compact and physical. Haiti are making their first appearance since 1974. Brazil should top the group. Should.
| Date | Match | Kickoff | Preview | Bet |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 13 Jun | Brazil vs Morocco | 15:00 PT | Preview | Bet |
| 18 Jun | Brazil vs Scotland | 18:00 PT | Preview | Bet |
| 23 Jun | Brazil vs Haiti | 18:00 PT | Preview | Bet |
All kickoff times in local venue time (Pacific Time). Subject to change.
A History Written in Gold
1958. Sweden. A 17-year-old from Bauru named Edson Arantes do Nascimento scored twice in the final. The world had never seen anything like it. Pelé wept on the shoulder of teammate Didi after the final whistle. Brazil won 5-2. The template was set.
1962. Chile. Pelé got injured in the second game and Brazil won it anyway. That tells you everything about the squad depth. Garrincha took over. Garrincha, who was born with a deformed spine and two legs that bent inward, who grew up in the tiny town of Pau Grande, who learned to play on dirt pitches with a ball made from a sock stuffed with rags. He was arguably the most naturally gifted dribbler who ever lived. Brazil won again.
1970. Mexico. The greatest World Cup squad ever assembled. Full stop. No debate. Pelé, Jairzinho, Tostao, Rivelino, Carlos Alberto. Jairzinho scored in every single game. Carlos Alberto’s fourth goal in the final against Italy is still being replayed in broadcast packages fifty-six years later. Brazil won the Jules Rimet Trophy outright having won it three times. They got to keep it. They deserved to keep it.
Then came the years that still hurt. Not because Brazil lost. Because of how they lost. And because of who was in those teams.
Zico. The Crime of 1982.
Artur Antunes Coimbra. Known as Zico. Born in Quintino, a working-class district of Rio de Janeiro. Scouts from Flamengo came to watch his brother play and left with Zico’s signature instead. He was fifteen. By the time he was twenty-five he was doing things with a football that made grown men stop and stare. A free kick that dipped. A first touch that killed the ball dead. A pass that found space that nobody else had seen. He scored 72 goals in 88 internationals. In an era before Opta, before StatsBomb, before any of it, those numbers are staggering.
The 1982 Brazil team is the answer to the question nobody wants to ask: what is the greatest football team to never win the World Cup? Zico in the hole. Falcao controlling midfield. Socrates, the chain-smoking doctor-turned-footballer, dictating tempo with a touch so heavy it looked lazy and a vision so precise it looked impossible. Eder, who scored a goal against the USSR with a shot so ferocious it nearly tore the net off the frame. They didn’t just play football. They philosophised it.
They met Italy in the second round in Barcelona needing only a draw to advance. They went 1-0 up through Socrates. Italy equalised. Brazil went 2-1 up through Falcao. Italy equalised again. Then a third. Paolo Rossi, who had returned from a match-fixing ban just weeks earlier, completed his hat-trick. Italy 3, Brazil 2. The most beautiful team in World Cup history went home. Zico sat in the dressing room afterwards and reportedly didn’t speak for two days.
1986. Mexico City. Zico came on as a substitute in the quarter-final against France with the score level at 1-1. Brazil were awarded a penalty. Zico stepped up. Joel Bats saved it. The game went to extra time, then penalties. France went through. Zico retired two years later having never won the one thing that would have completed the story. Forty years on, football still hasn’t given him one back.
From the Street to the Stage
The thing that makes Brazil different isn’t money. It isn’t infrastructure. It isn’t academies or science or data. It’s the streets. The concrete pitches in the favelas where kids play barefoot in the evening heat because the ball doesn’t care where you were born. Brazilian football has always been a pipeline from poverty to something else. Not always the World Cup. But sometimes.
Ronaldo Nazario grew up in Bento Ribeiro on the outskirts of Rio. His family couldn’t afford football boots. He played in flip-flops. He went on to score 15 World Cup goals across three tournaments and win the thing twice. When he scored both goals in the 2002 final against Germany in Yokohama, 200 million Brazilians were watching. In a country where a significant portion of the population lives without reliable electricity or running water, they found a way to watch.
Vinicius Junior was born in Sao Goncalo, across Guanabara Bay from Rio. Not the postcard Rio. The other one. He signed his first contract with Flamengo at 14, sold to Real Madrid for 45 million euros at 16, won the Champions League by 22. He is now arguably the most exciting forward on the planet. He dances after goals not because he’s showing off but because that’s how he was raised. In Brazil you celebrate. You always celebrate. The critics told him to stop. He didn’t stop.
Recent Form and the Hard Truth
Two wins, one draw, two losses from their last five competitive internationals. FIFA ranking sixth in the world. And a CONMEBOL qualifying campaign that finished fifth out of ten. For any other nation those numbers would signal a midtable team on a decent run. For Brazil they signal a crisis. The Brazilian Football Confederation went through four coaches in the years following the 2022 Qatar quarter-final exit against Croatia. The fan base turned on every one of them. The pressure is relentless and permanent.
This is not a machine in full working order heading into 2026. It is a team with world-class individual talent, an unresolved question about cohesion, and a new coach who has never managed a national team in his life. The squad finished below Argentina, Ecuador, Uruguay and Colombia in CONMEBOL qualifying. None of those teams have five World Cup stars on their shirt. The expectation gap is enormous. So is the opportunity.
The Coach — Carlo Ancelotti
Head Coach · Appointed May 2024
Carlo Ancelotti
Born June 10 1959 in Reggiolo, northern Italy. Centre-midfielder for AC Milan and Italy in his playing days. Won Serie A twice and the European Cup. Neat, intelligent, not flashy. His management career reads like a list of someone’s dream jobs: Parma, Juventus, AC Milan, Chelsea, PSG, Real Madrid, Bayern Munich, Napoli, Everton, Real Madrid again. In his second spell at the Bernabeu he won La Liga twice and the Champions League twice, including the 2024 final. He has won the Champions League five times as a manager, more than anyone else in history.
The Brazilian Football Confederation pursued him for years. He finally agreed in May 2024. He is 66 years old, has managed twelve clubs across seven countries, and has never taken charge of a national team before in his life. Whether that matters or not is one of the more interesting debates heading into the summer.
What Ancelotti does better than almost anyone else is manage egos. Vinicius, Raphinha, Rodrygo and Paqueta are four very different personalities with four very different relationships to football. Getting them working together, not just coexisting, is the job. He has done harder things. Just about.
Key Players
Players are selected using Lucky Rebel’s points-based framework. Automatic inclusions: captain and first-choice goalkeeper. Points-based inclusions require 4 or more points scored across World Cup experience, confederation tournament experience, caps, goals, assists and qualification stats. All selections are provisional pending final squad confirmation on June 1 2026.
Raphael Dias Belloli. Porto Alegre. Came through Avaí and Vitória before moving to Europe via Sporting CP and Rennes. Leeds United signed him in 2020, he was the one bright thing in a very difficult season, Barcelona bought him in 2022 and for a year the move looked questionable. Then the 2024-25 season happened. Under Hansi Flick he was arguably the best player in La Liga. 26 goals. 12 assists. He was 28 and playing the football of his life.
18 international goals in 52 caps is a strike rate that would make most strikers jealous. He plays wide but he scores like a number nine. For Brazil in 2026 the combination of Raphinha and Vinicius on opposite flanks is the most exciting attacking proposition in the tournament. Selection criteria: World Cup 2022 (3pts), Copa América 2021 and 2024 (4pts), 50+ caps (2pts). Total 9 points.
Brazil Betting Markets
+750 to win the tournament. That’s the number. Five titles. The most of any nation in history. Sixth in the world rankings. A coach with five Champions Leagues on his CV. A forward who has scored in two Champions League finals. And you’re getting better than seven to one. Make of that what you will.
| Market | Selection | Price | Bet |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tournament Winner | Brazil | +750 | Bet |
| Group C Winner | Brazil | -250 | Bet |
| Golden Boot | Vinicius Junior | +1200 | Bet |
Odds correct at time of publication and subject to change. View all Brazil World Cup markets at Lucky Rebel ↗
Keep Researching
Gambling should be entertaining. You always risk losing the money you bet. Never spend more than you can afford to lose. If you think you may have a problem, visit luckyrebel.la/responsible-gaming. 18+ only. Lucky Rebel is licensed by the Office of Mwali International Services Authority under the Gaming and Gambling Act, 2022. Squad data provisional pending final squad confirmation June 1 2026. Caps and career statistics sourced from Wikipedia. Odds correct at time of publication and subject to change.