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Brazil topped Group C with a comfortable 3–0 win over Scotland, sending the Scots home and setting up a mouth-watering last-16 run.
Brazil topped Group C with a comfortable 3–0 win over Scotland, sending the Scots home and setting up a mouth-watering last-16 run.
It was always going to be a tall order. Scotland, having clawed their way to three points in a brutal Group C, needed something special against a Brazilian side that had already announced themselves as genuine contenders at this World Cup. They didn't get it. Brazil were efficient, at times breathtaking, and utterly ruthless when it mattered. The final scoreline — Scotland 0–3 Brazil — tells a clean story, even if the Scots will feel the margin flattered the Seleção slightly in the first half.
For Canadian fans packed into the stadium and millions more watching across the country from Toronto to Vancouver, this was the kind of World Cup moment the tournament was built for. A proper footballing giant, playing proper football. It just came at Scotland's expense.
Scotland started with genuine intent — you had to give them that. They pressed high, they competed physically, and for a spell they made Brazil uncomfortable. The problem is that Brazil at a World Cup tend to absorb that early pressure and then, almost casually, shift through the gears.
Reports from those inside the venue suggested the third goal, in particular, was something special — the kind of move that gets replayed on highlight packages for years. By that point, the tie was already settled, but Brazil added the exclamation mark anyway. That's what the great Brazilian sides do. They don't just beat you; they remind you of the gap.
Scotland had moments — they always do under pressure — but converting possession into genuine chances against a defence of this quality proved beyond them. Clean sheet for Brazil. Three goals scored. Job done.
Brazil top Group C on seven points, level with Morocco, but with a superior goal difference of +6 compared to Morocco's +3. Both sides advance, and the group picture is actually a fascinating one. Two very different styles of football, both peaking at the right time.
Scotland finish third with three points — one win, two losses — and exit the tournament. Haiti, pointless after three games and with a goal difference of -6, go home alongside them. For Scotland, there's pride in having competed at a co-hosted World Cup on North American soil, and a win somewhere in that group campaign to point to. But ultimately, the gap to the top two was exposed clearly.
For Brazil, this result sets up what promises to be a compelling knockout run. They've now won Group C outright, and face the Group D runner-up in the Round of 16. Given the form they've shown — seven points, clean sheet in the final group game, and that third goal apparently worth the price of admission alone — they'll be among the last teams anyone wants to draw.
Morocco, meanwhile, advance as runners-up and will be quietly pleased to avoid Brazil in the Round of 16, at least for now.
Three games, three points, exit stage left. That's the summary. But let's be fair — Scotland qualified for this tournament, they competed in a group that included Brazil and Morocco, and they didn't embarrass themselves. A win on the board, a few moments of quality across the campaign.
The 0–3 loss to Brazil hurts, but it's not the story of their tournament. The story is that Scotland are still building. If the manager and the squad can take something from this experience — the tempo, the intensity, the standard required — then a World Cup appearance in the United States, Canada and Mexico might yet prove a stepping stone rather than just a destination.
It won't feel like that right now. Sporting heartbreak rarely does.
Group C winners. Seven points. A defence that's looked increasingly solid as the tournament has progressed. Brazil advance into the knockout rounds as one of the clear favourites, and reports from the camp suggest confidence is high without tipping into complacency.
The Round of 16 will be a different challenge entirely — knockout football has its own logic, and Brazil have experienced heartbreak at this tournament before. But based purely on what we've seen in this group stage, they look like the real thing. Physical, technically gifted, with match-winners capable of producing moments that change games in an instant.
If you're a Canadian neutral, you want Brazil going deep. They're good for the tournament.
With the group stage wrapped up and the Round of 16 taking shape, the real betting action is just getting started. Whether you're in Ontario with access to regulated online sportsbooks, or elsewhere in the country, there are solid options for placing informed wagers on the rest of the tournament.
Two platforms worth checking out as the knockout rounds begin:
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Quick WithdrawalAs always, compare odds across platforms before placing — margins matter over the course of a tournament, and the difference between a -115 and -108 adds up. Betting on the World Cup should be fun. Keep your stakes sensible and your expectations realistic.
Conclusion: Brazil were too good, Scotland weren't quite good enough, and Group C has delivered one of the tournament's more straightforward conclusions. The Seleção look like a genuine threat going into the knockout rounds, and Morocco will be no pushovers either. For Scotland fans who made the trip to Canada — and there were plenty — at least there was a World Cup to attend, one game to celebrate, and a third goal from Brazil that probably made even neutrals stand up. Football, at its best, does that.
🔞 Gambling should be entertaining, not a financial strategy. If betting stops being fun, step back. Resources are available through ConnexOntario (1-866-531-2600) and the Responsible Gambling Council at responsiblegambling.org. Must be 19+ in most Canadian provinces (18+ in Alberta, Manitoba and Quebec) to wager legally.
Written by
James Thornton · Senior Casino ReviewerFact-checked by Rachel Doyle and edited by Brett Sutherland. OddsGenie covers the World Cup 2026 for Canadian fans — independent, ad-free, and grounded in real data.
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