← Beyond the Pitch Group C

Brazil

Five-time champions chasing a sixth, now coached by Carlo Ancelotti and missing the second-best winger they own

Group
C
Region
CONMEBOL
World Cup Appearances
23
Code
BR

The Story

Brazil arrives in 2026 the way Brazil always arrives — as the most decorated team in the sport, with the yellow jersey that every kid in every country has tried on at some point in their lives, and a 24-year wait for a sixth title that the country is genuinely starting to find offensive.

What's different this time is the manager. Carlo Ancelotti — the most decorated club coach of his era, the only person to have won the Champions League five times — became the first non-Brazilian to manage the Seleção on a permanent basis when he took the job in 2025. The reaction in Brazil was complicated. The reaction in the dressing room, by all accounts, has been excellent. Vini Jr., Raphinha, Casemiro, Alisson — the spine of the team — wanted him.

The cost of waiting on Ancelotti was the fall qualifying campaign, which was uneven, and a March friendly cycle disrupted by a long injury list (Militão, Bruno Guimarães, Estêvão, and most painfully Rodrygo, whose ACL tear has ruled him out of the tournament). The team that walks out in June will be deep, talented, and short one of its best wide players. They are still favorites. They are always favorites. The question, as always with Brazil, is what version shows up.

3 Players to Know

Vinícius Júnior

Grew up in São Gonçalo across the bay from Rio, played barefoot on the streets, signed his first Flamengo contract as a kid because the family needed the money. Real Madrid bought him at 16 for €46 million. He finished second in the 2024 Ballon d'Or, and he is now the gravitational center of this team in a way Neymar used to be — the player who can win a knockout match by himself in the 87th minute. Brazil's tournament probably hinges on whether Vini is having a good day.

Raphinha

From Restinga in the south of Brazil, the player who took the long way — through Portuguese second-division clubs, Sporting, Rennes, Leeds, Barcelona — and arrived as one of the best wingers on earth at 28. Last season at Barça he had 34 goals and 26 assists across all competitions. This season has been quieter (13 and five) but he's still in form, still the player Ancelotti turns to opposite Vini. The contrast in their backgrounds — São Gonçalo prodigy versus Restinga grinder — is most of the story of modern Brazilian football.

Endrick

The 19-year-old who Real Madrid signed before he was old enough to drive in Spain, then loaned to Lyon this season because there wasn't a path through Vini, Mbappé, and Bellingham. The loan worked — 11 goal contributions in 12 games, his confidence back, Ancelotti calling him into the squad for the World Cup despite the noise around Madrid. He grew up in Brasília in real poverty and Palmeiras' youth system rebuilt him. He is the future of this national team. He may also be the present, depending on what game-state Brazil finds itself in this summer.

The Food

Signature Dish

Feijoada is the Saturday institution — black beans cooked all day with pork (shoulder, ribs, sausage, and the parts your grandmother won't let you ask about), served with rice, sautéed collards, farofa (toasted cassava flour), and orange slices to cut the richness. Then picanha — the cap of sirloin, salted heavily, grilled over open flame, sliced thin against the grain. And a caipirinha, made with cachaça, lime, and sugar, that tastes deceptively like fruit punch and absolutely is not.

Where to Eat in DFW

Texas de Brazil started in Addison and grew into a national chain, but the original-DFW location still does the rodízio service the way it's supposed to be done — gauchos walking the floor with skewers of picanha, costela, lamb, sausage, the whole rotation. Reservations on a match day are mandatory. The salad bar is unironically excellent. For something more casual, Boi Na Brasa in Plano serves a proper Saturday feijoada.

The Music

A soundtrack for the matches, the pregame, and the afterparty.

Fan Culture

Brazilian support is the reason FIFA invented the word "carnival." It is yellow shirts and green and gold flags and a samba drumline that often shows up uninvited and stays the entire match. Their celebrations are choreographed in the way only people who grew up dancing can manage. They will absolutely do the wave, they will absolutely sing for the entire 90 minutes, and they will absolutely be heartbroken in a louder, more public, more theatrical way than any other support in the world if it goes wrong. There's a reason every neutral kid in America picks Brazil first when they buy a FIFA video game. The vibes are correct.
Fun Fact

Brazil is the only nation that has played in every single World Cup since the tournament began in 1930 — 23 in a row, including 2026. They are also the only country to have won it five times. The yellow shirt isn't a costume; it's the most successful jersey in the sport's history.

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