Casemiro played every minute as Brazil beat Haiti but media from his home country weren’t impressed with his World Cup 2026 performance
Casemiro has been lambasted by several Brazilian football pundits after the ex-Manchester United star’s World Cup 2026 performance against Haiti. Brazil put their opponents to the sword 3-0 in Philadelphia.
Having been held in their opening game against Morocco, Carlo Ancelotti’s squad endeavoured to bounce back against Haiti and did just that. A brace from Matheus Cunha and a Vinicius Junior strike ensured they climbed to the top of Group C.
Casemiro was particularly disappointing against Morocco and was substituted at half-time. But in Brazil’s latest clash, he partnered with Bruno Guimaraes in the midfield once again as a holding enforcer, kept a clean sheet and played every second of the game.
However, while some media outlets in Brazil were more fair-minded about his performance, one publication’s writers have issued a scathing evaluation of the former United man.
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O Globo asked its panel of columnists and correspondents to write comments on who played well for Brazil against Haiti and which stars played poorly.
Eight were asked and when it came to poor performances, five opted to single out Casemiro, who left Old Trafford after the expiration of his contract this month. The first wrote: “He struggled even against a much weaker opponent and stood out in midfield, which featured Guimaraes and [Lucas] Paqueta who played well.”
A second said: “He hasn’t found his form in the competition yet. He seems lost, below his usual level.” Whilst another admitted: “It’s impressive how nervousness is coming from someone where experience was expected. Both performances so far are worrying. He could lose his place, which he only holds because of Ancelotti’s confidence in him.”
“Luckily, it was Haiti. When pressured, he couldn’t hold up,” claimed a fourth, as a fifth penned: “He couldn’t even defend well or organise the build-up play.”
Other publications did not share this view, as Casemiro finished the match with the most duels won for his side, the most tackles and the most fouls won.
Speaking after the opening fixture against Morocco, manager Ancelotti justified removing Casemiro at half-time, claiming that this was just the beginning of their World Cup tilt.
“They are good players. I think I made the right choices and I won’t accept any criticism of individual players,” he said. “If there is any criticism, it concerns the whole team.
“You can’t expect the team to be perfect from the start; you don’t win the World Cup in the first match. My confidence in the players is absolute. In football, everything doesn’t go perfectly. This is just the beginning of the journey.
“I think the team was a bit anxious at the beginning. Nerves were on edge. But the team fought until the last minute, that’s the positive aspect. It’s quite clear that we need to improve.”
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