Fans on social media have been thrown into disbelief after Gabriel Martinelli scored a late-minute goal that gave Brazil a 2-1 win over Japan. Both sides met in the round of 32 of the 2026 FIFA World Cup at NRG Stadium on Tuesday, June 29.
During the encounter, the Japanese were the first to open the scoring through Kaishu Sano in the 29th minute. The midfielder weaved his way through Brazil’s defence and released an accurate shot into the bottom left corner of the net, which Alisson couldn’t save.
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In the 52nd minute, Zion Suzuki pulled off an excellent save to deny Bruno Guimaraes’ header from going into the back of the net. Four minutes later (56′), Brazil got their equalizing goal through Casemiro. The midfielder relied on a pinpoint cross from Gabriel Magalhaes and planted his header into the back of the net to make the scoreline 1-1.
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Three minutes later (59′), Suzuki pulled off a decent save to deny Vinicius Junior from giving Selecao the lead. However, Guimaraes released a brilliant pass to Martinelli, who managed to position himself properly between the defenders and placed the ball into the net in the added time (90+5′).
Meanwhile, Martinelli came into the game as a replacement for Matheus Cunha in the 66th minute and registered a passing accuracy of 100%(13/13). He delivered one key pass and scored a goal despite making only 19 touches of the ball (via Sofascore).
In the game’s aftermath, fans took to X to share their thoughts on the winger’s performance, with one tweeting:
“Martinelli has to be the luckiest player of all time. How does such a terrible player get himself in these positions.”
Other fans posted:
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How did Vinicius Junior perform in Brazil’s FIFA World Cup encounter with Japan?
Brazil v Japan: Round of 32 – FIFA World Cup 2026 – Source: Getty
Vinicius Junior was arguably Brazil’s sharpest attacker during their FIFA World Cup encounter with Japan. Despite failing to score, he registered yet another outstanding encounter in the tournament.
In 90 minutes on the pitch, the left-winger registered a passing accuracy of 90% (35/39). He delivered two key passes, registered two shots on target, and won six out of 11 ground duels (via Sofascore).
Vinicius has scored four goals and registered one assist in four appearances in the 2026 FIFA World Cup. Selecao will take on the winner of the encounter between Ivory Coast and Norway in the round of 16.
France secured the top spot of their group in style thanks to a hat trick by Ousmane Dembélé. Senegal’s 5-0 goal fest against Iraq means they make it through to the knockouts. Cape Verde remain unbeaten in the group stage, with a 0-0 draw against Saudi Arabia. They are the first debutants to ever go through the group stage undefeated. Belgium finally get a win, and Iran wait to see if they make it to the next stage of the competition.
Paraguay stunned Germany in a penalty shootout on Monday to reach the World Cup last 16 after a 1-1 draw following extra time. The South Americans won 4-3 on spot kicks, handing Germany their first-ever defeat in a World Cup penalty shootout and booking a place in the knockout stage.
Apr 18, 2026; Montreal, Province of Quebec, CAN; CF Montreal forward Kwadwo Opoku (7) plays the ball against the Red Bull New York during the second half at Saputo Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Eric Bolte-Imagn Images
CF Montreal transferred forward Kwadwo “Mahala” Opoku to Greek side Panetolikos FC on Monday.
Montreal will retain a percentage of any future transfer for the 24-year-old Ghana international.
Opoku recorded seven goals and four assists in 42 regular-season appearances for Montreal from 2023-26
“We would like to thank Mahala for his contributions and professionalism during his time with the club,” said Luca Saputo, Montreal’s managing director of recruitment and sporting methodology. “We wish him the best of luck in the next chapter of his career.”
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Opoku previously played for LAFC from 2020-23, recording nine goals and six assists in 60 MLS matches.
Argentina’s Lionel Messi practices for the FIFA World Cup soccer tournament Thursday, June 11, 2026, in Kansas City, Kan. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)
Lionel Messi may be leading the Golden Boot race and continues to rewrite FIFA World Cup history, but the Argentine captain is not the highest-rated attacking player of the tournament after the group stage.Instead, FIFA’s official performance rankings have placed Germany substitute Deniz Undav at the top of the attacking charts, edging past Messi by the narrowest of margins following three extraordinary substitute appearances during the 2026 FIFA World Cup.FIFA’s official World Cup player power rankings, developed with Aramco under the guidance of Arsène Wenger, evaluate every player’s performance using advanced match data. Outfield players receive scores out of 10 across attacking, creativity and defending, while goalkeepers are assessed separately for their goalkeeping and possession contributions.While many expected Messi, Kylian Mbappé or even Harry Kane to occupy top spot after the group stage, FIFA’s data instead rewarded efficiency, with Undav’s remarkable impact from the bench proving enough to finish first.
Deniz Undav tops FIFA’s attacking rankings despite never starting a match
Few players have influenced matches as dramatically with so little playing time.Undav has yet to start a game for Germany at the tournament, making only three substitute appearances for a combined total of just 86 minutes.
Germany’s Deniz Undav reacts after scoring during the World Cup Group E soccer match between Germany and Curacao in Houston, Sunday, June 14, 2026. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)
Those brief cameos have nevertheless produced extraordinary numbers.The striker has scored three goals and supplied two assists, averaging one goal every 28.7 minutes and a direct goal contribution every 17.2 minutes.His standout performance arrived during Germany’s emphatic 7-1 victory over Curaçao, where he came off the bench to score once and register two assists in just 26 minutes.He followed that by producing a dramatic substitute brace against Ivory Coast, including the decisive winner in the 94th minute, helping Germany secure a 2-1 victory.Those performances earned Undav an attacking rating of 8.36, narrowly ahead of Messi’s 8.34, making him FIFA’s highest-rated attacking player after the group stage despite never featuring in a starting XI.
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Messi continues to rewrite World Cup history
Although he finished second in FIFA’s attacking rankings, Messi continues to produce one of the finest tournaments of his career.The Argentina captain has scored six goals in three group-stage matches, extending his all-time World Cup goals tally to 19 and strengthening his position as the tournament’s leading scorer heading into the knockout rounds.During Argentina’s victory over Jordan, Messi also became the first player in history to score against 13 different countries at the FIFA World Cup.According to Opta, he also became the first footballer ever to score in seven consecutive World Cup matches, further adding to an already unmatched list of tournament records.His attacking rating of 8.34 would normally have comfortably led FIFA’s rankings, but Undav’s astonishing efficiency ultimately pushed him into second place.
Mbappé, Vinícius and Dembélé continue to chase
France captain Kylian Mbappé occupies third place in FIFA’s attacking rankings with a score of 8.13, while Brazil’s Vinícius Júnior sits fourth on 7.92 after an outstanding group stage.Vinícius finished the opening phase with four goals, scoring in all three matches against Morocco, Haiti and Scotland to become the first Brazilian player in 24 years to score in every group-stage match of a World Cup.France winger Ousmane Dembélé climbed into sixth after producing one of the tournament’s defining performances against Norway. His first-half hat-trick, completed inside just 32 minutes, made him the first player since Oleg Salenko in 1994 to score a first-half World Cup hat-trick while also becoming the second-fastest player ever to complete a World Cup treble from kick-off.Norway striker Erling Haaland also features among the leading performers after scoring four goals during his debut World Cup campaign.
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FIFA’s rankings measure more than goals
Unlike the Golden Boot standings, FIFA’s official rankings assess complete performances rather than simply goals scored.The attacking category rewards chance quality, finishing and offensive involvement, while creativity measures passing, chance creation and progression. Defensive contribution is also included to produce a broader picture of a player’s overall influence.Elsewhere in FIFA’s position-specific metrics, France’s Michael Olise leads the creativity rankings with a score of 8.03, Canada’s Luc De Fougerolles is the highest-rated defender on 7.38, while Paraguay goalkeeper Orlando Gill and South Africa’s Ronwen Williams occupy the top two positions among goalkeepers.As the Round of 32 begins, the battle for the tournament’s individual honours remains wide open.Messi still leads the Golden Boot race with six goals, while Kylian Mbappé, Ousmane Dembélé, Vinícius Júnior and Erling Haaland have all scored four times. France, Argentina and Mexico are also the only teams to have completed perfect group-stage records by winning all three of their matches, ensuring many of the tournament favourites remain firmly in contention.Whether Undav can retain top spot in FIFA’s statistical rankings without becoming a regular starter now becomes one of the more intriguing subplots of the knockout rounds.
FIFA’s top 10 outfield performers after the 2026 World Cup group stage
Benvenuto Cellini (7/4 favourite) and Ryan Moore won the Dubai Duty Free Irish Derby at The Curragh on Sunday.
It was an 18th success in the premier Irish classic for Aidan O’Brien, who also trained the runner-up and third placed horse.
The winner, who was declared a non-runner in the Betfred Epsom Derby at the beginning of the month, ran out a one-and-three-quarter length winner over the Epsom victor, Christmas Day (4/1), who, as in the English classic, was ridden by Ronan Whelan.
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Pierre Bonnard (9/1), in the hands of Wayne Lordan, came home third, a neck behind the runner-up.
🗣️”If there was any weakness in his armour, it was going to be exposed.”
The master of @Ballydoyle reveals he was by no means convinced that Benvenuto Cellini had a Derby-winning performance in him after what happened at Epsom. pic.twitter.com/qobUubcqMs
Table-toppers Belgium face African giants Senegal in the FIFA World Cup round of 32 at Seattle Stadium on Wednesday. The Red Devils have never played against the Lions of Teranga.
Belgium topped Group G with two draws and a victory in their three games. They drew 1-1 with Egypt in their opening game before a goalless stalemate with Iran, conditioned by a second-half red card for Nathan Ngoy.
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Criticism was building that the Red Devils are not the same team of old, and that they were not capable of scoring after only one goal netted in two, and that being an own goal.
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Rudi Garcia’s men responded with a comprehensive 5-1 victory over New Zealand in their final group-stage game, and those five points were enough to see them top the group, with Egypt second in Group G.
They will hope to build on that winning momentum to secure a victory over the Lions of Teranga.
Meanwhile, Senegal performed a late escape in Group I to be the only team on three points across all the groups progressing to the knockout rounds.
After losing their first two games, 3-1 to France and 3-2 to Norway, Senegal were considered by most to be out of the running for a top-eight spot among the third-placed teams, but they chose to fight on and thrashed Iraq 5-0 in the final group-stage game.
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That stunning scoreline earned them the three points and turned their goal difference positive to +2, allowing them to move ahead of South Korea, Scotland, and Iran (the other third-placed teams on three points) and into the next round.
The Lions of Teranga have received a lifeline, and they are determined not to waste it against their Belgian opponents. They conceded three times in their two group games against European opposition, and they will need to tighten up their backline if they are to eliminate the Red Devils.
The winner of this match will return to Seattle Stadium for a round-of-16 encounter with either co-hosts the USA or Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Belgium vs Senegal head-to-head stats and key numbers
Belgium and Senegal have never played against each other in an international football match.
Senegal have qualified for the World Cup four times, while Belgium are taking part in their 15th World Cup tournament.
Romelu Lukaku continues to push his impressive record as Belgium’s leading goalscorer, with his goal against New Zealand making it 91 goals in 129 appearances.
Belgium vs Senegal prediction
We expect the Red Devils to dominate possession and use the pace and creativity of wingers Leandro Trossard and Jeremy Doku to take on the Senegalese defenders, isolating them in one-on-one situations before shooting or making the final pass to the Belgian strikers in goal-scoring positions.
They will also count on the tournament experience of veterans Kevin De Bruyne and Lukaku to guide them through the tricky moments in a knockout match.
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Senegal are likely to use their typical aggressive approach to make the most of their physicality, winning the ball back and launching quick counterattacks to hurt Belgium. The Lions of Teranga have shown some vulnerabilities at the back during the group stage, and they will need to be more compact and disciplined if they are to stop Belgium from scoring.
We expect this to be a tight encounter, with the Belgians clinching a narrow victory.
Germany begin their knockout campaign knowing that anything short of victory will bring an abrupt end to their FIFA World Cup 2026 ambitions. Standing in their way are Paraguay, a side that recovered impressively from a disastrous opening match to extend their tournament and earn another opportunity to challenge one of world football’s traditional heavyweights.
The Round of 32 encounter takes place at Boston Stadium in Foxborough, Massachusetts, where Germany arrive after topping Group E with six points. Nagelsmann’s side announced themselves as title contenders by dismantling Curaçao 7-1 before overcoming Ivory Coast 2-1 to seal early qualification. Their final group fixture brought a timely reminder that improvements are still needed, however, as Ecuador inflicted a 2-1 defeat despite Germany having already secured first place.
Paraguay’s group-stage journey could hardly have been more different. Their tournament appeared in danger of ending after a 4-1 defeat to hosts United States in the opening match, but Alfaro’s players responded with impressive resilience. A disciplined 1-0 victory over Türkiye, achieved after playing the entire second half with ten men, reignited their campaign before a hard-earned 0-0 draw against Australia secured four points and a place among the tournament’s best third-placed teams.
Germany will once again rely on one of the competition’s most exciting attacking units. Jamal Musiala and Florian Wirtz continue to provide creativity behind Kai Havertz, while Deniz Undav has become one of the stories of the tournament. The striker has scored three goals despite coming exclusively from the bench and enters the knockout stage as Germany’s most effective impact substitute. Defensively, Germany have been dealt a significant setback after Nico Schlotterbeck was ruled out for the remainder of the tournament with a serious ankle injury, leaving Antonio Rüdiger to marshal the back line.
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Paraguay also welcome an important boost. Miguel Almirón returns after serving his suspension and is expected to partner Julio Enciso in leading the counter-attacking threat. Midfielder Diego Gómez, however, is unavailable after accumulating two yellow cards during the group stage.
This will be only the second World Cup meeting between the nations. Their previous encounter came in the Round of 16 at the 2002 World Cup in South Korea, where Germany finally broke Paraguay’s resistance in the 88th minute through Oliver Neuville before eventually finishing runners-up to Brazil.
The tactical contrast promises to define the contest. Nagelsmann’s Germany favour aggressive pressing, fluid movement and sustained possession, while Alfaro has built Paraguay around defensive organisation, compact positioning and quick transitions. Germany may carry the stronger pedigree, but Paraguay have already shown throughout the group stage that they are capable of frustrating more fancied opponents when discipline and structure take centre stage.
Cbus Super Stadium will play host to Friday’s
Round 17 NRL game between Gold Coast Titans and
Canterbury Bulldogs. The game kicks off at 6:00 pm with Canterbury Bulldogs heading into the game as favourites with the bookmakers. Continue reading for our in-depth preview of the Gold Coast Titans vs.
Canterbury Bulldogs
game and give you our free tips and bets.
The Gold Coast Titans will attempt to build on last week’s confidence-boosting victory when they host Canterbury at Cbus Super Stadium on Friday night.
The Bulldogs continue to search for greater attacking fluency and may have found a solution with captain Stephen Crichton spending more time in the halves. His involvement against Manly provided another dimension to Canterbury’s attack and helped create opportunities for Lachlan Galvin and the outside backs.
Gold Coast has shown encouraging signs in recent weeks, with Keano Kini and Jayden Campbell thriving behind the steady influence of young halfback Zane Harrison. The Titans have often struggled for consistency, but their attacking shape has looked far more settled.
With both sides sitting outside the premiership contenders, this shapes as an important contest for teams trying to build momentum ahead of the second half of the season.
Titans team: 1. Keano Kini 2. Jaylan De Groot 3. Jojo Fifita 4. AJ Brimson 5. Phillip Sami 6. Jayden Campbell 7. Zane Harrison 8. Moeaki Fotuaika 9. Oliver Pascoe 10. Tino Fa’asuamaleaui 11. Arama Hau 12. Beau Fermor 13. Chris Randall 14. Kurtis Morrin 15. Josh Patston 16. Klese Haas 17. Jett Liu 18. Sam Verrills 19. Lachlan Ilias 20. Dean Ieremia 21. Adam Christensen 22. Michael Molo
Bulldogs team: 1. Connor Tracey 2. Jacob Kiraz 3. Matt Burton 4. Enari Tuala 5. Jethro Rinakama 6. Stephen Crichton 7. Lachlan Galvin 8. Max King 9. Bailey Hayward 10. Leo Thompson 11. Josh Curran 12. Jaeman Salmon 13. Harry Hayes 14. Kurt Mann 15. Lipoi Hopoi 16. Jack Underhill 17. Alekolasimi Jones 19. Bronson Xerri 20. Sean O’Sullivan 21. Jacob Preston 22. Logan Spinks 23. Jed Reardon
On Sunday afternoon, 21 British players were into the main draw of the Wimbledon men’s and women’s singles. By sunset on Monday, only nine remained. Despite bright sunshine and balmy temperatures in SW19 what seemed an idyllic start to the tournament rapidly morphed into a nightmare, a truly miserable Monday, as 10 Brits fell on the opening day – the worst return for the home nation this century.
Twelve homegrown players were scheduled for the first day of the Championships. One didn’t make it at all, as Emma Raducanuwithdrew late on Sunday night before she had been slated to open play on Court No 1 on Monday afternoon. Her latest in a litany of frustrating injury setbacks came as a recent “niggle” she had been managing developed into a full-blown stress fracture, and she was advised not to compete.
So 12 was down to 11, and of those survivors, three were knocked out by lunchtime. Things then went from bad to worse: at 2.30pm came the announcement that Jack Draper – scheduled to play on Tuesday – was to follow Raducanu as the highest-profile British player in his draw to pull out, this time with a recurrence of the arm injury that forced him to miss seven months of the tour between August and February.
That news came as Harriet Dart, unexpectedly promoted to Court No 1 after Raducanu’s exit, was locked in an almighty tussle against Jelena Ostapenko. Having dropped the first three games before needing a medical timeout it looked as though Dart might be going the way of her other fallen compatriots, but she rallied in spirited fashion to push the ever-combustile Latvian to three bruising sets.
But as Ostapenko wobbled her way through her service games and produced 13 double faults it was a tie that could easily have gone the other way, and an obviously disappointed Dart was bitterly aware of this as she walked off court with her head covered by a towel.
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She joined wildcards Mika Stojsavljevic (lost in straight sets to 11th seed Belinda Bencic) Felix Gill (lost in three sets to 23rd seed Rafael Jodar), and Alicia Dudeney (lost in straight sets to Alycia Parks), and Max Basing (lost in straight sets to fellow qualifier Shintaro Mochizuki) in making a swift exit out of the All England Club gates.
The dominoes kept falling as teenagers Mimi Xu and Hannah Klugman lost almost at the same time, falling to Daria Kasatkina and 2024 champion Barbora Krejcikova. The draw certainly was not kind to many of the Brits.
While Dart was grappling with Ostapenko the hopes of a nation were slowly descending onto the shoulders of British No 1 Cameron Norrie, so often the last one standing at a major championships. The 30-year-old, seeded 26th, normally produces his best tennis at home, something he acknowledged after the fact.
But he was condemned to his earliest exit at Wimbledon since 2018 by talented college player Michael Zheng, who prevailed in a match tie-break after five closely fought sets. The 22-year-old went through qualifying to reach all three major main draws this year and was a tricky first-round draw despite making his debut at the tournament, having been a junior finalist here.
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Harriet Dart looked dejected as she walked off court (Reuters)
Norrie later described him as “one of the best college players, if not the best college player, at the moment”. But he would have expected to edge the encounter, especially after recovering from the rib injury which hampered him during the clay season.
The exodus continued as qualifier Oliver Tarvet saved three match points in a gritty display against 25th seed Arthur Rinderknech but eventually fell in four sets. Tarvet – who memorably made it to the second round last year, losing to Carlos Alcaraz – put up a fight for more than four hours, and needed a medical timeout after a nasty fall in the third.
Fran Jones then lost in straight sets to Diane Parry to cap a record-breaking day, while the numbers could have been even worse had Jack Pinnington Jones’ match against Brandon Nakashima not been suspended due to bad light, with the Brit two sets to love down.
There was no faulting the effort on display, or the significance of the crowd’s support behind every player. Norrie said afterwards: “I fought really hard. I felt the desire, the hunger, which is important. It’s just tough to fight every point, and you come out on the losing side. But that’s sport.”
Dart shrugged off the idea that there was any greater weight of expectation on the British players’ shoulders. She said: “It’s not just being a British player out there. I think every player has pressure, regardless of the situation. And no matter how many times you do it, someone’s always feeling the pressure. It’s just how people handle it, and some people handle it better than others.”
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Oliver Tarvet fought hard but could not take his first-round match to a deciding set (PA)
But after two high-profile injury withdrawals and a torrent of first-day losses, with British players winning just five of 29 sets played, there was not much to be cheery about. Least of all for the LTA, who stuck to their strategy of showering wildcards on promising British hopefuls and now have little to show for it.
For all the money funnelled into British players, the two most prominent are dealing with injury after injury, while the remainder are struggling to match the likes of Americans, Ukrainians, or Italians in terms of numbers in the top 10 and consistency at the top level. Miserable Monday at Wimbledon threw that into stark relief.
Norrie summed it up: “It always stinks to lose, especially at Wimbledon, my favorite tournament in the world, a tournament I always play so well at. I played well today.
“I think it just takes probably a week or so for this kind of loss to get over. There’s no hiding from it. Yeah, it stinks.”
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