Why Haiti Could Trouble Brazil After a Brave World Cup Bow

By The Rio Times | Created at 2026-06-14 08:11:37 | Updated at 2026-06-14 10:50:10 2 hours ago

Brazil · Sport

Key Facts

The result. Haiti lost their opening match 1-0 to Scotland, beaten by a deflected first-half goal.

The surprise. Haiti actually out-shot Scotland, 15 to 9, and pushed a more fancied side back for long spells.

The history. It was Haiti’s first World Cup appearance since 1974, ending a wait of more than half a century.

What is next. Haiti face five-time champions Brazil on June 19, with Brazil coming off a flat 1-1 draw.

The weak link. Haiti’s problem was finishing, not effort; they created chances but could not convert them.

The backdrop. The team qualified against the odds while their country endures violence, hunger and displacement.

The Brazil Haiti meeting on June 19 was meant to be a routine win for the favourites, but Haiti’s spirited opening defeat, and Brazil’s own shaky start, have quietly made it more interesting than the rankings suggest.

Vinicius Junior celebrates for Brazil, who face Haiti next at the 2026 World Cup (Photo internet reproduction)

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A defeat that read like a warning

On the scoreboard, Haiti lost. They went down 1-0 to Scotland, undone by a shot that took a deflection and crept in just before the half-hour.

The story of the match, though, was not one of a side being overwhelmed. Haiti out-shot Scotland by fifteen attempts to nine and pushed a more experienced team back for long stretches.

What they lacked was the final touch. Chance after chance went begging, and a header that might have earned a draw flashed just wide late on.

Even the opposing camp acknowledged it. Scotland’s coach admitted his side had carried less pressure and credited Haiti for the way they competed on their long-awaited return.

The goal that beat them was unlucky too, a strike that took a double deflection on its way past the goalkeeper. On another night, with a sharper finish at the other end, Haiti might have taken something from the game.

Who Haiti are, for the newcomer

For readers meeting this team for the first time, Haiti are a small Caribbean nation playing at only their second World Cup ever, and their first since 1974. That is a gap of more than half a century.

Their qualification carried weight far beyond sport. The country has been gripped by gang violence, hunger and mass displacement, and the team’s arrival on the world stage was a rare moment of national pride against a grim backdrop.

On the pitch they are quick, energetic and unafraid, the kind of side that runs hard and harries opponents rather than one that controls the ball. That profile is precisely what can unsettle a bigger name on an off day.

Why the Brazil Haiti game is less routine than it looks

Brazil should still win, and comfortably on their best form. But their best form is exactly what has been missing so far.

In their own opener the five-time champions were held to a flat 1-1 draw, rescued by a single moment of brilliance after a nervous, disjointed performance. A team in that state can be vulnerable to an opponent willing to run at it.

Haiti will not fear Brazil after their showing against Scotland, and they will arrive knowing a result against the favourites could rescue their tournament. That combination of belief and desperation is what makes the fixture worth watching.

The group table sharpens the point. Scotland sit top after their win, which means Brazil cannot afford to drop more points if they want to control their own path out of the group.

A slip against Haiti would turn the final match against Scotland into a nervous, must-win occasion. Suddenly a group that looked straightforward on paper carries real jeopardy for the favourites.

What is really at stake

For Brazil, the stakes are about more than two points. Having stumbled in their first match, they need a convincing win to calm the nerves around a side that arrived among the favourites but has yet to look like one.

For Haiti, almost anything is a bonus. They are already writing history simply by being here, and a competitive display against Brazil would only deepen the pride back home.

The likeliest outcome is still a Brazilian victory. But the Scotland match showed that Haiti will make their opponents earn it, and that is more than most expected of the tournament’s great returnees.

For the neutral, that is the appeal of an expanded World Cup. Sides once dismissed as makeweights arrive organised and fearless, and the gap between the giants and the newcomers looks narrower than the rankings ever admit.

Frequently Asked Questions

When do Brazil play Haiti?

Brazil face Haiti on June 19 in Philadelphia, the second round of Group C matches. Brazil go into it after a 1-1 draw with Morocco, while Haiti lost their opener to Scotland.

How did Haiti perform in their first game?

They lost 1-0 to Scotland but out-shot them and created the better chances, falling short only in finishing. It was a far more competitive display than their underdog billing suggested.

Why does this match matter to Haiti?

It is only Haiti’s second World Cup and their first since 1974, reached against the backdrop of a deep national crisis. A strong result against Brazil would be a landmark moment for the team and its supporters.

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