Casemiro found the back of the net in the 56th minute against Japan on June 29, leveling the score at 1-1 in a Round of 32 clash. It was the veteran midfielder’s first goal of the 2026 World Cup.
For a player with 89 international caps and 9 goals heading into the tournament, the strike was less a surprise than a reminder. At 34, Casemiro is still the kind of player who shows up when elimination is on the line.
A tournament where Brazil entered as underdogs
Casemiro acknowledged on June 3, before the tournament kicked off, that Brazil entered the 2026 World Cup as non-favorites. The World Cup, running from June 11 to July 19, 2026, is the first edition with 48 teams and an expanded bracket. Brazil had already navigated the group stage successfully, with Vinícius Júnior providing a goal against Morocco in an earlier fixture.
The goal itself and why it mattered
Japan took the lead before halftime. Casemiro’s equalizer in the 56th minute reset the match psychologically as much as it did on the scoreboard. Japan, who had been controlling tempo and looking increasingly comfortable with their lead, suddenly had to recalibrate.
What this means for Brazil’s World Cup path
The equalizer kept Brazil alive in a match they could not afford to lose. In a 48-team format, the Round of 32 is where the tournament begins to thin out, and early exits carry enormous weight for footballing nations with Brazil’s pedigree.
The 2026 World Cup has already delivered its share of drama, and Brazil’s Round of 32 clash with Japan added to the collection.
Coverage of the match did not mention any cryptocurrency tokens or initiatives specifically tied to Casemiro’s goal. The sports crypto space has been relatively quiet during this tournament cycle compared to the hype surrounding the 2022 edition in Qatar, where fan token projects were aggressively marketed.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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