Scotland vs Brazil Prediction: The Group C Decider

Updated July 2026
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Twenty-eight years ago I watched John Collins roll a penalty past Taffarel and dared, for ninety seconds, to believe Scotland could trouble Brazil. They could not. They never have at a World Cup. And yet here we are again — Wednesday night, Hard Rock Stadium in Miami, the Tartan Army back on the biggest stage and a place in the knockout rounds genuinely on the line. For those of us in Ireland who have adopted Scotland as our own this summer, this is the match the whole tournament has been building toward. RTÉ have it free-to-air at 23:00 IST, and I would not miss it for the world.

Scotland and Brazil colours represented under dramatic stadium floodlights ahead of a World Cup 2026 night match

Miami, Wednesday night, 23:00 IST — Scotland’s shot at history against the Seleção.

What Scotland Need on Wednesday

Let me cut straight to the table, because the permutations matter for every market on this game. Scotland sit third in Group C on three points, level on the maths with the leaders but behind Brazil and Morocco (both four) on the head-to-head ledger. Haiti, pointless and already eliminated, are gone. With the top two and the eight best third-placed sides advancing, Scotland are in a strong position — but nothing is sealed.

The simple version: a draw with Brazil almost certainly takes Scotland through, either as runners-up or as one of the best third-placed teams, and a win would book it outright. The complication is the simultaneous Morocco v Haiti kick-off in Atlanta — Morocco are heavy 2/7 favourites and will expect to win, so Scotland cannot rely on results elsewhere. Steve Clarke’s men need a point of their own, and they need it against the most talented side in their path. The full group context sits in my Group C: Brazil & Scotland breakdown.

Team News: Brazil Are Patched Up

Here is where it gets interesting, and where the 6/1 about a Scotland win stops looking absurd. Brazil arrive in Miami without a recognised front line:

The flip side: Neymar is back, declared available by Carlo Ancelotti, and even a patched Brazil at 2/5 is a fearsome thing. But this is not the all-conquering Seleção the 12/1 outright price implies — it is a top-heavy squad missing three first-choice names, asked to break down a Scotland side built to defend.

Scotland have their own worries. Billy Gilmour has been out since late May with a knee injury; Aaron Hickey and Scott McKenna both missed training on 21 June and are doubts, McKenna with a calf. The good news is Kieran Tierney trained fully and is available. My full Scotland World Cup betting guide has the squad in depth.

A defensive wall of players bracing for a free kick on a floodlit World Cup pitch

Scotland’s road to the knockouts runs through disciplined, low-block defending — exactly as it did in qualifying.

The Odds & Where the Value Sits

Here are the verified prices, as of 22 June (ESPN / Oddschecker aggregated best available; Bet365, BetOnline, BetNow; fractional conversion mine — confirm before staking):

The expected-goals data from Matchday 2 tells the story the market is pricing: Brazil 1.56, Scotland 0.51 (RealGM tracker). Brazil should create more. But Scotland have conceded sparingly and only need to survive, and a Brazil missing Raphinha and Rodrygo loses a chunk of the creativity that turns 1.56 xG into goals.

Example: A €25 stake on the draw at 7/2 returns €112.50 (€87.50 profit). Back “draw no bet — Scotland” at around 6/5 instead and that €25 returns €55 with your stake safe if Scotland nick it — the smarter way to play the result Scotland actually need.

That, for me, is the bet. Scotland do not need to beat Brazil; they need not to lose. The draw at 7/2 (up to 17/4) is the headline value, and draw-no-bet on Scotland is the cautious cousin for those who want insurance. The straight 6/1 win is a lottery ticket — fun for a euro or two, no more.

My Verdict

I have learned not to let the heart drive the slip, and my head says Brazil’s individual quality still edges a tight one. But the gap between 4/9 and reality has narrowed sharply with three Brazilian forwards unavailable, and Scotland have built their entire identity on nights exactly like this. My prediction is a 1–1 draw that sends the Tartan Army into the Round of 32 for the first time in their history — and breaks twenty-eight years of my own World Cup heartache by proxy.

My pick: the draw at 7/2 (up to 17/4), with draw-no-bet Scotland as the safer alternative. You will find both markets in € with fractional odds at Boomerang Bet.com, Blitz.bet or BillyBets — 18+, please bet responsibly, and enjoy the night whatever your slip says.

What time is Scotland v Brazil in Ireland?
23:00 IST on Wednesday 24 June, live free-to-air on RTÉ. Kick-off is 6:00 PM ET at Hard Rock Stadium, Miami Gardens.
Do Scotland qualify with a draw against Brazil?
A draw almost certainly sends Scotland through — either as group runners-up or as one of the eight best third-placed teams. A win guarantees it. Defeat would leave them relying on other groups’ results.
Which Brazil players are missing?
Raphinha (thigh) is out of this match; Rodrygo (ACL/meniscus) and Éder Militão (hamstring surgery) are out for the tournament. Neymar returns and is available.
Have Scotland ever beaten Brazil at a World Cup?
No. Scotland have never beaten Brazil at a World Cup; their only point came in a 0–0 draw at the 1974 tournament.