It doesn’t matter whether you’re the five time world champions [hi, Brazil] or a nation whose best performance in the World Cup is reaching the semi-finals on home soil in 2002 [hey, it’s South Korea], witnessing your star man and national icon suffering a nasty injury is a worrying scenario. Korea Republic had to wait nervously to see if Son Heung-Min would be fit for Qatar 2022, while Brazil lost Neymar to a full-scale Serbian ankle assault in their opening game of the tournament. Fortunately both men lined up for their nations in this last 16 ties. Brazil were huge favourites to progress to a quarter-final against Croatia but some fancied South Korea as a potential banana skin for the tournament favourites. They were wrong.
Incredibly, South Korea would go and do just that. Unless you’re Arsenal playing at Newcastle in February 2011 there’s little concern when defending a 4-0 lead and, despite some occasional but typically dreamy moves, Brazil were happy to see the game out, getting a bit of rest ahead of their Croatian encounter on Friday. The Koreans even scored one of the best consolation goals you’ll ever witness, Paik Seung-Ho lashing in a left-footed screamer from outside the box.
Their advantage reduced to three goals, Brazil reacted in the most sensible way imaginable, substituting Alisson for third-choice goalkeeper Weverton, meaning they became the first team to use 26 different players in a single World Cup, and the ninth nation to use three goalkeepers in a single edition of the Global Jamboree™️.
In the end, the second half was a process for Brazil, a period to get through without picking up injury or suspension and they did just that. The first half, though, will live on as a vivid memory of just what this team can do when they ease through the gears. They can expect Croatia to approach the quarter-final in an entirely different way to South Korea, but the 2018 World Cup runners-up will be playing on a knife-edge. One slip against this Brazil team and they can ruin you in an instant.