Brazil come into Houston with the old glow returning, or at least something close to it. Ancelotti’s side did not start perfectly, but the response since then has been mature, controlled and, at times, pretty ruthless. The Selecao look like a team growing into the tournament.
Japan bring a different kind of danger. They are not the loudest side in the competition, but they are tidy, brave and very hard to panic. Moriyasu’s structure gives them protection when they sit deeper, then speed when the ball is released into space.
Tactically, this could become a battle between Brazil’s wide overloads and Japan’s wing-back lanes. Brazil should have more possession, but that does not automatically mean control. Japan are comfortable defending without the ball, then attacking the gaps that appear once opponents start to chase the next pass.
The match rhythm should be sharp rather than chaotic. Brazil have the higher ceiling in individual quality, especially in the final third, but Japan’s collective movement makes them awkward. With no detailed corners or cards table supplied, the clearest betting read comes from goals, transitions and attacking profiles.
There is also a psychological edge here. Brazil carry the weight of history, expectation and that familiar knockout pressure. Japan carry something lighter but just as dangerous: belief. They have already shown they can hurt bigger names, so this does not feel like a routine favourite versus outsider story.