Brazil’s 2026 World Cup picture is taking shape at exactly the right moment, and Carlo Ancelotti is the man tasked with turning expectation into reality. The coach is set to finalize his 26-player roster in Rio de Janeiro, narrowing a much larger preliminary pool into the squad that will represent the Selecao across the United States, Canada, and Mexico. For a nation that treats the World Cup as a matter of identity, every selection carries real weight.
Ancelotti’s first major test in charge
This tournament will be Ancelotti’s first as Brazil boss, and the pressure is immediate. He arrives with a reputation built on club success across Europe, but international football is a different challenge: less time, more scrutiny, and fewer chances to fix mistakes. Brazil have not won the World Cup since 2002, and that long drought has made the 2026 cycle feel especially urgent.
The current squad debate is being shaped by a simple question: should Brazil prioritize continuity, current form, or proven pedigree? In practice, Ancelotti appears to be trying to balance all three. The likely final list blends established stars, trusted veterans, and a few players who have forced their way into the conversation through consistent club performances.
The core of the squad looks stable
Some names seem all but locked in, and that stability gives Brazil a strong foundation. The spine of the team is familiar, especially in defense and midfield, where experience matters most in knockout football.
- Goalkeeper: Alisson is expected to remain the clear first choice, with Ederson providing elite competition and cover.
- Center backs: Marquinhos and Gabriel Magalhaes are widely viewed as the main pairing, while Bremer and Leo Pereira offer important depth.
- Midfield: Casemiro, Bruno Guimaraes, and Lucas Paqueta give Brazil a mix of control, recovery, and creativity.
- Attack: Vinicius Junior, Raphinha, Matheus Cunha, and Gabriel Martinelli headline a forward group built around pace and movement.
At fullback, Wesley is emerging as the favorite on the right, especially with Vanderson unavailable, while Alex Sandro looks like the safest option on the left. That would give Brazil a back line that is not only talented, but also reasonably balanced in terms of profile and experience.
Injuries have changed the conversation
The biggest reason the final squad has become so interesting is the injury list. A few of Brazil’s most recognizable players are unavailable, and their absences have forced Ancelotti to rethink depth in several areas.
- Rodrygo: The Real Madrid forward is out after knee ligament surgery and is expected to miss several months.
- Estevao Willian: The Chelsea teenager is sidelined by a serious muscle injury, removing one of Brazil’s brightest young attacking options.
- Eder Militao: Another major defensive blow, with his knee issue leaving a gap that is difficult to replace cleanly.
These setbacks matter because Brazil do not simply lose individual talent; they lose tactical flexibility. Rodrygo’s absence changes the wing and wide-forward rotation. Militao’s injury affects the defensive pool. Estevao’s unavailability removes a high-upside option who could have altered the shape of the attack over the course of the tournament.
Neymar remains the biggest selection dilemma
If there is one storyline that still dominates discussion, it is Neymar. He made the preliminary 55-man list even though he has not played for Brazil since October 2023, when he suffered a serious knee injury against Uruguay. At 34, he is still Brazil’s all-time leading scorer, and his resume alone makes him impossible to ignore.
Recent reporting suggests Ancelotti is leaning toward taking him, especially with Rodrygo and Estevao out of contention. Neymar’s recent form at Santos has also helped his case, and the player himself has said he feels physically ready and believes he has earned a place. If he is selected, the most likely player to miss out is Joao Pedro, despite the Chelsea striker’s strong scoring return in England.
That decision would be more than symbolic. Neymar is not just a name; he changes how opponents defend Brazil. Even if he is not the same player he once was, his ability to draw attention, create fouls, and unlock compact defenses could be decisive in a short tournament.
Group C gives Brazil a workable route
Brazil’s group-stage path is favorable on paper. Group C includes Morocco, Haiti, and Scotland, which means the Selecao avoid an especially punishing opening round by recent World Cup standards.
- June 13: Brazil vs Morocco at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey
- June 19/20: Brazil vs Haiti at Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia
- June 25/26: Scotland vs Brazil at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens
Morocco is the toughest opponent in the section, but Brazil should still feel confident about advancing. A top finish would also create a more manageable Round of 32 path, likely against a third-placed team from another group. That matters in a tournament where momentum often matters as much as talent.
What the opening lineup could look like
Ancelotti’s recent friendlies against France and Croatia offered a useful clue about how Brazil may line up. The most likely shapes are a 4-2-3-1 or a 4-3-3, both of which would suit the squad’s current balance.
A possible starting eleven
Alisson; Wesley, Marquinhos, Gabriel, Alex Sandro; Casemiro, Bruno Guimaraes; Raphinha, Lucas Paqueta, Vinicius Junior; Matheus Cunha or Igor Thiago.
If Neymar makes the cut, he becomes one of the most interesting tactical variables in the squad. He could compete with Paqueta for the central creative role, or he could operate closer to Vinicius Junior in a more fluid front line. Either way, Ancelotti would have a major decision on his hands.
The bigger picture for Brazil
Brazil go into 2026 with a clear objective: end a 24-year title drought and remind the world why the national team remains one of football’s defining powers. The squad is not without questions, but it does have a strong backbone, high-end attacking talent, and a manager whose calm authority could suit a team under pressure.
If the final list breaks the expected way, Brazil will arrive at the World Cup as one of the favorites. The real test will begin only when the matches start, but for now, the setup looks encouraging. The ceiling is still extremely high, and for Brazil, that is always where the conversation begins.

