Scotland’s World Cup 2026 Lifeline — the Brazil Equation Few Irish Fans Have Done

Updated July 2026
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There is a particular kind of Irish football summer where the Boys in Green are watching from home and half the country quietly adopts Scotland instead. This is that summer. Ireland’s playoff heartbreak against Czechia left a hole in the schedule, and into it have stepped the Tartan Army — complete with a few hundred travelling Irish who, as one Dundalk group cheerfully put it, intend to "bring the craic and the beer" to the Scotland–Brazil game. So let me do the sum that the pub optimists keep waving away: can Scotland actually still qualify? Yes. Here is exactly how.

Scotland football supporters in tartan celebrating in a stadium crowd at the World Cup 2026
With Ireland absent, a swathe of Irish support has thrown in with Scotland — and the maths gives them something to shout about.

Where Scotland Actually Stand

After Friday’s 1–0 loss to Morocco, Scotland sit third in Group C on three points with a goal difference of zero. Above them, Brazil and Morocco are both on four. Below, Haiti are gone on zero. The final round on 24 June pits Scotland against Brazil, while Morocco face Haiti.

That is not the look of a dead team. It is the look of a team that needs results to break a specific way — and in an expanded 48-team World Cup, where the eight best third-placed sides also advance, "specific" is a long way from "impossible".

The Equation, Done Properly

Two routes are open to Scotland, and it is worth being precise because the headlines rarely are.

Route one — second place. Scotland beat Brazil on 24 June. A win takes them to six points. If Morocco fail to beat Haiti, the door to second place swings wide; if Morocco win, goal difference and the margin of Scotland’s victory come into play. Beating Brazil is the hard part — but it puts destiny back in Scottish hands.

Route two — best third place. Even a narrow loss or a draw may not be fatal. With four points, or in some permutations three plus a healthy goal difference, Scotland could sneak in among the eight best third-placed teams across the twelve groups. That race will not resolve until the other groups finish, so a competitive Scotland performance against Brazil keeps them in the conversation regardless.

Inside line: the under-discussed lever here is goal difference. Scotland are on zero; a heavy Brazil defeat could quietly end them even if their points tally looks survivable. So when you watch the Brazil game, the scoreline matters as much as the result — a 1–0 loss is a very different night from a 4–0 one for the third-place permutations.

Why the Brazil Game Suits an Underdog

I wrote in Friday’s recap that Brazil’s 3–0 over Haiti was a first-half blitz followed by a switch-off. That is the pattern to watch. Brazil are at their most vulnerable when the result feels secured and the intensity drops — and Scotland, with nothing to lose and everything to chase, are precisely the kind of high-energy, physical opponent built to punish a complacent favourite.

Brazil and Scotland players competing for the ball during a World Cup 2026 group match
Scotland’s final group game against Brazil on 24 June is the one fixture in Group C where the favourite carries the heavier burden.

The Celtic thread runs through this too. Scotland’s qualification was built on the spine of players Irish fans know intimately from the Scottish Premiership, and that familiarity is a big part of why the adoption has been so natural. When Kieran Tierney and company line up against the Selecao, plenty of living rooms from Dublin to Galway will be as invested as anyone in Glasgow.

The Odds Read

Brazil are heavy favourites for the individual match, as you would expect, and short enough in the outright that — as I keep arguing on our odds page — they are priced on five stars and history rather than this squad’s transitional reality. Scotland to win the match is a genuine outsider’s price, which is exactly why a structured each-way or draw-no-bet approach makes more sense than a straight win single.

Example: A €10 each-way bet on Scotland to beat Brazil splits your stake across the win and a place/over-performance market — so a gallant Scottish display that falls just short can still return part of your outlay, which a flat win single never would.
  • Scotland sit third in Group C on three points with a zero goal difference after losing to Morocco.
  • Beating Brazil on 24 June reopens a direct route to second place, especially if Morocco drop points to Haiti.
  • The expanded 48-team format means the eight best third-placed sides also advance — keeping Scotland alive even without a win.
  • Goal difference is the silent killer: a heavy Brazil defeat could end Scotland even if the points look survivable.

The Insider Verdict

Scotland are not qualified and they are not eliminated — they are in the most interesting position of all, the live underdog with a clear task and a favourable script. For the Irish supporter who has adopted them, the value is not in expecting a famous win but in recognising that the Brazil game is genuinely coin-flippable and pricing your bets accordingly. Back the occasion, not the fairy tale: structured stakes, each-way thinking, and an eye on the margin as much as the result.

If you want a bookmaker for the Group C finale, Spinit and BillyBets carry the each-way and Scottish-interest markets — in euro, and with the discipline this kind of high-variance bet demands. The full Group C picture and the Scotland team read are worth a look before you commit a cent.

Can Scotland still qualify for the World Cup 2026 knockouts?
Yes. Scotland sit third in Group C on three points. Beating Brazil on 24 June opens a route to second place, and even short of that they remain in contention for one of the eight best third-placed berths in the expanded 48-team format.
When do Scotland play Brazil?
Scotland face Brazil in their final Group C match on 24 June 2026, with Morocco playing Haiti in the simultaneous fixture.
Why are Irish fans supporting Scotland at the World Cup?
With Ireland not qualifying after a playoff loss to Czechia, many Irish fans have adopted Scotland — helped by the Celtic and Scottish Premiership connections that make the squad familiar, and the long-standing camaraderie between the two sets of supporters.