Brazilian football has always depended upon singular interpreter - players capable of transforming a tactical system into something emotionally intelligible. Across generations, the Seleção’s identity has oscillated between artistry and structure, improvisation and doctrine. At the FIFA World Cup 2026, that responsibility has fallen upon Matheus Cunha.
What makes Cunha’s emergence remarkable is not merely the volume of his contributions, but the nature of them. Four years removed from the silent devastation of missing the journey to Qatar, the 27-year-old has returned not simply as a goalscorer, but as the conceptual nucleus of Carlo Ancelotti’s evolving Brazil: a forward who bends systems around himself without ever compromising collective balance.
Through the group stage - from a controlled introduction against Morocco to a devastating display against Haiti and a tactically transcendent performance versus Scotland - Cunha has evolved into the defining architectural force of Brazil’s campaign.
From Exile to Axis: The Emotional Genesis of Reinvention
Cunha’s World Cup began quietly.
Against Morocco, Ancelotti introduced him cautiously from the bench, less as an attacking savior and more as a structural stabilizer. Brazil needed rhythm, composure, and connective tissue between midfield and attack. Cunha supplied precisely that. Yet the restraint of that cameo only amplified what followed.
The turning point arrived against Haiti.
Handed a starting role ahead of Igor Thiago, Cunha delivered not only two goals in Brazil’s commanding 3–0 victory, but also a complete reinterpretation of the center-forward role. His performance carried the emotional weight of personal redemption, yet its deeper significance lay in its tactical intelligence.
“It’s one of the best days of my life… After everything I’ve been through, I’ve grown wiser and matured. I just try to live in the moment.”
~ Matheus Cunha
Traditional Brazilian number nines historically occupied defenders physically; Cunha destabilized them psychologically. Rather than remaining fixed against opposition center-backs, he drifted through phases of play with near-oceanic fluidity, evoking the freedom of his off-pitch passion for surfing.
His opening goal against Haiti captured this identity perfectly. The sequence began not inside the penalty area, but deep within midfield territory, where Cunha intercepted possession before immediately accelerating the transition. Moments later, he arrived in the box with impeccable timing to finish the move he himself had initiated.
That sequence distilled the essence of his tournament: a forward simultaneously functioning as destroyer, conductor, and finisher.
It also revealed the foundational principle of Ancelotti’s Brazil - an attacking structure built not around positional rigidity, but around intelligent occupation of dynamic spaces.
The Scotland Performance: The False Nine as Strategic Sovereign
If Haiti represented emotional catharsis, Scotland represented tactical mastery.
In Miami, against a disciplined Scottish low block orchestrated around the physical authority of Scott McTominay, Brazil unveiled perhaps their most complete performance of the tournament. Ancelotti’s structure oscillated fluidly between a pressing 4-3-3 and an overwhelming 3-1-6 during sustained possession phases. At the center of every transformation stood Cunha.
He was not simply participating within the system; he was governing its geometry.
Structural Manipulation and Spatial Engineering
Cunha’s partnership with Vinícius Júnior became the central mechanism of Brazil’s attacking ecology.
While Vinícius stretched Scotland vertically with relentless direct running, Cunha manipulated the horizontal corridors between midfield and defense. By repeatedly dropping into deeper zones, he created numerical superiority in central areas while simultaneously disorganizing Scotland’s defensive references.
The consequences were devastating.
Every time a Scottish centre-back stepped forward to engage him, a channel emerged behind the defensive line. Into those vacated corridors surged Bruno Guimarães, whose under-lapping runs became one of the defining tactical patterns of the match.
Cunha’s genius lay not in occupying space, but in manufacturing it for others.
This is the critical distinction between a conventional false nine and what Cunha became in Miami: a spatial orchestrator capable of altering the opponent’s defensive structure through movement alone.
Defensive Leadership: Brazil’s First Defender
Equally significant was Cunha’s contribution without the ball.
Brazil’s pressing system has drawn widespread acclaim throughout the tournament, yet its functionality begins with the aggression and intelligence of its first line. Cunha did not press symbolically; he pressed diagnostically.
Rather than shadowing defenders passively, he actively eliminated Scotland’s central passing lanes, isolating their single pivot and forcing rushed long clearances. His timing in transitional moments repeatedly suffocated Scotland before attacks could even materialize.
The opening goal itself emerged from this defensive ferocity.
Near the edge of the box, Cunha executed a perfectly judged sliding challenge to recover possession before immediately triggering the attacking sequence that ended with Vinícius finishing Bruno Guimarães’ delivery.
In that moment, Cunha embodied the modern elite forward: a player whose defensive interventions are as structurally valuable as his goals.
Statistical Output and Tactical Magnitude
Cunha’s group-stage campaign has achieved a rare equilibrium between tactical sophistication and direct production.
Strategic Impact
- Morocco: Stabilized match rhythm after coming onto the pitch as a substitute.
- Haiti: Advanced Center-Forward, provided width and rhythm to Vinicius Junior. Dropped deeper to aid the midfield and develop connection with the forward line.
- Scotland: Controlled structural superiority. Dropped in the midfield and hampered the play of Scottish defensive midfielders and never let them settle.
Yet statistics alone inadequately explain his influence.
His true value resides in the elasticity he grants Brazil’s attacking framework. He enables wingers to attack interior channels, midfielders to penetrate vertically, and full-backs to advance aggressively - all because his movement continuously manipulates defensive orientation.
He does not merely occupy the frontline. He redesigns it in real time.
Beyond the Seleção: The Implications for Manchester United
Cunha’s performances carry implications extending far beyond the World Cup.
At Manchester United, his evolution may prove transformative. Modern football increasingly polarizes attacking profiles into specialists: the physically dominant target-man typified by Erling Haaland, or the explosive inside-forward represented by Kylian Mbappé.
Cunha exists outside that binary.
He combines the connective intelligence of a midfielder with the instinctive aggression of a striker. He can receive under pressure, progress play, create overloads, initiate presses, and still arrive inside the box as a decisive finisher.
In many ways, he represents the archetype of the contemporary holistic forward: less a fixed attacker than a complete tactical ecosystem.
For Michael Carrick, that versatility could become foundational. Cunha’s ability to function simultaneously as link-player, creative conduit, and penalty-box threat offers Manchester United something increasingly rare in elite football - structural fluidity without sacrificing attacking penetration.
The Modern Vanguard
As Brazil advance toward the knockout rounds, the conversation surrounding their campaign has subtly transformed.
The question is no longer who can inherit the mantle of Brazil’s legendary attacking focal points.
The answer may already exist.
In Matheus Cunha, Brazil have discovered not merely a striker, but a catalyst - an athlete forged equally by disappointment and reinvention. He plays with the resilience of a man who has experienced exclusion, and with the liberated imagination of one who has finally found the stage worthy of his complexity.
At the World Cup 2026, Cunha is not simply leading Brazil’s line.
He is redefining it.
Thank You
Faisal Caesar




