Brazil 4-1 South Korea: Sublime Selecao turn on style to set up Croatia quarter-final

Brazil 4-1 South Korea: Sublime Selecao turn on style to set up Croatia quarter-final

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Neymar was among the goals on his return to the side as Brazil thumped South Korea 4-1 in Monday's World Cup last-16 tie.

Brazil produced the best display of Qatar 2022 so far with an emphatic 4-1 victory over South Korea at Stadium 974 on Monday to set up a quarter-final tie with Croatia.

The Selecao were four goals up inside 36 minutes – only the second time in their World Cup history they have scored four times in the first half of a match – in a one-sided tie.

Neymar returned to Brazil's line-up – back to full strength after their 1-0 loss to Cameroon – and he netted from the penalty spot after Vinicius Junior had opened the scoring.

Richarlison and Lucas Paqueta put the game well out of reach and there was no way back for South Korea, though they did have a moment to savour courtesy of Paik Seung-ho's goal in the second half.

Raphinha pulled the ball back for Vinicius to curl into the top-right corner after seven minutes and Brazil had a quickfire second goal when Neymar converted from the penalty spot.

Richarlison won that penalty after being caught by Jung Woo-young, and he was himself among the goals when finishing after Thiago Silva picked him out with a first-time pass.

Brazil were completely out of sight by the interval as Paqueta rounded off another fine attack that culminated in Vinicius clipping the ball into his path to volley home.

A double change at the interval led to an improved display from South Korea, who after forcing Alisson into a few saves scored through a long-range Paik strike that took a deflection.

What does it mean? Samba stars put on a show

Brazil toiled for large parts of their wins over Serbia and Switzerland prior to suffering a shock defeat to Cameroon, but back at full strength here they laid down a real marker.

South Korea's first knockout-stage game in this competition since 2010 could not have gone much worse, with Tite's men out of sight well before half-time.

Five-time winners Brazil have advanced from their past eight World Cup last-16 ties and will now face 2018 beaten finalists Croatia, who earlier defeated Japan on penalties.

Brazil find their scoring touch

Brazil scored a rather underwhelming three goals from 57 shots in the group stage, compared to three goals from their first five efforts against South Korea.

The Selecao were a lot more clinical than they were in the first round, though their opponents' set-up also played right into their hands – a mistake Croatia will surely not make.

Returning Neymar back among the goals

Neymar was back in the side after missing the past two games through injury and he registered his 76th goal for Brazil, placing him one short of Pele's all-time record.

The Paris Saint-Germain superstar, whose past six goals for the Selecao have come from the penalty spot, will look to match and surpass the Brazil great in Qatar.

Key Opta Facts:

- Brazil scored four goals in a knockout-round game at the World Cup for the first time since 1998 (4-1 v Chile), scoring more goals in the opening 36 minutes of this match (four) than they did in their three group stage games combined (three).

- South Korea are winless in all seven of their World Cup games against South American sides (D2 L5) – only Scotland (eight) have faced such nations more often without ever winning in the competition.

- Neymar became just the third Brazilian to score in at least three editions of the World Cup (2014, 2018, 2022), along with Pele (1958, 1962, 1966, 1970) and Ronaldo (1998, 2002, 2006).

- Brazil led 3-0 after just 29 minutes, the earliest they have gone three goals ahead in a single World Cup match. In the end, it was just the second time they have scored four goals in the first half of a World Cup match, also doing so against Mexico in 1954.

- Brazil have won all four of their World Cup matches against Asian opponents, with each game coming against a different side (also 4-0 v China, 4-1 v Japan, 2-1 v North Korea).

What's next?

Brazil have that quarter-final tie with Croatia to look forward to in Al Rayyan on Friday, while South Korea's campaign in Qatar is now over.

Brazil 4-1 South Korea: Sublime Selecao turn on style to set up Croatia quarter-final

Neymar was among the goals on his return to the side as Brazil thumped South Korea 4-1 in Monday's World Cup last-16 tie.

Brazil produced the best display of Qatar 2022 so far with an emphatic 4-1 victory over South Korea at Stadium 974 on Monday to set up a quarter-final tie with Croatia.

The Selecao were four goals up inside 36 minutes – only the second time in their World Cup history they have scored four times in the first half of a match – in a one-sided tie.

Neymar returned to Brazil's line-up – back to full strength after their 1-0 loss to Cameroon – and he netted from the penalty spot after Vinicius Junior had opened the scoring.

Richarlison and Lucas Paqueta put the game well out of reach and there was no way back for South Korea, though they did have a moment to savour courtesy of Paik Seung-ho's goal in the second half.

Raphinha pulled the ball back for Vinicius to curl into the top-right corner after seven minutes and Brazil had a quickfire second goal when Neymar converted from the penalty spot.

Richarlison won that penalty after being caught by Jung Woo-young, and he was himself among the goals when finishing after Thiago Silva picked him out with a first-time pass.

Brazil were completely out of sight by the interval as Paqueta rounded off another fine attack that culminated in Vinicius clipping the ball into his path to volley home.

A double change at the interval led to an improved display from South Korea, who after forcing Alisson into a few saves scored through a long-range Paik strike that took a deflection.

What does it mean? Samba stars put on a show

Brazil toiled for large parts of their wins over Serbia and Switzerland prior to suffering a shock defeat to Cameroon, but back at full strength here they laid down a real marker.

South Korea's first knockout-stage game in this competition since 2010 could not have gone much worse, with Tite's men out of sight well before half-time.

Five-time winners Brazil have advanced from their past eight World Cup last-16 ties and will now face 2018 beaten finalists Croatia, who earlier defeated Japan on penalties.

Brazil find their scoring touch

Brazil scored a rather underwhelming three goals from 57 shots in the group stage, compared to three goals from their first five efforts against South Korea.

The Selecao were a lot more clinical than they were in the first round, though their opponents' set-up also played right into their hands – a mistake Croatia will surely not make.

Returning Neymar back among the goals

Neymar was back in the side after missing the past two games through injury and he registered his 76th goal for Brazil, placing him one short of Pele's all-time record.

The Paris Saint-Germain superstar, whose past six goals for the Selecao have come from the penalty spot, will look to match and surpass the Brazil great in Qatar.

Key Opta Facts:

- Brazil scored four goals in a knockout-round game at the World Cup for the first time since 1998 (4-1 v Chile), scoring more goals in the opening 36 minutes of this match (four) than they did in their three group stage games combined (three).

- South Korea are winless in all seven of their World Cup games against South American sides (D2 L5) – only Scotland (eight) have faced such nations more often without ever winning in the competition.

- Neymar became just the third Brazilian to score in at least three editions of the World Cup (2014, 2018, 2022), along with Pele (1958, 1962, 1966, 1970) and Ronaldo (1998, 2002, 2006).

- Brazil led 3-0 after just 29 minutes, the earliest they have gone three goals ahead in a single World Cup match. In the end, it was just the second time they have scored four goals in the first half of a World Cup match, also doing so against Mexico in 1954.

- Brazil have won all four of their World Cup matches against Asian opponents, with each game coming against a different side (also 4-0 v China, 4-1 v Japan, 2-1 v North Korea).

What's next?

Brazil have that quarter-final tie with Croatia to look forward to in Al Rayyan on Friday, while South Korea's campaign in Qatar is now over.

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