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Scotland's hopes of reaching the knockout stages of the World Cup for the first time are in significant peril after calamitous defending allowed Brazil to sweep them aside 3-0 in Miami and finish top of Group C.
Steve Clarke's side knew they could all-but confirm a historic passage out of the group stages with a point against the record tournament winners.
Before the game, the statisticians said a record of three points and a minus three goal difference would give a team a 42% chance of claiming one of the eight best third-place team spots in the last 32.
But the Scots face an agonising wait until potentially as late as Sunday morning to know their fate as the rest of the groups play their final games.
Should they miss out, they will rue being masters of their own downfall yet again.
Scott McKenna - in for his first start of the finals - hesitated on the ball and was robbed by Bournemouth teenager Rayan. He teed-up Vinicius Jr, and one of the game's most potent strikers gratefully accepted the gift.
The Real Madrid forward – who has scored in every group game – thought he had his second when he pick-pocketed Jack Hendry and rolled beyond Angus Gunn.
VAR bailed the Scots out - the officials deciding the defender had been tripped - when they couldn't help themselves.
Carlo Ancelotti was not a happy man, but his talisman soon had his second, nodding in at the back post after the feeble Scots failed to clear in first-half stoppage time.
Vinicius Jr could have had a hat-trick. Brazil could have had five.
And yet Scotland will have felt a bit sore going in at the break two goals down as they looked the best they have this tournament in possession and on the front foot.
Perhaps that's saying something, though.
Without captain Andy Robertson - who was ripped by Rayan, yet saved by Gunn - in the second half, the Scots again started brightly. But Brazil were toying with them.
Two soft penalty claims and a Scott McTominay header arrowed at Alisson were forgotten of when Newcastle midfielder Bruno Guimaraes dispossessed Kenny McLean, setting up Matheus Cunha to smash home.
Scotland now face an anxious wait if they are one of the best eight third-place finishers as they look to reach the last 32 despite only defeating Haiti on matchday one.
To rejig a well-known phrase, it's not what you do, but how you do it.
Scotland couldn't have been kinder to Brazil. Few at this tournament need a helping hand, but the South Americans don't need the presents Clarke's side provided.
An empty goal for the opener. A free header on the end of a deep cross for the second. A switch-off on the 18-yard line for the disallowed goal. Countless other mistakes and genuine chances for Ancelotti's men.
The manner of feeble Scotland's failure to lay a glove in their hunt for history will sting most.
Fans were warned they were never going to go "gung-ho" but many would have hoped for less hilarity at Scotland's expense.
One horror show over, another to come. Now there is a gruelling wait over the next few days where the third-place table will be refreshed more than the Boston and Miami beer kegs.
In sweltering conditions, Brazil returned the favour of kindness by keeping the scoreline at just three.
The deficit could have been narrowed late on with McTominay being denied. But the difference was Brazil's big players performed while Scotland's were ponderous. (BBC)









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