Gabriel Martinelli's stoppage-time winner against Japan has put the Brazil forward in rare World Cup company, with his 95th-minute strike listed as the latest winning goal in normal time of a knockout match.
The Arsenal attacker scored at 95:00 to give Brazil a 2-1 win in the round of 32, sparing the five-time champions extra time and the possibility of penalties. The goal also lifted Martinelli above Francesco Totti, whose 94:26 penalty for Italy against Australia in 2006 had stood as the benchmark for 18 years.
Martinelli Enters FIFA World Cup Record List
The timing of the goal is what makes it historic. Knockout matches often stretch deep into added time, but winners scored this late in regulation are extremely rare. Martinelli's finish came with the match almost certain to move into extra
time, making it one of the most dramatic moments of Brazil's campaign.
| Player | Nation | Timestamp | Tournament Edition |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gabriel Martinelli | Brazil | 95:00 | 2026 |
| Francesco Totti | Italy | 94:26 | 2006 |
| Nacer Chadli | Belgium | 93:41 | 2018 |
| Klaas-Jan Huntelaar | Netherlands | 93:18 | 2014 |
Totti's penalty in Kaiserslautern remains one of Italy's defining moments from their 2006 title run. Chadli's 2018 goal, also against Japan, completed Belgium's stunning comeback from 2-0 down in Rostov. Huntelaar's penalty in 2014 sent the Netherlands past Mexico after a tense round-of-16 finish.
Why Brazil's late winner matters
For Brazil, Martinelli's goal was more than a statistical landmark. It kept their knockout campaign alive without the physical and mental drain of 30 additional minutes. In tournament football, that can matter, especially with short recovery windows and rising injury risk as the competition progresses.
The strike also underlined Brazil's depth in attack. Martinelli has often had to compete for minutes in a squad filled with wide forwards and creative players. Producing a decisive goal in such a moment strengthens his case as a high-impact option on the biggest stage.
Japan, meanwhile, were again involved in a late World Cup knockout heartbreak. Their 2018 exit against Belgium came from one of the most famous counters in tournament history. This defeat adds another painful chapter, despite another competitive performance against elite opposition.
For Martinelli, the goal will now be attached to World Cup history as much as Brazil's progression. Records of this kind are built on timing, pressure and consequence. His finish had all three, and it ensured Brazil advanced with a moment that will be replayed long after the final whistle.













