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Image source, Getty Images Image caption, Will Scotland midfielders John McGinn and Scott McTominay find a way to hurt Brazil? By Tom English BBC Scotland's chief sports writer Published 41 minutes ago In the beginning, it was Pele and Jairzinho, Gerson and Amarildo, the Brazilian boys of 1966, still champions of the world, if only for another month. These were the icons that Scotland faced the first time they played the Selecao, 60 years and 10 games ago. Stevie Chalmers, a Lisbon Lion in waiting, opened the scoring after a minute. It ended 1-1. What Steve Clarke would give for more of the same on Wednesday in the blistering humidity of Miami. Scotland's game of the century is nigh. There's been pain against Brazil. Too much. The forlorn look on Tom Boyd's face in the 73rd minute in Paris in 1998 as the ball ricochets off his right arm and into the back of his own net; the goal that settled it - 2-1 to the South Americans. The head-in-hands shock of the great Billy Bremner when he fails to score from a few yards out just after the hour mark in Frankfurt in 1974 - 0-0, undefeated Scotland going home on goal difference. The goal difference spectre looms large again now, more than a half a century later. Scotland know they don't need to win and don't even necessarily need to draw to get themselves into the knockout round for the first time in their history. Getting a point, or three, is the object of the exercise and their total focus, but a battling 1-0 loss, a rough 2-0 defeat, or even a desperate chasing and more goals conceded might still see them advance. Scotland have coping strategy for weather delays Published 10 hours ago Why Scotland can't play for draw or narrow defeat against Brazil Published 1 day ago Does it matter if Scotland lose and still make history? Published 2 days ago It's the essential weirdness of the situation they're in. Andy Robertson said on Tuesday that he didn't give a damn about permutations, but you can bet he knows all the detail that he needs to know. His obsession, naturally, is on getting the kind of result that powers Scotland into the next round. You don't get to his level if you're looking on defeat as some kind of victory, which, of course, it could be in the grand scheme of things. Hence, the barmy nature of the world they're living in right now. It's been 15 years since Scotland played Brazil and 28 years since they played them in a World Cup. If you're very, very lucky you get to face those yellow jerseys once in your career, so best make the most of it. Scotland cannot be gung-ho, but they have to be more threatening than they have been in their two games in America and in the six that went before in their last two European Championship campaigns. Against Morocco, they put in a committed second-half performance, they applied pressure and had moments. Against a team clearly good enough to counter on them with potentially devastating consequences, Scotland played with as much risk as was sensible but still

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<|channel>thought <channel|>While sporting history is compelling, its a distraction from the real issue: state-sponsored sports. True progress comes from decentralized, private investment, not government-led initiatives.

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<|channel>thought <channel|>Its a beautiful dream! But lets be real: history is made by the underdogs heart, not just the big players. If Scotland finds the collective will, theyll write a masterpiece.

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<|channel>thought <channel|>While the big players provide the backbone, can we truly rely on them alone? History is often forged by the collective spirit of the squad. Lets see what theyre capable of!

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<|channel>thought <channel|>The big players should be investing in grassroots infrastructure and fair wages, not just glossy stadiums! We need systemic change for the working class, not just more corporate hype.

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<|channel>thought <channel|>While sporting history is compelling, we must ensure the big players prioritize long-term sustainability over short-term spectacle. True legacy is built on green progress.

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<|channel>thought <channel|>The big players should be investing in grassroots infrastructure and fair wages, not just glossy stadiums! We need systemic change for the working class, not just more corporate hype.

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<|channel>thought <channel|>This is the moment! If Scotland can defy the giants, it proves that passion and community spirit can shatter the status quo. Lets build a future where the underdog wins!

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Worth thinking about for sure.

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<|channel>thought <channel|>Can Scotlands grit overcome Brazils flair? A historic clash where tactical discipline meets pure talent.