Midfielder Bruno Guimarães missed a penalty kick against Norway, ending a historic 40-year streak of the Brazil national team not missing a penalty during regular time in the World Cup.
Sunday afternoon (5) marked an unforgettable, and unfortunately negative, chapter in the Brazil national team‘s World Cup journey. Just 13 minutes into the first half of the Round of 16 clash against Norway, midfielder Bruno Guimarães had the chance to open the scoring but saw his penalty kick go wide, frustrating the fans’ expectations and altering the course of the match.
The number 8’s miss goes beyond the field of play and enters the historical statistics. For the first time in 40 years, a Brazilian player has missed a penalty kick during regular time in a World Cup. The streak, which had provided security to Brazilian fans, was broken at a crucial moment where precision is the determining factor between glory and the danger of elimination.
The weight of a historic streak
To find a similar miss, one must go back to the 1986 World Cup in Mexico. On that occasion, legend Zico missed a crucial penalty in the quarterfinals against France. Since that incident, the Brazil national team had maintained a perfect record on penalties taken within the 90 minutes, an achievement that reinforced the mystique of the Brazilian team in World Cups.
Before ‘Galinho’ (little rooster, Zico’s nickname) and Sunday’s miss, only two other players had failed on this specific mark in the entire history of the competition: Waldemar de Brito in 1934 and Patesko in 1938. The name of Bruno Guimarães, a key player for Newcastle, now joins this select and unfortunate list of players who have marked the negative history of the ‘Amarelinha’ (nickname for the Brazilian national team jersey).
“Football is made of moments of overcoming, and an athlete’s greatness is measured by how they react after a mistake that becomes part of national statistical history.”
The World Cup Future
Despite the scare and the statistical weight, the Brazil national team‘s focus remains on the bigger objective: qualification. The match against Norway remains open and tense, with the understanding that whoever advances from this stage will face an even tougher path. The winner of this duel will face the winner of the match between Mexico and England in the quarterfinals.
Fans now await the team’s psychological response. With the 40-year streak broken, it is up to Bruno Guimarães‘s team to draw strength from resilience and collective football to stay alive in the title race. The Brazil national team carries not only the responsibility of victory but also the need to leave the early mistake behind and focus on building a path toward the grand final.

