Raphinha is set to miss the rest of the World Cup after suffering a hamstring injury that has left Brazil’s campaign in serious danger of unraveling. The Barcelona winger, who had been one of the standout players of the tournament, was forced off during Brazil’s last outing, and subsequent medical assessments have confirmed the severity of the damage.

The news hit Brazilian fans like a thunderbolt. Raphinha had been carrying the Seleção’s attacking play almost single-handedly, his pace and directness causing problems for every defense he faced. Now, without him, coach Dorival Junior must find a way to plug a gap that will not be easy to fill.
A spokesperson for the Brazilian Football Confederation confirmed the injury to reporters but did not give a specific timeline for recovery, saying only that Raphinha would not feature again in this tournament.
For Nigerian football fans who have been watching the World Cup closely, this development carries a bitter familiarity. Brazil has long been the team Nigerians adopt as a second side, a love affair that dates back decades. The green and gold jersey commands as much affection on the streets of Lagos and Kano as it does in Rio de Janeiro. So when Brazil hurts, Nigeria feels it.
But beyond sentiment, this injury has practical implications for how the rest of the tournament plays out. Brazil was already walking a tightrope. Their performances had moments of brilliance but also stretches of uncertainty that suggested a team not yet at full cohesion. Raphinha was the thread that held the attack together.
Without the hamstring injury victim on the pitch, Brazil’s options narrow. Rodrygo, Vinicius Junior, and Gabriel Martinelli remain available, and on their best day any of them can hurt opposition defenses. But Raphinha brought something different, a relentlessness and technical sharpness that complemented Vinicius rather than duplicating him.
The hamstring injury comes at the worst possible moment in the competition. Teams are now in the knockout stages, where there is no second chance and no opportunity to recover lost ground over a series of games. One bad night and you are on a plane home. Brazil’s remaining opponents will have noted this development very carefully.
Team medical officials have not disclosed exactly when or how the injury occurred, nor have they confirmed whether surgery will be required. What is clear is that the hamstring damage is serious enough that no risk will be taken with the player’s long-term fitness.
Raphinha himself has not spoken publicly since the diagnosis was confirmed. His club, Barcelona, will also be monitoring the situation closely. A badly managed hamstring injury can drag on for months, and the Catalans will be anxious to have him back fit for the second half of the club season.
For now, though, club concerns must wait. The immediate story is World Cup devastation. A player at the peak of his form, on the biggest stage in football, stopped by his own body at the worst time.
Brazil’s next fixture will tell us a great deal about the character of this squad. Can they absorb this blow and push on? Or will the loss of Raphinha prove to be the moment their World Cup dream began to die? Only time will tell.

