2022 FIFA World Cup Group G

Matches in Group G of the 2022 FIFA World Cup took place from 24 November to 2 December 2022.[1] The group consisted of Brazil, Serbia, Switzerland and Cameroon. The top two teams, Brazil and Switzerland, advanced to the round of 16.[2] This was unprecedented in World Cup history as Brazil won the group despite scoring fewer goals than each of their opponents. Brazil, Serbia and Switzerland also played in Group E at the previous FIFA World Cup.

Warm-up prior to the Brazil–Serbia match

Teams

Draw positionTeamPotConfederationMethod of
qualification
Date of
qualification
Finals
appearance
Last
appearance
Previous best
performance
FIFA Rankings[3]
March 2022[nb 1]October 2022
G1  Brazil1CONMEBOLCONMEBOL Round Robin winners11 November 202122nd2018Winners (1958, 1962, 1970, 1994, 2002)11
G2  Serbia3UEFAUEFA Group A winners14 November 202113th[nb 2]2018Fourth place (1930, 1962)[nb 3]2521
G3  Switzerland2UEFAUEFA Group C winners15 November 202112th2018Quarter-finals (1934, 1938, 1954)1415
G4  Cameroon4CAFCAF third round winners29 March 20228th2014Quarter-finals (1990)3743

Notes

Standings

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification
1  Brazil320131+26Advanced to knockout stage
2   Switzerland320143+16
3  Cameroon31114404
4  Serbia301258−31
Source: FIFA
Rules for classification: Group stage tiebreakers

In the round of 16:

  • The winners of Group G, Brazil, advanced to play the runners-up of Group H, South Korea.
  • The runners-up of Group G, Switzerland, advanced to play the winners of Group H, Portugal.

Matches

All times listed are local, AST (UTC+3).[1]

Switzerland vs Cameroon

The teams had never met before.

After a goalless first half, Breel Embolo scored the only goal of the match three minutes into the second period, finishing from six yards out after a cross from Xherdan Shaqiri on the right.[4] Embolo did not celebrate the goal in respect to being born in Cameroon; he moved to Switzerland when he was six years old.[5]

Switzerland  1–0  Cameroon
  • Embolo 48'
Report
Attendance: 39,089
Switzerland
Cameroon
GK1Yann Sommer
RB3Silvan Widmer
CB5Manuel Akanji  83'
CB4Nico Elvedi  64'
LB13Ricardo Rodriguez  90'
CM8Remo Freuler
CM10Granit Xhaka (c)
RW23Xherdan Shaqiri  72'
AM15Djibril Sow  72'
LW17Ruben Vargas  81'
CF7Breel Embolo  72'
Substitutions:
MF20Fabian Frei  72'
FW19Noah Okafor  72'
FW9Haris Seferovic  72'
MF25Fabian Rieder  81'
DF18Eray Cömert  90'
Manager:
Murat Yakin
GK23André Onana
RB19Collins Fai  36'
CB21Jean-Charles Castelletto
CB3Nicolas Nkoulou
LB25Nouhou Tolo
DM14Samuel Gouet
CM8André-Frank Zambo Anguissa
CM18Martin Hongla  68'
RF20Bryan Mbeumo  81'
CF13Eric Maxim Choupo-Moting (c)  74'
LF12Karl Toko Ekambi  74'
Substitutions:
MF5Gaël Ondoua  68'
FW10Vincent Aboubakar  74'
MF7Georges-Kévin Nkoudou  74'
FW6Moumi Ngamaleu  81'
Manager:
Rigobert Song

Man of the Match:
Yann Sommer (Switzerland)[6]

Assistant referees:
Ezequiel Brailovsky (Argentina)
Gabriel Chade (Argentina)
Fourth official:
Saíd Martínez (Honduras)
Reserve assistant referee:
Walter López (Honduras)
Video assistant referee:
Mauro Vigliano (Argentina)
Assistant video assistant referees:
Fernando Guerrero (Mexico)
Pau Cebrián Devís (Spain)
Ricardo de Burgos Bengoetxea (Spain)
Stand-by assistant video assistant referee:
Nicolás Taran (Uruguay)

Brazil vs Serbia

The teams had met once in the World Cup, in Brazil's 2–0 group stage victory in 2018. With Serbia playing as Yugoslavia, the sides had met 18 times, including four encounters in FIFA World Cup group stages: in 1930, 1950, 1954 and 1974, with one victory for each and two draws.

After a goalless first half, Richarlison opened the scoring for Brazil in the 62nd minute, when he followed up to finish after Serbian goalkeeper Vanja Milinković-Savić saved Vinícius Júnior's low shot from the left, with Neymar initially creating the chance.[7] Richarlison then made it 2–0 eleven minutes later when he controlled the ball from Vinícius Júnior before finishing to the left of the net with an over-the-shoulder acrobatic right-footed kick. Casemiro hit the woodwork and Fred also had a shot saved with Brazil running out comfortable 2–0 winners.[8]

Brazil  2–0  Serbia
Report
Attendance: 88,103
Brazil
Serbia
GK1Alisson
RB2Danilo
CB4Marquinhos
CB3Thiago Silva (c)
LB6Alex Sandro
CM5Casemiro
CM7Lucas Paquetá  75'
RW11Raphinha  87'
AM10Neymar  79'
LW20Vinícius Júnior  75'
CF9Richarlison  79'
Substitutions
MF8Fred  75'
FW21Rodrygo  75'
FW18Gabriel Jesus  79'
FW19Antony  79'
FW26Gabriel Martinelli  87'
Manager:
Tite
GK23Vanja Milinković-Savić
CB5Miloš Veljković
CB4Nikola Milenković
CB2Strahinja Pavlović  7'
DM8Nemanja Gudelj  49'  57'
CM16Saša Lukić  64'  66'
CM20Sergej Milinković-Savić
RW14Andrija Živković  57'
AM10Dušan Tadić (c)
LW25Filip Mladenović  66'
CF9Aleksandar Mitrović  83'
Substitutions
MF24Ivan Ilić  57'
MF7Nemanja Radonjić  57'
MF22Darko Lazović  66'
FW18Dušan Vlahović  66'
MF6Nemanja Maksimović  83'
Manager:
Dragan Stojković

Man of the Match:
Richarlison (Brazil)[9]

Assistant referees:
Mohammadreza Mansouri (Iran)
Mohammadreza Abolfazli (Iran)
Fourth official:
Maguette Ndiaye (Senegal)
Reserve assistant referee:
El Hadj Malick Samba (Senegal)
Video assistant referee:
Taleb Al-Marri (Qatar)
Assistant video assistant referees:
Muhammad Taqi (Singapore)
Anton Shchetinin (Australia)
Pol van Boekel (Netherlands)
Stand-by assistant video assistant referee:
Ashley Beecham (Australia)

Cameroon vs Serbia

The teams had faced each other once, a 2010 friendly won 4–3 by Serbia.

Jean-Charles Castelletto put Cameroon into the lead in the 29th minute, when he finished from close range off of a corner. In first-half stoppage time, Strahinja Pavlović equalized with a header, before Sergej Milinković-Savić brought Serbia ahead just two minutes later with a low finish into the corner of the net.[10] Eight minutes into the second half, Aleksandar Mitrović put Serbia 3–1 up with a low finish after a passing move. Vincent Aboubakar scooped the ball over goalkeeper Vanja Milinković-Savić to score Cameroon's second goal in the 63rd minute, awarded by the VAR after initially being deemed offside, before Eric Maxim Choupo-Moting completed the comeback three minutes later with a low shot after a pass from the right by Aboubakar. The match finished in an entertaining 3–3 draw.[11]

This was Cameroon's first point in a World Cup match since 2002, ending an eight-game losing streak.[12]

Cameroon
Serbia
GK16Devis Epassy
RB19Collins Fai
CB21Jean-Charles Castelletto
CB3Nicolas Nkoulou  24'
LB25Nouhou Tolo
DM18Martin Hongla  55'
CM8André-Frank Zambo Anguissa  81'
CM15Pierre Kunde  67'
RF20Bryan Mbeumo  81'
CF13Eric Maxim Choupo-Moting (c)
LF12Karl Toko Ekambi  67'
Substitutions:
FW10Vincent Aboubakar  55'
FW11Christian Bassogog  30'  67'
MF5Gaël Ondoua  67'
MF14Samuel Gouet  81'
MF7Georges-Kévin Nkoudou  81'
Manager:
Rigobert Song
GK23Vanja Milinković-Savić
CB4Nikola Milenković  90+3'
CB5Miloš Veljković  78'
CB2Strahinja Pavlović  55'
RM14Andrija Živković  78'
CM6Nemanja Maksimović
CM16Saša Lukić
LM17Filip Kostić  90+2'
AM10Dušan Tadić (c)
AM20Sergej Milinković-Savić  78'
CF9Aleksandar Mitrović
Substitutions:
DF13Stefan Mitrović  55'
DF15Srđan Babić  78'
MF7Nemanja Radonjić  78'
MF26Marko Grujić  78'
MF21Filip Đuričić  90+2'
Other disciplinary actions:
FW11Luka Jović[note 1]  45+4'
Manager:
Dragan Stojković

Man of the Match:
Vincent Aboubakar (Cameroon)[13]

Assistant referees:
Mohamed Al-Hammadi (United Arab Emirates)
Hasan Al-Mahri (United Arab Emirates)
Fourth official:
Ma Ning (China)
Reserve assistant referee:
Shi Xiang (China)
Video assistant referee:
Nicolás Gallo (Colombia)
Assistant video assistant referees:
Juan Soto (Venezuela)
Ezequiel Brailovsky (Argentina)
Leodán González (Uruguay)
Stand-by assistant video assistant referee:
Gabriel Chade (Argentina)

Brazil vs Switzerland

The teams had met nine times prior, including two draws coming in World Cup group stage matches: 2–2 in 1950 and 1–1 in 2018.

Brazil started the game without the injured Neymar, who was ruled out for the remainder of the group stage after spraining his ankle in the previous match.[14] The only goal of the game was scored by Brazilian midfielder Casemiro in the 83rd minute, when his deflected right-footed shot from inside the penalty area struck the top corner of the net.

The win secured Brazil's passage to the knockout stage, and was their first victory in three attempts against Switzerland at the FIFA World Cup.[15]

Brazil  1–0  Switzerland
Report
Attendance: 43,649
Brazil
Switzerland
GK1Alisson
RB14Éder Militão
CB4Marquinhos
CB3Thiago Silva (c)
LB6Alex Sandro  86'
DM5Casemiro
CM8Fred  52'  58'
CM7Lucas Paquetá  46'
RF11Raphinha  73'
CF9Richarlison  73'
LF20Vinícius Júnior
Substitutions:
FW21Rodrygo  46'
MF17Bruno Guimarães  58'
FW18Gabriel Jesus  73'
FW19Antony  73'
DF16Alex Telles  86'
Manager:
Tite
GK1Yann Sommer
RB3Silvan Widmer  86'
CB5Manuel Akanji
CB4Nico Elvedi
LB13Ricardo Rodriguez
CM8Remo Freuler
CM10Granit Xhaka (c)
RW25Fabian Rieder  50'  58'
AM15Djibril Sow  76'
LW17Ruben Vargas  58'
CF7Breel Embolo  76'
Substitutions:
DF2Edimilson Fernandes  58'
DF11Renato Steffen  58'
MF14Michel Aebischer  76'
FW9Haris Seferovic  76'
MF20Fabian Frei  86'
Manager:
Murat Yakin

Man of the Match:
Casemiro (Brazil)[16]

Assistant referees:
David Morán (El Salvador)
Zachari Zeegelaar (Suriname)
Fourth official:
Saíd Martínez (Honduras)
Reserve assistant referee:
Walter López (Honduras)
Video assistant referee:
Drew Fischer (Canada)
Assistant video assistant referees:
Armando Villarreal (United States)
Kathryn Nesbitt (United States)
Fernando Guerrero (Mexico)
Stand-by assistant video assistant referee:
Mahmoud Abouelregal (Egypt)

Serbia vs Switzerland

The teams had met once before, in Switzerland's 2–1 group stage victory at the 2018 FIFA World Cup. With Serbia playing as Yugoslavia, the two teams had met 13 times, including in the 1950 FIFA World Cup group stage, a 3–0 victory for Yugoslavia.

In an open and entertaining match, Andrija Živković struck the post early on for Serbia, before Xherdan Shaqiri opened the scoring for Switzerland via a deflection, becoming the first Swiss player to score at three different World Cups.[17] Aleksandar Mitrović equalized just six minutes later with a header off of a Dušan Tadić cross, before a poor clearance by Swiss midfielder Remo Freuler allowed Dušan Vlahović to put Serbia in front. The first half would end 2–2 after Breel Embolo brought Switzerland level off of a Silvan Widmer cross.

Serbia, who needed a victory to have a chance of reaching the knockout stage, then went behind again early into the second half, after Freuler finished off a Swiss team goal with a volley. The game became ill-tempered, similar to the sides' previous encounter in 2018, and saw both sets of players scuffle multiple times, primarily triggered after provocation towards the Serbian bench by Swiss captain Granit Xhaka, an ethnic Albanian.[18] The eleven yellow cards distributed during the contest was the most shown in a World Cup match since the twelve given in the 2010 final. Switzerland ultimately retained their lead and won the match 3–2.[19]

Their two group stage victories saw Switzerland progress to the knockout stage as runners-up for a third successive World Cup, while Serbia finished bottom and were eliminated in the first round for their fourth tournament in a row.

Serbia  2–3  Switzerland
Report
Attendance: 41,378
Serbia
Switzerland
GK23Vanja Milinković-Savić
CB4Nikola Milenković  90+5'
CB5Miloš Veljković  55'
CB2Strahinja Pavlović  56'
RM14Andrija Živković  78'
CM20Sergej Milinković-Savić  47'  68'
CM16Saša Lukić  90+10'
LM17Filip Kostić
AM10Dušan Tadić (c)  78'
CF9Aleksandar Mitrović  82'
CF18Dušan Vlahović  55'
Substitutions:
DF8Nemanja Gudelj  81'  55'
FW11Luka Jović  55'
MF6Nemanja Maksimović  68'
MF21Filip Đuričić  78'
MF7Nemanja Radonjić  78'
Other disciplinary actions:
GK12Predrag Rajković[note 2]  66'
Manager:
Dragan Stojković
GK21Gregor Kobel
RB3Silvan Widmer  15'
CB5Manuel Akanji
CB22Fabian Schär  90+9'
LB13Ricardo Rodriguez
CM8Remo Freuler
CM10Granit Xhaka (c)  90+5'
RW23Xherdan Shaqiri  69'
AM15Djibril Sow  69'
LW17Ruben Vargas  34'  83'
CF7Breel Embolo  90+6'
Substitutions:
DF2Edimilson Fernandes  69'
MF6Denis Zakaria  69'
MF16Christian Fassnacht  83'
FW19Noah Okafor  90+6'
Manager:
Murat Yakin

Man of the Match:
Granit Xhaka (Switzerland)[20]

Assistant referees:
Juan Pablo Belatti (Argentina)
Diego Bonfá (Argentina)
Fourth official:
Kevin Ortega (Peru)
Reserve assistant referee:
Jesús Sánchez (Peru)
Video assistant referee:
Mauro Vigliano (Argentina)
Assistant video assistant referees:
Julio Bascunan (Chile)
Nicolás Taran (Uruguay)
Leodan Gonzalez (Uruguay)
Stand-by assistant video assistant referee:
Martín Soppi (Uruguay)

Cameroon vs Brazil

The teams had previously met six times, including in two World Cup group stage games, both won by Brazil: a 3–0 victory in 1994 and a 4–1 win in 2014.

Brazil, already assured a place in the knockout stage, made ten changes to their previous starting lineup. Despite the Brazilians having the majority of the game's chances, Cameroon would take the lead in second-half stoppage time, after Vincent Aboubakar ran into the penalty area to head the cross from Jerome Ngom Mbekeli on the right into the net's bottom corner from six yards out.[21]Aboubakar celebrated the goal by removing his shirt, receiving a second yellow card and thus being sent off.[22]

The match marked Brazil's first defeat in the group stage of a World Cup since losing to Norway in 1998. Despite their loss, Brazil clinched top spot in Group G on goal difference as they progressed to the knockout stage. Although they were still eliminated, Cameroon became the first African team to defeat Brazil at a World Cup, with this victory also being their first at the tournament since beating Saudi Arabia in 2002. This result also meant that no team finished the group stage of the World Cup with a perfect winning record for the first time since 1994.

Cameroon  1–0  Brazil
Report
Attendance: 85,986
Cameroon
Brazil
GK16Devis Epassy
RB19Collins Fai  32'
CB4Christopher Wooh
CB24Enzo Ebosse
LB25Nouhou Tolo  6'
CM8André-Frank Zambo Anguissa
CM15Pierre Kunde  28'  68'
RW20Bryan Mbeumo  64'
AM13Eric Maxim Choupo-Moting
LW6Moumi Ngamaleu  86'
CF10Vincent Aboubakar (c)  81'   90+3'
Substitutions:
FW12Karl Toko Ekambi  64'
MF22Olivier Ntcham  68'
DF2Jerome Ngom Mbekeli  86'
Manager:
Rigobert Song
GK23Ederson
RB13Dani Alves (c)
CB14Éder Militão  7'
CB24Bremer
LB16Alex Telles  54'
CM15Fabinho
CM8Fred  54'
RW19Antony  79'
AM21Rodrygo  54'
LW26Gabriel Martinelli
CF18Gabriel Jesus  64'
Substitutions:
DF4Marquinhos  54'
MF22Éverton Ribeiro  54'
MF17Bruno Guimarães  85'  54'
FW25Pedro  64'
FW11Raphinha  79'
Manager:
Tite

Man of the Match:
Devis Epassy (Cameroon)[23]

Assistant referees:
Kyle Atkins (United States)
Corey Parker (United States)
Fourth official:
Ma Ning (China)
Reserve assistant referee:
Shi Xiang (China)
Video assistant referee:
Alejandro Hernández (Spain)
Assistant video assistant referees:
Juan Martinez (Spain)
Pau Cebrián Devís (Spain)
Ricardo de Burgos Bengoetxea (Spain)
Stand-by assistant video assistant referee:
Roberto Díaz Pérez del Palomar (Spain)

Discipline

Fair play points would have been used as tiebreakers if the overall and head-to-head records of teams were tied. These were calculated based on yellow and red cards received in all group matches as follows:[2]

  • first yellow card: −1 point;
  • indirect red card (second yellow card): −3 points;
  • direct red card: −4 points;
  • yellow card and direct red card: −5 points;

Only one of the above deductions was applied to a player in a single match.

TeamMatch 1Match 2Match 3Points
           
 Brazil12−3
 Switzerland214−7
 Cameroon1231−9
 Serbia327–12

See also

Notes

References

External links