13 Jun
Sat
•6:00pm
MetLife Stadium • New York
13 Jun
Sat
•6:00pm
MetLife Stadium • New York
19 Jun
Fri
•9:00pm
Lincoln Financial Field • Philadelphia
24 Jun
Wed
•6:00pm
Hard Rock Stadium • Miami
26 Dec
Fri
•9:00pm
Prince moulay abdellah stadium • Rabat
29 Dec
Mon
•10:30pm
Stade Al Barid • Rabat
13 Jun
Sat
•6:00pm
MetLife Stadium • New York
19 Jun
Fri
•6:00pm
Gillette Stadium • Boston
24 Jun
Wed
•6:00pm
Mercedes-Benz Stadium • Atlanta
Brazil arrive at MetLife Stadium as five-time world champions, with those famous stars on the shirt and a crystal-clear identity: attacking football, one‑on‑one magic and a team built for the biggest stages in world football.
Morocco come in as the ultimate dark horse: at Qatar 2022 they became the first African and Arab team ever to reach a World Cup semi-final, knocking out Spain and Portugal with a compact, hard-working unit. They’ve already met on football’s biggest stage: in 1998, Brazil won in the group phase — a bit of history that adds extra spice to this new chapter.
On the pitch, the clash of philosophies couldn’t be clearer: the creativity and explosive pace of Vinícius and Rodrygo against the rock-solid defence and lightning counters of a Moroccan side that never loses its shape. In a group where every point can open the door to the knockouts or make life complicated, the intensity will be sky‑high from the very first minute.
Experiencing it live in New York, inside a MetLife Stadium set up for around 80,000 fans, with steep stands and a closed-in atmosphere, means feeling the contrast between the jogo bonito and Africa’s new powerhouse just a few metres from the pitch.
Brazil boast a truly unique pedigree: five World Cups and an almost permanent presence in the latter stages, even after going out in the quarter-finals in 2022. This new Seleção leans on the game‑changing talent of Vinícius Júnior, the timing and finishing of Rodrygo, the leadership of Marquinhos and the reliability of Alisson, all key figures at the very top of European football.
Morocco arrive with the respect they earned in Qatar: fourth in the world, a tight-knit unit that defends together and strikes as soon as they win the ball back. Achraf Hakimi, Sofyan Amrabat, Hakim Ziyech and Youssef En-Nesyri lead a team that has already proved it can compete with — and beat — the giants.
Brazil–Morocco at MetLife is no ordinary group-stage fixture: it’s a global superpower against the team that redrew the map of African football. Lock in your ticket and experience, up close, a showdown that could define the fate of the group.
MetLife Stadium, in the New York / New Jersey area, will hold close to 80,000 fans for the World Cup, with multi-tiered stands and a design very similar to the top modern arenas in Europe: no running track and excellent sightlines from almost every seat.
The lower sidelines are the equivalent of the main tribunes in Munich or Madrid; behind the goals you’ll find the loudest, most passionate fans; and the upper tiers offer a perfect panoramic view to follow every tactical move.
According to the official price range for group-stage matches at U.S. venues, Category 4 tickets start at around 140 USD and Category 1 tickets go up to roughly 410 USD at face value. Using a recent approximate exchange rate, that works out, as a guideline, at around €130–170 in the higher tiers, €170–240 behind the goals and in the corners, €240–320 along the sides, and €320–380 for central seats on the halfway line.
Prices can vary depending on demand, the opponent and when you buy, but this is the bracket to keep in mind if you don’t want to miss out on this Brazil–Morocco clash in New York.