SportFootballWorld Cup 2026Brazil kicked off Group C action against Morocco but the BBC's coverage got viewers talking after an error early on in the second-half.00:32, 14 Jun 2026Updated 00:37, 14 Jun 2026Viewers of Brazil's World Cup opener against Morocco were left baffled after the commentary appeared to be taken over by the TV director. The incident occurred in the early stages of the second-half as Vinicius Jr looked to double his tally for the evening and social media user were left baffled after it hijacked the coverage.‌BBC were broadcasting the Group C opener between the record World Cup holders and Morocco, who were embroiled in that controversial Africa Cup of Nations final with Senegal earlier this year. The coverage had been relatively seamless until Jon Champion and Alan Shearer saw their voices overshadowed on the airwaves.‌There was no change in picture but the error was audible as a voice said: "Thank you. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. Go, go, go. Do you want to speak to me on the cord on the headset or are you not bothered about that? Yeah, two secs then."‌One user on social media platform X said: "Some random guy just started talking in the BBC commentary for Brazil vs Morocco?"Another said: "BBC commentary made me think I'm having auditory hallucinations for a sec..."‌While one user thought he had travelled into the VAR room for their discussions on the talking points within Brazil's opener. They wrote: "Is it me or did the BBC coverage pick the VAR conversations as temporary commentary? #WorldCupShockingMoment."Due to the time difference between North America and the United Kingdom, one user joked that it served as a wake-up call. They tweeted: "BBC commentary doing a good job of keeping me awake just then - “Go Go Go.” WTF."There will be more to follow on this breaking news story and Mirror Sport will bring you the very latest updates, pictures and video as soon as possible.Article continues belowPlease check back regularly for updates on this developing story.Follow us on Google News, Flipboard, Apple News, Twitter, Facebook or visit The Mirror homepage.Choose Daily Mirror as a 'Preferred Source' on Google News for quick access to the news you value.‌Alan ShearerBBCFootball fansFIFA World CupWorld Cup 2026