A brace in soccer is when one player scores two goals in a single match.

Quick Scoop

  • A brace = 2 goals by the same player in one game.
  • If that player scores a third, it becomes a hat-trick , not a brace.
  • The goals can be in either half and don’t need to be back-to-back; as long as it’s two before full time, it counts as a brace.

Why it’s called a “brace”

  • The word comes from older English and Anglo-French usage where brace meant a pair of something, like a brace of birds or animals.
  • Soccer borrowed this idea: a brace of goals = a pair of goals by the same player.

Brace vs hat-trick and more

  • Brace: 2 goals in one match by one player.
  • Hat-trick: 3 goals in one match by one player.
  • Informal terms: 4 goals is sometimes called a haul , and 5 a glut in some commentary.

Little real-game picture

Imagine a striker scoring in the 10th minute and again in the 78th. Commentators will say “he’s scored a brace today,” even if his team still loses 3–2.

So when you hear “Player X has a brace,” it simply means they’ve beaten the keeper twice in that match.

Meta description:
Learn what a brace in soccer means, how it differs from a hat-trick, where the term comes from, and how commentators use it in today’s game.

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