Massive,
I fear that last night's loss is the beginning of a very dark period in Brazilian football that may actually get way worse before it gets better. Had Argentina lost to Holland in the second semi-final, and then went on to beat the Seleção on Saturday, that would have plunged Brazilian football into an abyss. Luckily, they will be averted that embarrassment and are now in the unenviable position of hoping Germany beat their hated continental rivals on Sunday. But we should have seen it coming. I speculate that last night’s loss is symptomatic of a larger problem which has several underlying contributing factors, including:
1. Lack of attention to the Brazilian domestic leagues
I believe Brazil's football has suffered greatly because it has neglected its domestic leagues. Clubs with great historical footballing pedigree teeter on the brink of administration. Teams like Santos, Fluminese, Botafogo, Flamengo, Palmerias, Corinthians have all flirted with one disaster or another from what I understand. They are in the unenviable position of having to sell their best players and some have turned to a policy of developing young talent with the express objective of selling them to other teams.
2. Brazil has systematically “let” the Europeans siphon off their best players
In 1970, the entire Brazilian team played professionally in Brazil, as was the case in most of the teams in the World Cup. Same thing in '74, '78, '82; in '86, only 2 of the squad played outside Brazil. But by 1990, only 10 of the 22 man squad played in Brazil, but the progression went on, 11 in 1994, 9 in 1998, 12 in 2002, by 2006, the number dropped to 3!! Young Brazilian ballers - Kaka, Fred, Robinho, Adriano were not playing for great clubs like Palmeiras, São Paulo, Santos or Corinthians, but rather, for Inter, Real Madrid, Lyon and Milan instead.
So let's keep going. In 2010, there were only 3 in the squad playing for Brazilian teams including Robinho on loan from City. He was technically not a Santos player and he only played 20 games or so for them before heading back to Europe to join AC Milan. The other two were Gilberto and Kleberson, both over 30. Brazil was becoming a elephant graveyard for their retiring players. So what about this World Cup? There were 4 players on the squad who played in Brazil - two were goal keepers, the other two were Fred and Jo! Hardly a ringing endorsement for Brazilian domestic football.
3. There is no longer a “Brazilian way” of playing football
They have exported their best players to Europe at the expense of creating a national playing identity. We saw Luiz, Dante and Gustavo at "sixes and sevens" this evening, not even close to being on the same page. No longer is there any identifiable way of playing football, like Spain with their tiki takka, or Brazil of old with “jogo bonito”. What we have now is a mashup of different styles that doesn’t seem to have any discerning qualities to it.
4. Brazilian football is becoming too expensive for the poor
Unlike the olden days when clubs sponsored the development of the best footballers, Brazil’s football development landscape has changed. There are “a ton” of soccer schools and academies all over the country costing from $30/day to $220/day. Which Favela youth can afford that? Certainly Pelé could not. Unlike the olden days when Brazilian clubs would sponsor their underprivileged youths, today’s clubs charge. Paid rides exist only for a few of their kids. I may be wrong on this, but that’s what I understand.
I have been a Brazil fan like most of you for a long time. Last night’s loss and today’s win by Argentina is painful to me. I want to see the Brazil of old rekindled with a new generation of Tastoas, Socrates, Pelés, Garrinchas, Jairzinhos, Ronaldos and the host of names we have associated with the beautiful game. Can any of us say that there was such a player on the field in yesterday’s semi-final? Unfortunately, no. Brazil is a victim of its own policies. Their footballing establishment needs to take a serious look at itself if the great land of football is to be relevant again in world football. But, hey, what the heck do I know? I'm sure some of you can educate me where I am wrong.
PM
I fear that last night's loss is the beginning of a very dark period in Brazilian football that may actually get way worse before it gets better. Had Argentina lost to Holland in the second semi-final, and then went on to beat the Seleção on Saturday, that would have plunged Brazilian football into an abyss. Luckily, they will be averted that embarrassment and are now in the unenviable position of hoping Germany beat their hated continental rivals on Sunday. But we should have seen it coming. I speculate that last night’s loss is symptomatic of a larger problem which has several underlying contributing factors, including:
1. Lack of attention to the Brazilian domestic leagues
I believe Brazil's football has suffered greatly because it has neglected its domestic leagues. Clubs with great historical footballing pedigree teeter on the brink of administration. Teams like Santos, Fluminese, Botafogo, Flamengo, Palmerias, Corinthians have all flirted with one disaster or another from what I understand. They are in the unenviable position of having to sell their best players and some have turned to a policy of developing young talent with the express objective of selling them to other teams.
2. Brazil has systematically “let” the Europeans siphon off their best players
In 1970, the entire Brazilian team played professionally in Brazil, as was the case in most of the teams in the World Cup. Same thing in '74, '78, '82; in '86, only 2 of the squad played outside Brazil. But by 1990, only 10 of the 22 man squad played in Brazil, but the progression went on, 11 in 1994, 9 in 1998, 12 in 2002, by 2006, the number dropped to 3!! Young Brazilian ballers - Kaka, Fred, Robinho, Adriano were not playing for great clubs like Palmeiras, São Paulo, Santos or Corinthians, but rather, for Inter, Real Madrid, Lyon and Milan instead.
So let's keep going. In 2010, there were only 3 in the squad playing for Brazilian teams including Robinho on loan from City. He was technically not a Santos player and he only played 20 games or so for them before heading back to Europe to join AC Milan. The other two were Gilberto and Kleberson, both over 30. Brazil was becoming a elephant graveyard for their retiring players. So what about this World Cup? There were 4 players on the squad who played in Brazil - two were goal keepers, the other two were Fred and Jo! Hardly a ringing endorsement for Brazilian domestic football.
3. There is no longer a “Brazilian way” of playing football
They have exported their best players to Europe at the expense of creating a national playing identity. We saw Luiz, Dante and Gustavo at "sixes and sevens" this evening, not even close to being on the same page. No longer is there any identifiable way of playing football, like Spain with their tiki takka, or Brazil of old with “jogo bonito”. What we have now is a mashup of different styles that doesn’t seem to have any discerning qualities to it.
4. Brazilian football is becoming too expensive for the poor
Unlike the olden days when clubs sponsored the development of the best footballers, Brazil’s football development landscape has changed. There are “a ton” of soccer schools and academies all over the country costing from $30/day to $220/day. Which Favela youth can afford that? Certainly Pelé could not. Unlike the olden days when Brazilian clubs would sponsor their underprivileged youths, today’s clubs charge. Paid rides exist only for a few of their kids. I may be wrong on this, but that’s what I understand.
I have been a Brazil fan like most of you for a long time. Last night’s loss and today’s win by Argentina is painful to me. I want to see the Brazil of old rekindled with a new generation of Tastoas, Socrates, Pelés, Garrinchas, Jairzinhos, Ronaldos and the host of names we have associated with the beautiful game. Can any of us say that there was such a player on the field in yesterday’s semi-final? Unfortunately, no. Brazil is a victim of its own policies. Their footballing establishment needs to take a serious look at itself if the great land of football is to be relevant again in world football. But, hey, what the heck do I know? I'm sure some of you can educate me where I am wrong.
PM
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