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Shambolic Brazil shown up by bitter rivals Argentina

Written by 
Published in Soccer
Wednesday, 26 March 2025 00:58

In some ways, this was worse than the 7-1. At least that World Cup semifinal defeat to Germany 11 years ago can be put down to an emotional collapse in a mad few minutes. But Brazil's 4-1 defeat to Argentina on Tuesday -- their heaviest loss to its rival since 1964 -- was 90 minutes of unrelenting humiliation. The gulf between the two teams was frankly embarrassing.

Styles make fights, as the boxing writers like to say. This showdown in Buenos Aires was always going to be a clash of approaches -- a team that loves to maneuver the ball around the midfield against an opponent that seemed to regard central midfield as an optional extra.

Even so, going into the game, it looked as if Brazil might have a counter-puncher's chance. That Argentina defensive unit has not been renewed since the last FIFA World Cup when, in game after game, it threatened to collapse under pressure. How would it cope against the unbridled speed and talent of Vinícius Júnior, Rodrygo, Raphinha and Matheus Cunha? Surely there was the chance of Argentina self-destructing?

And it happened, once in the game. Under no immediate pressure, Cristian Romero delayed and was caught by Cunha, who scored with a perfectly placed shot from outside the area. Argentina duly handed over its present.

The problem was, Brazil was already two goals down. And this, together with a long-range free kick from Raphinha, was to be its only attempt on goal in the match. Brazil created absolutely nothing.

Meanwhile, Argentina passed holes in the visitor's defense, moving the ball back and forth, breaking in little clusters, switching the play and could have scored many more than the four delightfully worked goals it put past Selecao keeper Bento.

The gulf between the teams was horrifying, and here is the sting: Man for man, many of the Brazil players would be worthy of a place on Argentina's team.

Brazil has goalkeepers, center backs and wingers that any team in the world would be proud to have. How can a team with such good players be so bad? The result against Argentina is astonishing. The level of performance less so. Brazil has been playing at this level for a while. Against Colombia last week, and Chile late last year, it won games with a goal right at the end. A flash of individual talent saved the day when it mattered. Not this time. Against a Lionel Messi-less Argentina, they all went down together.

Fourteen rounds of World Cup qualifiers should have made one thing clear: It is obvious why Brazil was prepared to wait a year for Real Madrid manager Carlo Ancelotti. The quality of domestic coaches is not good enough, hence the fact that the Brazilians have been losing space to the Argentines and, especially, to Portuguese coaches in the domestic game. The original Ronaldo was recently forced to end his campaign to become president of Brazil's football association, the CBF. It was always clear he would not gain sufficient support in the internal politics of the Brazilian game. One of his positions was to bring in a foreign coach -- the Brazilians, he feels, have been left behind.

Brazil went to the past two World Cups -- where it perhaps deserved better luck than a pair of quarterfinal eliminations -- under Tite, the outstanding Brazilian coach of recent times. His teams were solid, competitive and occasionally brilliant. Since Tite stepped down, Brazil has been a shambles. In the 17 matches of the previous set of qualifiers, Brazil conceded only six goals. In 14 rounds so far, it has given up 16.

For the first six rounds, Brazil was under the command of Fernando Diniz, an unorthodox figure who was seen as a stopgap while it was waiting for Ancelotti to be available. Without time on the training ground, it always looked like a long shot. He fell after a defeat to Argentina, and the same will very possibly now happen to current coach Dorival Junior after this latest humiliation.

Dorival was the local choice after political infighting in the CBF frightened off Ancelotti. Many, particularly older fans, were delighted that the foreigner did not come, and Dorival started his reign a year ago with considerable backing. That has now frittered away. He has spent 12 months arguing that his team is evolving -- a claim that is not supported by the evidence on the field.

It's true there is a problem in the vital central midfield area. In the 1990s, there was a brutal separation of Brazil's midfield quartet into two who defended and two who attacked. All round midfielders went out of fashion, and it has been some time since the country produced a genuinely world-class box-to-box midfielder. But if this is the reality, accept it and work to minimize it. As the old saying goes, if you can't outplay them, outnumber them. But against Argentina, Brazil was both outnumbered and outplayed in central midfield. This explains why it was passed to pieces, and also why the team never gave a platform to the attacking talent that it has.

That is the fault of the coach. The team's lack of emotional balance is also down to Dorival. Was there really a need to try to press Argentina so high? Or was the team caught up in its own rhetoric, in the unwise words of Raphinha that it would be ready to kick its opponents on and off the pitch? There was a clear case to be made for defending deep, staying compact, drawing Argentina forward and then creating space for the counterattack. But Brazil appeared too hyped up for such clear thinking.

In terms of selection, strategy and emotional approach, all roads would seem to lead to the door of Dorival -- and it is unlikely he will be in charge when the team next takes the field at Ecuador in June.

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