Pic - :: An Illustration Of " RISE AGAIN " That Could Be Narratively Explained Through The Picture
Pic - Branco After Winning THe World Cup For Brazil In 1994Before I start my write up, I would like to be clarified about Mr Carlos Ancelloti and about his contractwiththe CBF. If the contract still exists then I have nothing to say. If his contract expires then, it is time that the C.B.F ought to place the combination of Mr Zico and Mr Branco as the Chief and Assistant Chief of Brazil national team .If Mr Zico is unavailable due to his age , then it ought to be Mr Branco and Mr Roberto Carlos in that charge
Why
The End of Neymar Era Could Help Brazil Rise Again
Brazil’s elimination against Norway in the FIFA World Cup 2026
Round of 16 should not be remembered simply as another painful defeat. It
should be remembered as the moment Brazil was finally forced to confront a
truth it had spent more than a decade avoiding.
The Neymar era failed.
Not failed romantically. Not failed “despite effort.” Failed
structurally, culturally, tactically, and historically. For all the marketing
campaigns, highlight reels, social media mythology, and emotional protection
surrounding Neymar Jr. and the so-called “golden generation” of 2010, the final
verdict is brutally simple: they underachieved relative to the talent,
resources, and expectations handed to them.
And paradoxically, that failure may become the greatest blessing
Brazilian football has received in years.
The defeat to Norway did more than knock Brazil out of a World
Cup. It symbolically buried an era built on illusion — an era where branding
replaced leadership, individual celebrity overshadowed collective function, and
emotional attachment repeatedly overruled practical footballing decisions.
Now, under Carlo Ancelotti, Brazil finally has a chance to
escape its longest cycle of self-inflicted stagnation.
Neymar:
The Biggest Loser in Brazil’s Football History
Brazilian football has produced many flawed stars. But Neymar
occupies a uniquely controversial space because no Brazilian player in modern
history received more protection while delivering so little relative to
expectation.
He was marketed as the successor to Pelé, Ronaldo Nazário,
Ronaldinho, Romário, and Kaká — a player supposedly destined to dominate world
football and restore Brazil’s supremacy. Instead, Neymar became the symbol of
an entire generation that prioritized image over endurance and celebrity over
competitive evolution.
Statistically, Neymar will always have defenders. Goals,
assists, records, and highlight compilations will exist forever. But history
judges Brazilian legends differently. Brazil does not measure greatness through
aesthetics alone. Brazil measures greatness through transformation, leadership
under pressure, and ultimate triumph.
Pelé won World Cups as a teenager. Ronaldo returned from
career-threatening collapse to dominate a World Cup. Ronaldinho transformed
matches with joy while delivering decisive trophies. Rivaldo sacrificed glamour
for collective balance. Kaká carried tactical discipline inside elite systems.
Neymar inherited the most privileged footballing ecosystem in the
world and left behind repeated collapses.
2014 ended in trauma.
2018 ended in tactical paralysis.
2022 ended in emotional disintegration.
2026 ended in irrelevance.
At some point, patterns stop being accidents.
The deeper problem was not merely Neymar’s performances. It was
the culture constructed around him. Brazil became tactically dependent on a
player whose game increasingly revolved around freedom without responsibility.
Managers continuously bent entire systems to maximize Neymar’s comfort instead
of maximizing the collective efficiency of the team.
This distorted the development of an entire
generation.
Talented footballers such as Philippe Coutinho, Roberto Firmino,
Rodrygo, Vinícius Júnior, and others often operated in compromised structures
designed to preserve Neymar’s centrality. Brazil stopped evolving into a modern
collective unit because too much energy was spent maintaining the illusion of
one superstar savior.
The
result was a fragile team incapable of surviving adversity against elite
opposition.
The
Overrated Generation of 2010
The generation emerging around 2010 was repeatedly described as
one of Brazil’s most talented ever. In reality, it became one of the most
overprotected and underachieving eras in the history of the Seleção.
This group inherited extraordinary technical ability but lacked
the psychological steel and tactical adaptability that defined Brazil’s
greatest dynasties.
Previous Brazilian champions balanced artistry with
ruthlessness. The 1970 side had tactical intelligence. The 1994 team had
defensive discipline. The 2002 generation had devastating balance between flair
and structure.
The
Neymar generation often had neither balance nor discipline.
Too frequently, Brazil entered major tournaments relying on
emotional momentum, individual improvisation, and media-created narratives
rather than functional systems. Against organized European sides, they
repeatedly looked structurally vulnerable.
Modern football evolved rapidly during the 2010s. Elite
international football became increasingly physical, tactically synchronized,
and transition-oriented. Nations like France, Germany, Croatia, and now Norway
developed systems capable of controlling space collectively.
Brazil remained trapped in romantic
nostalgia.
The obsession with preserving “beautiful football” without
tactical modernization left them exposed in high-pressure knockout matches.
They often controlled moments but rarely controlled games.
The defeat against Norway illustrated this perfectly. Norway
understood their identity completely: compact shape, disciplined midfield,
controlled transitions, and ruthless efficiency through Erling Haaland.
Brazil, meanwhile, still looked like a team searching for itself
after more than a decade.
The
Toxic Role of Media and Fan Culture
Brazilian football’s stagnation cannot be blamed solely on
players or coaches. The ecosystem surrounding the national team became deeply
unhealthy.
For years, sections of the media and fanbase created a
protective shield around Neymar and the 2010 generation. Legitimate criticism
was treated as betrayal. Tactical concerns were dismissed as negativity. Poor
tournament outcomes were rationalized through emotion rather than analyzed
honestly.
This
created an echo chamber where accountability disappeared.
Commercial interests also played a major role. Neymar became
more than a footballer — he became a global entertainment product. Sponsors,
broadcasters, influencers, and sections of the media benefited enormously from
maintaining his superstar image. Consequently, sporting logic was often
sacrificed for narrative preservation.
Managers faced immense pressure to continue building around
familiar stars, even when evidence suggested Brazil needed tactical
restructuring.
The result was institutional paralysis.
Instead of making difficult decisions early, Brazil delayed
transition after transition. Sentimentality repeatedly defeated practicality. Aging stars remained untouchable.
Tactical experiments remained incomplete. Younger players entered unstable
environments rather than coherent long-term systems.
Meanwhile, elite football continued evolving without Brazil.
Why
Brazil’s Think Tank Failed
The
greatest failure belongs to the Brazilian football establishment itself.
For over a decade, the CBF failed to modernize strategically.
While elite football increasingly prioritized collective pressing, tactical
compactness, physical preparation, and structured transitions, Brazil often
relied on outdated assumptions about individual genius solving structural
problems.
In difficult moments, Brazil consistently lacked pragmatism.
Selection decisions frequently appeared
politically influenced. Tactical identities
changed constantly. Coaches rarely received full authority to reshape the
culture aggressively because public pressure and media noise continuously
interfered.
Brazil’s football leadership became reactive
instead of proactive.
The
Norway defeat exposed this failure clearly. Norway looked physically prepared,
tactically disciplined, emotionally stable, and strategically coherent. Brazil
looked emotionally dependent on moments rather than systems.
Even Neymar’s late penalty felt symbolic — a dramatic individual
moment detached from the actual flow of the game. By the time he scored, Norway
had already won the tactical war.
Why
the End of the Neymar Era Is a Blessing
Painful
endings sometimes create necessary clarity.
Brazil’s Round of 16 exit finally destroys the illusion that the
old cycle merely needed “one more chance.” There is no emotional argument left.
No mythology remains strong enough to hide the structural decline.
And that is precisely why this defeat may become transformative.
For the first time in years, Brazil can rebuild without
nostalgia dominating every conversation. The emotional gravity surrounding
Neymar’s generation has finally weakened. The national team can now evolve
without constantly protecting the legacy of an unfinished era.
The timing of Carlo Ancelotti’s arrival is
therefore crucial.
Unlike previous Brazilian managers trapped between politics and
sentiment, Ancelotti represents cold practicality. He is not emotionally
attached to old hierarchies. His greatest strength throughout his career has
been constructing functional balance around available talent rather than
forcing systems around celebrity.
Brazil now desperately needs that
philosophy.
The Rebuild Must Begin Immediately
The
rebuilding process cannot be cosmetic. It must be structural and ruthless. The
illustrious points to be mentioned and taken a great care and a great note are
as under - :;
1BBrazil Must Fully Embrace Collective
Football .
Frankly enough - To be FRANK excep Vinicius Junior, none in this present
Brazil squad appeared to be MATUTRED enough to play the
kind of football that is required to play in the World Cup matched. Then with FULL
respect To Mr Carlos Ancellotti , the Coach, the Brazilian side ought to have a
BRAZILIAN
Coach. If the 73 years old Mr Zico can be physically fit enough to
take the charge and the guard for the next FOUR years it would be a WORLD
OF GOOD, if NOT then Mr Branco the
winning member of the 1994 World Cup team ought to be handed the charge with Mr
Roberto Carlos as his Assistant .IT HAS TO BEGIN FROM THERE AND IT HAS TO
BEGIN WITH THE NAMES MENTIONED TO TAKE OVER THE CHARGE. That is the
CORRECT
and the most APPROPRIATE step that is required to move the things
forward.
The future cannot revolve around one
superstar. Modern elite football rewards systems, not dependency.
Brazil possess extraordinary young attacking talent in Vinícius
Júnior, Rodrygo, Endrick, Savinho, and others. Instead of creating another
singular icon, Brazil must build a fluid, interchangeable attacking structure
emphasizing movement, pressing, and coordinated transitions.
2. Midfield Fixing
Must Become the Priority
This
is a must.
The next Brazilian midfield must prioritize
creativity, intensity, compactness, positional intelligence, and defensive
balance. Modern tournaments are often won through control of transitions rather
than pure creativity.
YES, AT TIMES IN THE CASE OF BRAZIL ALONE,
THE COMBINATION OF TRNASITION, AND CREATIVITY COULD BE MIXED TO SERVE AS A
MAGICAL SHOW- JUST LIKE THEOIL MIXING WITH WATER.
3. Meritocracy Must
Replace Celebrity Culture
Selection
should depend entirely on form, tactical suitability, and physical readiness.
No player
— regardless of reputation — should become institutionally untouchable again. The
Neymar era demonstrated how dangerous emotional favoritism can become when it
overrides competitive logic.
4. Psychological Toughness Must Be Rebuilt
Brazil’s recurring collapses under pressure revealed a fragile
football culture overly dependent on emotion and narrative Ancelotti must build
a calmer, harder, more disciplined environment capable of surviving adversity
without panic.
Brazil’s Future Begins After the Collapse
Norway may have eliminated Brazil from the
World Cup, but they may also have liberated them from their own illusions.
For over a decade, Brazilian football lived inside a carefully
maintained fantasy — that individual brilliance alone could restore global
dominance. The reality was harsher. Football evolved while Brazil remained
emotionally attached to an unfinished generation.
Now the illusion is gone.
The Neymar era is over.
The mythology is broken.
The dependency has collapsed.
And perhaps, for the first time in many
years, Brazil finally has a genuine opportunity to rebuild itself honestly.
Not around hype.
Not around nostalgia.
Not around celebrity.
But around structure, discipline,
pragmatism, and collective identity.
That is how Brazil once conquered the world.
AND
THAT IS HOW BRAZIL MAY EVEOLVE AND EMERGE AGAIN.
That is it
That explains everything about it all
Mr Shyamal Bhattacharjee, the author was born at West Chirimiri Colliery at District Surguja, Chattisgarh on July 6th 1959 He received his early education at Carmel Convent School Bishrampur and later at Christ Church Boys' Higher Secondary School at Jabalpur.
He later joined Hislop College at Nagpur and completed his graduation in Science and he also added a degree in B A thereafter. He joined the HITAVADA, a leading dailies of Central India at Nagpur as a Sub-Editor ( Sports ) but gave up to complete his MBA in 1984 He thereafter added a Diploma In Export Management.
He has authored NINE , as of now, books namely Notable Quotes and Noble Thought published by Pustak Mahal in 2001 Indian Cricket : Faces That Changed It published by Manas Publications in 2009 and Essential Of Office Management published by NBCA, Kolkatta in 2012, GOLDEN QUOTES on INSPIRATION , SORROW , PEACE and LIFE published by B.F.C Publications, Lucknow, , and QUOTES:: Evolution and Origin of Management Electives by by BOOKSCLINIC Publishing House , , Bilaspur , Chhattisgarh ,From Dhyan To Dhan :: Indian Hockey - Sudden Death Or Extra Time published by BOOKS CLINIC Publishing House , Bilaspur , Chattisgarh and his FIRST book on Hindi poem, which reads as " BHED HAI GEHRA - BAAT JARA SI " and MIDAS TOUCH AND MIRACLES OF INDIAN SPORTS , one is Psychology Of Being Self Confident And Socially Esteemed , which also has been published published by BooksClinics , Bilaspur , Chhattisgarh , and the latest one is " PSYCHOMETRIC - PHYSIO - SOCIO " Reflection Of '" SPORTS ANALYSIS ", the TENTH a book has been recently published by Booksclinics, Bilaspur, Chattisgarh.
He carries a solid experience of about 35 years in Marketing , and Business Analytics .
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