Bundas, Bribes and Brazucas - The Official Brazil FIFA World Cup 2014 Thread

Who do you think will win the World Cup?


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Kritic

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Pele isn't a top 5 Brazilian player if we're honest.

Ronaldo, Rivaldo, Ronaldinho, Garrincha, Zico, Socrates, Jarzinho, Carlos Alberto, Oscar etc etc etc are all better.

At best he's top15-20. @Hollister doesn't want to admit it but brehs know the truth :manny:
you gotta be crazy when all these guys probably play soccer cause of him.

you can't take his talent and influence just cause he's turned into a fifa tom today. the man's gotta eat. negros didn't get the best contracts in his days..

saying pele is top 20 is disrespectful to the sport.
 
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Kritic

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:wow:

Add Romario or Rivaldo and you have the holy trinity of Brazilian forwards.
i don't like rivaldo after that stint vs turkey faking that shyt. i know he's a scorer but he waited on ronaldo to do all the work to draw defenders and take the glory with the goal...

romario (+bebeto) was a great world cup too. i vaguely remember it....
 
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Lakers Offseason

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Tim Vickery with the realness on Brazil:

After the cruel injury that keeps Neymar out of the rest of the World Cup, Brazil has become a country in mourning – and also a country in denial.

Camilo Zuniga, the Colombian right back whose ill judged lunge caused Neymar's injury, has become public enemy number one. As I write, Brazil's most famous football commentator has just described it as one of the most violent moments in the history of the game. The Brazilian FA is in the process of asking FIFA to give Zuniga a huge ban.

At this time, with the poster boy out of action, reality has been thrown out of the window.

Saturday's edition of 'Lance!' – Brazil's usually excellent sports daily – makes a sole passing reference to the wider context. "Curiously," says one article, "Brazil committed more fouls than Colombia – 31 against 23." This fact is presented as if it were some statistical quirk. But really it is part of a plan.

It is all very well for Brazil coach Luiz Felipe Scolari to complain that Neymar was being hunted on the field. The hunting started from his side. This is an unfortunate part of the contemporary Brazilian game. It is called tactical fouling. Its aim is to prevent the opposition gaining any fluency in possession by repeatedly interrupting the game with fouls.

I well recall being in the stadium for the final of the 2007 Copa America. Brazil, with an understrength side, pulled off a surprise by beating Argentina 3-0. It was a clinical counter-attacking triumph. But, up against a team with the likes of Riquelme, Veron and a young Lionel Messi, Brazil opened up its tool box and committed around 45 fouls.

Last year's Confederations Cup final against Spain was another resounding 3-0 win for Brazil, with some superb Neymar moments along the way. But the Spanish were entitled to a little grumble about the persistent fouling by their opponent – Brazil committed 26 fouls in that game, five fewer than its total against Colombia.

If any player was hunted on the field at Fortaleza last Saturday (AEST) it was the number ten of Colombia, James Rodriguez. Again and again he was on the end of vicious fouls from Brazil midfielder Fernandinho, who appeared to be acting to a plan to intimidate his opponent out of the game. And the referee did nothing.

The danger signs were there in Brazil's previous match against Chile. Right at the start Fernandinho flew into a late tackle. It was a clear yellow card. None was awarded. This leniency has been so prevalent that we can only assume the referees are acting on some kind of FIFA directive. It would seem that the world governing body, understandably, does not want to see too many players suspended, which might devalue its showpiece competition. Even Lionel Messi has been fortunate to escape punishment for the occasional petulant challenge or reaction.

This style of refereeing is very dangerous in a game involving two South American sides. After Fernandinho had got away with his bad tackle against Chile, it was clear that Chile would react. If Brazil was going to have a free one, then so would Chile – and it was also clear who the victim would be. Charles Aranguiz slid in with a tackle on Neymar which reduced the effectiveness of the young Brazilian in the match and briefly threatened his participation against Colombia.

In other words, Brazil had received a warning – do not go out to hunt lest you be hunted. It did not heed that warning. It tried to kick James Rodriguez out of the game, and the outcome is that Neymar has been kicked out of the World Cup.

It is very sad for him, for his team and for the tournament. But the sad, and surely unavoidable truth is that Brazil is reaping what it has sown – and as a proud owner of 1982 Brazil shirt, that is a desperately despondent sentence to be forced to write.

http://theworldgame.sbs.com.au/blog/2014/07/07/brazil-reaped-what-it-had-sown


:salute:


Lets see what the Germans do when Brazil starts with their shyt:sas2:
 

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Press reaction: Brazil mourn Neymar loss while Colombia rail at ‘injustice’


Newspapers in Brazil and Colombia were united in condemnation for the Spanish referee Carlos Velasco Carballo after their foul-strewn quarter‑final, as the hosts mourned the back injury that has ruled the home favourite Neymar out of the remainder of the tournament.

Images of Brazil’s stricken star filled almost every front page in the host nation, sometimes accompanied by one of the celebrating David Luiz, scorer of the winning goal. Diário Catarinense created a front page with mastheads at both top and bottom, with a picture of David Luiz filling one half accompanied by the single word alegria – happiness – while when turned upside down a picture of Neymar had the word Tristeza – sadness.

“The pain that stopped our joy,” read the headline in the Correio Braziliense. “Clattered by the knee of the Colombian right-back Juan Zúñiga, the best Brazilian attacker is out of the World Cup. A wave of sadness has invaded the country. For the first time under Felipão’s control the Seleção will play without its star in the No10 shirt, against the strongest team in this tournament: Germany. In 1962 Brazil was deprived of Pelé’s genius, also through injury, but won the title. It is time to repeat the feat.”

In the Folha de São Paulo, the columnist Juca Kfouri wrote: “Now the Germans are not only favourites, they are a sure thing. The Brazilian side is the underdog confronting mission impossible. Fans will be hoping for a miracle.”

“Cowardice deprives the World Cup of Neymar,” read the headline in the Rio newspaper Extra. “A scream of joy, a deep pain,” wrote Correio, alongside pictures of both David Luiz and Neymar, adding “Felipão is furious with the referee, who did not even show a yellow card.” Horaincluded, inset into a large image of a writhing Neymar, the image of Zúñiga, with the words “Foi ele!” – it was him!

The Colombian regional newspaper Diario del Magdalena had perhaps the hardest-hitting front page however, their headline reading “Arbitro Español: hijo de la gran puta madre que te parió” (Spanish referee, son of a massive whore, the mother who bore you):mjlol:. “The decision to disallow a legitimate goal, scored by Mario Yepes, and to give countless fouls against Colombia decided the match for the Brazilians,” they wrote.

Another Colombian newspaper, Q’hubo, led their front page with the single word: “Injusticia!” Using a picture of a tearful James Rodríguez – “his face reflecting the injustice which had befallen him” – they also complained about the disallowed goal, writing that Colombia lost “at the hands of the referee and a Brazil side that felt their own pain”.


Colombia :umad:


Last time Colombia got mad at someone fukking up their World Cup, he got murked:demonic:

Referee :ufdup:
 

Bboystyle

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I'd wish they shorten up the WC length. Every 4 years is toooooo long for such a huge event. 2 years would be cool
 

BlackAchilles

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I got:

Holland vs. Argentina: Argentina won't be able to keep the Dutch scoreless and haven't shown much goal scoring ability themselves

Germany vs. Brazil: I think it could go either way, but Brazil lost Neymar, so ...
 
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