Brazil at the 2014 FIFA World Cup
The following article concerns the performance of Brazil at the 2014 FIFA World Cup. They played their first home-soil World Cup after 64 years, since the 1950 World Cup, and thus were automatically qualified for the group stage.
Brazil qualified as first at their group, winning two matches (Croatia and Cameroon) and drawing one (Mexico).
They eventually reached the semi-finals, beating Chile and Colombia. Brazil, however, were then knocked out by the eventual champions Germany in a match known as the Mineirazo. In the third-place match, Brazil lost to Netherlands and therefore ended the tournament in fourth place.
Host selection[]
In March 2003, FIFA announced that the tournament would be held in South America for the first time since 1978, in line with its then-active policy of rotating the right to host the World Cup among different confederations.[1][2] The decision meant that it would be the first time that two consecutive World Cups were staged outside Europe and the first time two consecutive World Cups were held in the Southern Hemisphere (the 2010 edition was held in South Africa).[3] Only Brazil and Colombia formally declared their candidacy but, after the withdrawal of the latter from the process,[4] Brazil was officially elected as host nation unopposed on 30 October 2007.[5]
Pre-Tournament Friendlies[]
Squad[]
Coach: Luiz Felipe Scolari
The final squad was announced on 7 May 2014.[6] The squad numbers were revealed on 2 June.[7] Neymar suffered a fractured vertebra following a foul by Colombia defender Juan Camilo Zúñiga in the quarter-final; it was announced that Neymar would miss the remainder of the tournament.[8]
No. | Pos. | Player | Date of birth (age) | Caps | Club |
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1 | GK | Jefferson | 2 January 1983 (aged 31) | 9 | Botafogo |
2 | DF | Dani Alves | 6 May 1983 (aged 31) | 75 | Barcelona |
3 | DF | Thiago Silva (c) | 22 September 1984 (aged 29) | 46 | Paris Saint-Germain |
4 | DF | David Luiz | 22 April 1987 (aged 27) | 36 | Chelsea[9] |
5 | MF | Fernandinho | 4 May 1985 (aged 29) | 7 | Manchester City |
6 | DF | Marcelo | 12 May 1988 (aged 26) | 31 | Real Madrid |
7 | FW | Hulk | 25 July 1986 (aged 27) | 35 | Zenit Saint Petersburg |
8 | MF | Paulinho | 25 July 1988 (aged 25) | 26 | Tottenham Hotspur |
9 | FW | Fred | 3 October 1983 (aged 30) | 33 | Fluminense |
10 | FW | Neymar | 5 February 1992 (aged 22) | 49 | Barcelona |
11 | MF | Oscar | 9 September 1991 (aged 22) | 31 | Chelsea |
12 | GK | Júlio César | 3 September 1979 (aged 34) | 80 | Toronto FC[10] |
13 | DF | Dante | 18 October 1983 (aged 30) | 12 | Bayern Munich |
14 | DF | Maxwell | 27 August 1981 (aged 32) | 9 | Paris Saint-Germain |
15 | DF | Henrique | 14 October 1986 (aged 27) | 5 | Napoli |
16 | MF | Ramires | 24 March 1987 (aged 27) | 42 | Chelsea |
17 | MF | Luiz Gustavo | 23 July 1987 (aged 26) | 19 | VfL Wolfsburg |
18 | MF | Hernanes | 29 May 1985 (aged 29) | 24 | Internazionale |
19 | MF | Willian | 9 August 1988 (aged 25) | 7 | Chelsea |
20 | FW | Bernard | 8 September 1992 (aged 21) | 11 | Shakhtar Donetsk |
21 | FW | Jô | 20 March 1987 (aged 27) | 17 | Atlético Mineiro |
22 | GK | Victor | 21 January 1983 (aged 31) | 6 | Atlético Mineiro |
23 | DF | Maicon | 26 July 1981 (aged 32) | 72 | Roma |
Group stage[]
Brazil vs Croatia[]
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The two teams had met in two previous matches, including in the 2006 World Cup group stage, won by Brazil 1–0.[11] Croatia forward Mario Mandžukić was suspended for the match, after being sent off in the team's final qualifier against Iceland.[12]
Croatia opened the scoring through a Marcelo own goal, as the ball bounced off him into the net after Nikica Jelavić deflected Ivica Olić's cross.[13] Neymar equalised for the hosts with a 25-yard (23 m) shot after receiving a pass from Oscar.[14] In the second half, Brazil took the lead with Neymar's penalty after Dejan Lovren was judged to have fouled Fred in the penalty area.[14] Croatia had a potential equaliser disallowed, after a foul was called on the Brazilian goalkeeper, Júlio César.[15][16][17] In added time, Oscar sealed the win, toe-poking the third goal for Brazil from 22 yards (20 m) after receiving a pass from Ramires.[14]
Post-match, FIFA referees chief, Massimo Busacca, defended the officials for awarding the penalty, and insisted there had been some contact between Lovren and Fred even if it was minimal.[18] On the other hand, renowned former top-level FIFA referee Markus Merk criticised FIFA for having Yuichi Nishimura as the referee in the opening match, labelling the refereeing in the match as "embarrassing".[19]
The game was notable for a number of pioneering events. This was the first occasion in FIFA World Cup history on which an own goal (which was also the first ever own goal scored by Brazil in World Cup finals) opened scoring in the tournament. As the first game played at this World Cup, the match also saw the first use of vanishing spray to mark free kick spots, and the advent of goal-line technology, two innovations introduced during the tournament.[20]
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Brazil vs Mexico[]
The two teams had met in 38 previous matches, including three times in the FIFA World Cup group stage, all won by Brazil (1950: 4–0; 1954: 5–0; 1962: 2–0).[22] Their most recent meeting was in the 2013 FIFA Confederations Cup group stage, won by Brazil 2–0.
Mexican goalkeeper Guillermo Ochoa made four outstanding saves to deny Brazil. In the first half he saved a header from Neymar tight to his right to push around the post and blocked a close-range effort from Paulinho. In the second half he saved a low shot from Neymar and a late point blank header from Thiago Silva.[23]
This was the first time since the 1970 World Cup that the host team drew 0–0 in the group stage.[citation needed] Mexico became the first team from outside UEFA or CONMEBOL to take a point from Brazil in the World Cup.[24]
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Cameroon vs Brazil[]
The two teams had met in four previous matches, including in the 1994 World Cup group stage, won by Brazil 3–0.[25] Their most recent meeting was in the 2003 FIFA Confederations Cup group stage, won by Cameroon 1–0. Cameroon midfielder Alex Song was suspended for the match (first match of a three-match ban), after being sent off in the previous match against Croatia.[26]
Brazil, where a draw would guarantee their qualification to the knockout stage, opened the scoring in the 17th minute when Luiz Gustavo crossed from the left for Neymar to beat the goalkeeper with a first time low side-footed finish to the corner.[27] Already-eliminated Cameroon equalised when Allan Nyom beat Dani Alves on the left before crossing for Joël Matip to finish from close range. Neymar put Brazil back in front when he collected the ball from Marcelo and ran at goal before finishing with a low right foot shot that wrong footed the goalkeeper from just inside the penalty area.[28] In the second half, David Luiz crossed from the left for Fred to extend Brazil's lead with a close range header before half-time substitute Fernandinho completed the scoring when he collected a pass from Oscar before finishing with a low right footed shot.[29] The result assured that Brazil pipped Mexico on goal difference to qualify to the knockout stage as group winners.
The match was Brazil's 100th in the World Cup, and they followed Germany (which played their 100th match in their first game of the 2014 World Cup) to become the second team to reach the milestone.[citation needed]
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Round of 16[]
Brazil vs Chile[]
The two teams had met in 68 previous matches,[30] including three times in the FIFA World Cup knockout stage, all won by Brazil (1962, semi-finals: 4–2; 1998, round of 16: 4–1; 2010, round of 16: 3–0).
Brazil opened the scoring when from a corner David Luiz turned Thiago Silva's flick-on into the net. While replays suggested that Chilean defender Gonzalo Jara may have had the last touch,[31] FIFA later confirmed that the goal was scored by Luiz, not Jara.[32] Chile equalised when Hulk lost possession after a throw-in in his own half, Eduardo Vargas stole the ball and passed to Alexis Sánchez to score. In the second half, Hulk's goal was disallowed as Howard Webb adjudged that the player used his arm in bringing down the ball and gave him a yellow card instead.[33] Chances were few after that with Brazil dominating possession with Hulk forcing Claudio Bravo into a decent save, and the match went to extra time. The best chance of extra time came in the last seconds as Mauricio Pinilla's shot hit the crossbar.[34] In the resulting penalty shootout, the score was tied 2–2 after four rounds, with Brazil goalkeeper Júlio César saving from Pinilla and Sánchez, while Willian missed and Hulk's shot was saved by Bravo. In the fifth round, Neymar scored his penalty, meaning Chile had to score, but Jara's shot hit the inside of the post.[35] Brazil advanced to the quarter-finals to face Colombia.
The result meant that in all four World Cups where Chile qualified for the knockout stage, they were eliminated by Brazil.
Brazil | 1–1 (a.e.t.) | Chile |
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David Luiz 18' | Report | Sánchez 32' |
Penalties | ||
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3–2 |
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Quarter-finals[]
Brazil vs Colombia[]
The two teams had met in 25 previous matches, but never in the FIFA World Cup.[36] This was the first time Colombia had reached the quarter-finals of the World Cup. Brazil midfielder Luiz Gustavo was suspended for the match due to accumulation of yellow cards.[37]
Brazil took the lead in the 7th minute, when Neymar's corner was turned in from close range by Thiago Silva. They doubled the lead in the 69th minute when David Luiz scored directly from a long range free kick. Colombia reduced the deficit with 10 minutes to go, when James Rodríguez converted a penalty kick, awarded after substitute Carlos Bacca was fouled by Brazil goalkeeper Júlio César.[38] Neymar was kneed in the back by Colombia defender Juan Camilo Zúñiga in the 88th minute, which resulted in the striker's withdrawal from the match. Subsequent medical evaluation discovered a fractured vertebra, forcing the Brazilian to miss the remainder of the tournament.[8] Brazil advanced to the semi-final, where they would face Germany.
Rodríguez's goal was his sixth of the tournament, enough to win him the Golden Boot award.[39] He also became the first player to score in his first five career World Cup matches since Peru's Teófilo Cubillas (across the 1970 and 1978 tournaments).[40]
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Semi-final[]
Brazil vs Germany[]
The two teams had met in 21 previous matches, including in the final of the 2002 World Cup (their only previous encounter in the tournament's history), won by Brazil 2–0.[41]
While Germany kept the same starting lineup as their quarter-final against France, Brazil made two changes: defender and captain Thiago Silva was suspended for the match due to accumulation of yellow cards,[citation needed] and was replaced by Dante, while forward Neymar was sidelined after suffering a fractured vertebra in the quarter-final against Colombia,[8] and was replaced by Bernard.[42] Germany took the lead in the 11th minute, Thomas Müller volleying in Toni Kroos' corner. Miroslav Klose scored Germany's second goal, after a passing move saw him set up by Müller, his first shot was saved by Brazil goalkeeper Júlio César, but he slotted in the rebound. Kroos then scored two quick goals, the first one after Philipp Lahm's cross was missed by Müller, the second one after stealing the ball from Fernandinho and playing a quick one-two with Sami Khedira. Khedira then scored Germany's fourth goal in six minutes, after exchanging passes with Mesut Özil, to give Germany a 5–0 halftime lead. Substitute André Schürrle added two more goals in the second half, first slotting in from Lahm's cross, then scoring via the crossbar after a cut-back from Müller. Brazil scored a consolation goal in the 90th minute, as Oscar received a pass from Marcelo, dribbled inside and scored.[43] Germany reached their eighth World Cup final, a record by any nation, where they would face Argentina, while Brazil had to settle for the third-place play-off against the Netherlands.
The game equalled Brazil's biggest margin of defeat, a 6–0 loss to Uruguay in 1920, and it broke a 62-match home unbeaten streak in competitive matches going back to 1975.[44] The match also broke many World Cup records: It was Brazil's biggest World Cup defeat (eclipsing their 1998 final loss to France), the biggest defeat by a World Cup host nation (previous record was by three goals), and the biggest margin of victory in a World Cup semi-final (three previous semi-finals ended in 6–1 scorelines).[45]
Klose's goal was his 16th overall throughout his World Cup appearances, allowing him to beat Ronaldo for the record of all-time top scorer in World Cup finals tournaments.[citation needed] Germany's seven goals took their total tally in World Cup history to 223, surpassing Brazil's 221 goals to first place overall.[46]
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Third place play-off[]
Brazil vs Netherlands[]
The two teams had met in 11 previous meetings, including four times in the FIFA World Cup: Netherlands won 2–0 in the second group stage of the 1974 World Cup and 2–1 in the quarter-finals of the 2010 World Cup, and Brazil won 3–2 in the quarter-finals of the 1994 World Cup and 4–2 on penalties after a 1–1 draw (after extra time) in the semi-finals of the 1998 FIFA World Cup.[47]
Brazil made six changes in their starting line-up from their semi-final, while the Netherlands made only two, with Wesley Sneijder, who was originally part of the Dutch starting line-up, replaced by Jonathan de Guzmán after an injury during the pre-match warm-up prevented him from playing.[citation needed] The Netherlands opened the scoring within three minutes, after Robin van Persie converted a penalty kick awarded for a foul on Arjen Robben by Thiago Silva. Daley Blind extended the lead in the 17th minute, scoring after a David Luiz headed clearance fell to him inside the penalty area. Georginio Wijnaldum completed the scoring in second half injury time as he shot home from substitute Daryl Janmaat's cross from the right.[48]
The Netherlands finished third for the first time in their World Cup history.[49] With Michel Vorm's participation (who was substituted into the match in second half injury time), the Netherlands became the first team to use all of their 23 players in a World Cup since the finals squads were expanded from 22 to 23 players in 2002.[50] Brazil, who finished fourth for the second time in World Cup history, conceded a total of 14 goals in the tournament, the most they had ever allowed in a World Cup and also the most conceded by any World Cup hosts.[51] Brazil also became the second team to concede 100 World Cup goals, after Germany.[52][53]
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References[]
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- ^ "Rotation ends in 2018". FIFA.com (Fédération Internationale de Football Association). 29 October 2007.
- ^ "Brazil may lose the right to hold World Cup 2014". Pravda.Ru. Retrieved 25 June 2014.
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- ^ "Brazil confirmed as 2014 hosts". FIFA.com (Fédération Internationale de Football Association). 30 October 2007.
- ^ "World Cup 2014: Kaka and Robinho omitted from Brazil squad". BBC Sport. 7 May 2014. Archived from the original on 18 May 2014. Retrieved 7 May 2014.
- ^ "CBF divulga numeração dos jogadores da seleção para a Copa do Mundo" (in Portuguese). GloboEsporte. 2 June 2014. Archived from the original on 5 June 2014. Retrieved 2 June 2014.
- ^ Jump up to: a b c Kilpeläinen, Juuso (18 March 2018). "Neymar and the magical influence of an enigmatic amulet". Football Paradise. Retrieved 15 December 2020.
The match itself ended in favor of Brazil 2–1, but Seleção’s march was mentally disrupted 87 minutes into the game, when Colombian Juan Zúñiga stabbed Neymar’s back with his knee. The defender’s reckless challenge shattered a vertebra in the Brazilian’s spine, and the Barcelona wunderkind was no longer to be seen in the festival.
- ^ David Luiz joined Paris Saint-Germain after the tournament. "David Luiz rejoint Paris pour cinq ans". psg.fr (in French). Paris Saint-Germain FC. 13 June 2014. Retrieved 15 June 2014.
- ^ Júlio César was on loan at Toronto from Queens Park Rangers. "Toronto Acquires Julio Cesar On Loan". Toronto FC. Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment. 14 February 2014. Retrieved 15 June 2014.
- ^ "2014 FIFA World Cup – Statistical Kit" (PDF). FIFA.com. p. 7. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-06-29.
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- ^ "Neymar fires Brazil to comeback victory". FIFA. Retrieved 12 June 2014.
- ^ Jump up to: a b c "Brazil 3 Croatia 1". BBC Sport. 12 June 2014. Archived from the original on 8 July 2014.
- ^ Glendenning, Barry (12 June 2014). "Brazil 3–1 Croatia: World Cup 2014 – as it happened". The Guardian. Retrieved 16 June 2014.
- ^ Kane, Desmond (12 June 2014). "Forget Neymar, Brazil's new national hero is Yuichi Nishimura". Eurosport. Archived from the original on 13 June 2014. Retrieved 16 June 2014.
- ^ "Brazil 3 - 1 Croatia Match report - Goal.com". Goal.com. 12 June 2014. Retrieved 16 June 2014.
- ^ "Brazil 3 Croatia 1: Fifa defend under-fire referee Yuichi Nishimura as Japanese official caught up in diving row during opening World Cup match". The Independent. 13 June 2014. Archived from the original on 13 June 2014. Retrieved 14 June 2014.
- ^ Haji Talib, Hassan; Chotpibulsap, Pitisak (13 June 2014). "Former FIFA referee: Refereeing for World Cup opener was "embarrassing"". Goal.com. Retrieved 16 June 2014.
- ^ "Marcelo's own goal, vanishing spray and goaline technology – the World Cup firsts at Brazil 2014". Der Standard. 12 June 2014.
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- ^ "2014 FIFA World Cup – Statistical Kit" (PDF). FIFA.com. p. 39. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-06-29.
- ^ "World Cup 2014: Cameroon's Alex Song given three-match ban". BBC Sport. 23 June 2014.
- ^ "Neymar scores twice to ease Brazil past Cameroon into final stages". Guardian. 23 June 2014. Retrieved 24 June 2014.
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- ^ Klein, Jeff. "World Cup 2014: Germany Defeats Brazil, 7–1". New York Times. Retrieved 8 July 2014.
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- ^ "Wissel Vorm zorgt voor record". NOS.nl. 12 July 2014. Archived from the original on 2014-07-15.
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- ^ "Holland heap misery on Brazil with World Cup third-place play-off win". Guardian. 12 July 2014. Retrieved 14 July 2014.
- Brazil at the 2014 FIFA World Cup
- Countries at the 2014 FIFA World Cup