Brazil at Rock Bottom: How the Seleção Lost their Way

Brazil are on their fourth manager since exiting the 2022 World Cup in the quarter-finals. Photograph: Robyn Beck/AFP/Getty Images
Brazil are on their fourth manager since exiting the 2022 World Cup in the quarter-finals. Photograph: Robyn Beck/AFP/Getty Images
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Brazil at Rock Bottom: How the Seleção Lost their Way

Brazil are on their fourth manager since exiting the 2022 World Cup in the quarter-finals. Photograph: Robyn Beck/AFP/Getty Images
Brazil are on their fourth manager since exiting the 2022 World Cup in the quarter-finals. Photograph: Robyn Beck/AFP/Getty Images

If this isn’t rock bottom for the Seleção, it’s as near as makes no difference. Another early tournament exit. Another Brazil team making unwanted history. Their defeat to Uruguay on penalties in the quarter-finals of Copa América marks the seventh time they’ve been dumped from a tournament held outside Brazil before the semi-finals since 2009.

It may not be 1950 or 7-1, but the latest defeat paints as grim a picture as those famous results.

Heading into this summer’s Copa América, there was little expectation that Brazil would win their 10th title. But this could have been, should have been, a chance to build momentum. After years of turmoil at the federation, there was hope that a strong showing could spark a shift before the next round of World Cup qualifiers, where Brazil sit sixth in the standings – putting them perilously close to missing the 2026 tournament altogether.

After strong outings against Spain and England in March, coach Dorival Júnior, who was drafted in to stop the rot, looked to have stabilized the team. But Copa América did little to silence Dorival’s doubters. He has been criticized for failing to react in-game and for making substitutions too late. More alarmingly, his authority over a star-studded squad is being questioned. Before the penalty shootout, as the players huddled up, Dorival was left out of the circle. Raising his hand to speak, Dorival was ignored.

The manager talked throughout the tournament about his focus on penalties. Brazil spent pre-game sessions practising spot kicks, knowing the odds of a shootout were increased with Copa América moving straight to penalties during the knockout rounds without extra time. Yet despite reportedly missing every spot-kick in training, Éder Militão was chosen as the first to take a penalty and promptly fluffed his lines, as did Douglas Luiz.

Accosted by angry fans at the team’s hotel, calling for Dorival and captain Danilo to step down, Danilo said Brazil are a “young team showed that can do great things” and that he “only hopes that people have a little patience”.

Few would agree. Patience was already running thin before the tournament, and the results and performances point to a team that has again lost its way. Brazil won just one game, a 4-1 hammering of lowly Paraguay in their second group game. In their other three matches against Costa Rica, Colombia and Uruguay, they drew in regular time and failed to score from open play.

Brazil are associated with slick, free-flowing moves, but Dorival’s team were meandering. The joy looked like it had been stripped away. There was little intensity. The players expected to inject dynamism – Rodrygo, Endrick, Vinícius Júnior – were either left on the bench or disappointed. Much of the focus has been placed on Vinícius, who is hearing criticism from all angles.

“Vinícius is not the player you say ‘if he plays well, Brazil will be champion.’ If he plays well, he will [only] help Brazil a lot,” Brazilian great Romário said recently.

The evidence of this summer suggests he is right. Vinícius was once again unable to convince on the big stage for his country – and was suspended for the quarter-final after picking up two cheap bookings in the group stage. He scored twice in the win over Paraguay, but went missing in the draws against Costa Rica and Colombia. For his club side, Vinícius is a blur of speed. He’s inventive in the final third. When he’s rolling, no defender can stop him. But that player vanishes when he puts on the yellow shirt. Under successive managers, he’s struggled to find his role. Should he be driving in from the left? Holding up play in the middle? Dropping deeper? Does he connect play or initiate it? He ebbs between periods of frustration, drifting without the ball, or leading fruitless one-man missions into closed corridors. In 251 minutes at this summer’s Copa, he had double the number of unsuccessful touches as he had passes leading to a shot.

But for as much as Vinícius shoulders the creative burden, the failure to get him more involved falls on those around him. The forward can only thrive in a structured team with a stable base. And as Vinícius has grown to become the nation’s most influential player, the team around him has descended into mediocrity.

Before the Uruguay game, midfielder Andreas Pereira said that Brazil’s squad was one that Uruguay could only dream of having. It was a strange statement. Brazil’s midfield, full of Premier League players, had just been steamrolled by a Colombian midfield filled with players from the often ridiculed Brasileirão. But it also served as a motivation for La Celeste’s players.

“To talk about Uruguay you need to have a little more respect,” Luis Suárez said after Uruguay’s win. “Know the history of Uruguay before saying that there are players who would like to be in the Brazil national team. Whoever made that comment was [Giorgian] De Arrascaeta’s back-up in Brazilian football [at Flamengo], so imagine what it’s like for us to hear that.”

If Pereira’s words appeared tone-deaf before kick-off, they sounded laughable afterward. Lucas Paquetá, João Gomes, Bruno Guimarães and Pereira could not handle Uruguay’s high-octane press, just as they had struggled against Colombia. Unable to play through the middle in either game, they resorted to Alisson launching hit-and-hope long balls from the back, fracturing any attempt to build up play.

Standing on the sideline, Dorival could not find solutions. Whereas once Brazil could call on Casemiro or Fernandinho to offer strength and tenacity at the base of midfield, now they’re reliant on a midfield trio – Gomes, Guimarães and Paquetá – who are too often bystanders.

Only Endrick offers any real glimmer of light. The 17-year-old was handed his starting debut by Dorival in the quarter-final in place of Vinícius. But to expect him to carry the team at such a young age, in a difficult moment, is too much to ask. Against Uruguay, he completed just two passes (one from a kick-off), struggling to deal with the physicality of La Celeste’s back line.

Endrick may be viewed as a saviour, but he alone will not fix the structural problems in midfield or the lack of cohesion throughout the team. The reality is that Brazil are now the fourth-best team in South America, behind Argentina, Uruguay and Colombia, who are on a 27-game unbeaten streak. Those sides do not necessarily have more talent than the Seleção, but they all have a have clear way of playing and strong, dogmatic coaches.

If things do not turn around quickly, Brazil are in danger of missing the 2026 World Cup. And if Dorival can not halt the spiral, they will probably be on their fifth manager since 2022.



Serena Williams to Play Doubles with Sister Venus at Wimbledon

FILE -Venus Williams, left, and sister Serena talk together, during their Women's Doubles match against Irina Spirlea and Caroline Vis, at Wimbledon, July 4, 2000. (AP Photo/Alastair Grant, File)
FILE -Venus Williams, left, and sister Serena talk together, during their Women's Doubles match against Irina Spirlea and Caroline Vis, at Wimbledon, July 4, 2000. (AP Photo/Alastair Grant, File)
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Serena Williams to Play Doubles with Sister Venus at Wimbledon

FILE -Venus Williams, left, and sister Serena talk together, during their Women's Doubles match against Irina Spirlea and Caroline Vis, at Wimbledon, July 4, 2000. (AP Photo/Alastair Grant, File)
FILE -Venus Williams, left, and sister Serena talk together, during their Women's Doubles match against Irina Spirlea and Caroline Vis, at Wimbledon, July 4, 2000. (AP Photo/Alastair Grant, File)

Serena Williams will play at Wimbledon for the first time since 2022 after the American legend was given a wildcard to play the doubles event with her sister Venus on Tuesday.

Williams made a sensational return to tennis last week when she won her first-round doubles match at Queen's Club with partner Victoria Mboko.

The 44-year-old had not played professional tennis for four years after saying she was "evolving away" from the sport following the 2022 US Open.

But the 23-time Grand Slam singles champion was keen to play in front of her two young daughters and made the shock announcement of her return just prior to the Wimbledon warm-up event at Queen's.

Williams was unable to play more than one match at Queen's after Mboko pulled out with an injury, but she is due to continue her remarkable comeback in the Berlin Open doubles alongside Karolina Muchova this week.

The Williams sisters are six-time doubles champions at Wimbledon, winning their last title on their most recent appearance together a decade ago.

Following speculation that Serena would be tempted to play in the singles at Wimbledon, which starts on June 29, the American was absent from the list of wildcard entries into that part of the tournament.

After so long away, she had no ranking to secure automatic entry into tournaments, leaving her to rely on wildcards.

There is still one singles wildcard place for Wimbledon to be announced.


Gazans Displaced by War Watch World Cup from the Ruins

 Palestinian football fans watch 2026 World Cup matches at a cafe in Gaza City, June 11, 2026. (Reuters)
Palestinian football fans watch 2026 World Cup matches at a cafe in Gaza City, June 11, 2026. (Reuters)
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Gazans Displaced by War Watch World Cup from the Ruins

 Palestinian football fans watch 2026 World Cup matches at a cafe in Gaza City, June 11, 2026. (Reuters)
Palestinian football fans watch 2026 World Cup matches at a cafe in Gaza City, June 11, 2026. (Reuters)

Fadi Al-Arawi, a footballer in the Gaza Strip Premier League, hasn't been able to take the pitch since pro sports were suspended with the outbreak of war more than two years ago. Like most Gazans, he no longer even has a home where he can watch the World Cup on TV.

As Saturday's match between Qatar and Switzerland was about to get under way, he wore his old Gaza Sports Club professional uniform and medals he had picked up at international competitions.

He hovered in the darkness over a flickering laptop, trying to get an internet signal to watch the match with a group of friends in a room in a school converted into a shelter for Gazans displaced by ‌Israel's military campaign.

"See, ‌this is the internet, it's starting to cut out and ‌the ⁠match hasn't even ⁠started yet," Al-Arawi, 38, told Reuters in Khan Younis as Israeli drones hummed overhead. "Can you hear the drones? We might live or die, we might be bombed."

Much of Gaza was destroyed and its infrastructure heavily damaged during Israel's two-year military assault in the territory, launched after the October 2023 Hamas attacks.

Despite an October 2025 truce, Israel has continued to carry out attacks in Gaza, and Hamas has so far rebuffed calls to lay down its ⁠arms in exchange for Israel withdrawing its troops.

'DESPITE EVERYTHING, WE WILL ‌WATCH THE MATCHES'

Nearly the entire population of more ‌than 2 million Palestinians lives in a narrow strip of Hamas-controlled territory along the coast, mainly ‌in tents and damaged buildings.

Alaa Babli, who runs the Royal Cafe in Gaza City, ‌installed two alternative power lines and a backup battery to ensure late-night matches can still be screened once fuel-powered generators shut down after midnight.

Hani Abu Rizq, who came to watch a match beneath flags of Egypt and Morocco hanging on the cafe wall, said Gazans are never free ‌of fear when out in public.

"The cafe could be targeted," he said. "Something next to me could be targeted and I ⁠could lose my life... ⁠But despite everything we are suffering, we are continuing, and we will watch the matches."

The Palestinian Football Association says 1,000 athletes were among the 73,000 Palestinians killed by Israel in the war since 2023, from children and amateurs in all sports to referees and professionals.

Israel has also destroyed around 285 sports facilities — some completely bulldozed, others bombed. Israeli forces converted stadiums into detention camps, some of which became notorious for allegations of mistreatment of prisoners there, which Israel denies.

The enclave's flagship Al-Yarmouk Stadium in Gaza City, where Al-Arawi and other professionals once played in front of thousands of spectators, is now a tent city for displaced families.

"Since the Israeli war of extermination in 2023, Palestinian sports have been a primary target of the Israeli military machine," said Mustafa Siam of the Palestinian Football Association.


Jordan Feeling Pride Not Pressure Over World Cup Debut

Ehsan Haddad of Jordan shoots during the international friendly match between Jordan and Colombia at Snapdragon Stadium on June 07, 2026, in San Diego, California. (Getty Images/AFP)
Ehsan Haddad of Jordan shoots during the international friendly match between Jordan and Colombia at Snapdragon Stadium on June 07, 2026, in San Diego, California. (Getty Images/AFP)
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Jordan Feeling Pride Not Pressure Over World Cup Debut

Ehsan Haddad of Jordan shoots during the international friendly match between Jordan and Colombia at Snapdragon Stadium on June 07, 2026, in San Diego, California. (Getty Images/AFP)
Ehsan Haddad of Jordan shoots during the international friendly match between Jordan and Colombia at Snapdragon Stadium on June 07, 2026, in San Diego, California. (Getty Images/AFP)

Jordan are feeling pride not pressure ahead of their World Cup debut against Austria and will fight to prove their worth in what will be a new chapter in the country's football history, captain Ehsan Haddad said on Monday.

Known for their strong counter-attacking, Jordan scored 32 goals in World Cup qualifying and are seeking to become the first team to reach the knockout stage in a debut appearance since Slovakia's feat in 2010.

"We ‌are participating for ‌the first time in our history. It is a ‌great ⁠source of pride ⁠for us. This is pride more than pressure. It was the dream to be here," Haddad said.

"We have self-confidence," he said. "The pressure that we used to feel got us here. So let us see where it's going to lead us to."

There will be no gentle introduction for the side known at home as Al-Nashama, or the "noble ones", with Austria eager to make their ⁠mark on the tournament after 28 years in the World ‌Cup wilderness.

Jordan's next match in Group J ‌will be against Algeria, then defending champions Argentina.

BIG STEP UP TO WORLD STAGE

The ‌step up to the World Cup will be a big leap, with ‌the bulk of the Jordan squad from clubs at home or in the Middle East and only winger Mousa Al Tamari playing club football in Europe, with French side Stade Rennais.

Haddad said Jordan felt privileged to be at the World Cup ‌when teams like Italy had missed out, but they would not settle for just showing up.

"There are great ⁠players historically who ⁠are not here today. This is a source of motivation for us to give it everything we've got," he said.

"We are going to fight, we're going to be patient for 90 minutes and we're going to stick to our game plan."

Jordan coach Jamal Sellami said Austria had strong midfielders and were good in attack and in the air, but he had a gameplan he would stick to in the group encounter in Santa Clara at the stadium of the San Francisco 49ers.

Sellami said good opening matches in this World Cup for countries that qualified from Asia - Japan, South Korea, Australia and Qatar - had motivated his team.

"The results they achieved are really encouraging," he said. "It's all positive, positive motivators for the players or for them to perform."