Brazil’s beautiful game now has spine of steel
June 29th, 2010 - 1:16 pm ICT by IANSJohannesburg, June 29 (DPA) Brazil sent out an ominous warning to their World Cup rivals Monday with a clinical 3-0 defeat of Chile to set up a quarter-final clash with the Netherlands.
The Selecao seemed capable of scoring at will against Chile at Ellis Park in Johannesburg, and coach Carlos Dunga said he would now reduce the length of training sessions so his players can continue to produce a more expansive game than seen in the group stages.
The laborious victory against North Korea in the opening game, when Dunga faced accusations of betraying Brazil’s footballing heritage, seemed an age away as goals from Juan, Luis Fabiano and Robinho simply blew away the Chileans.
More frighteningly for the Dutch, who face Brazil Friday in Port Elizabeth for a place in the last four, is that Brazil barely moved out of second gear, and Dunga sees considerable room for improvement.
“We’ve already said that in these World Cup games, that we have to play an open game, and that is what we saw,” he said. “As we go along, game by game, our confidence is growing.”
Dunga revealed that Brazil are leaving nothing to chance in South Africa, with nutrition, training and recovery times for his players all coming under the microscope to ensure the South Americans go home with a sixth World Cup title.
Kaka is one player who has experienced Dunga’s attention to detail and is following a strict regime to ensure he is soon capable of playing a full 90 minutes, as he continues his comeback from a troublesome groin injury.
The Real Madrid star managed to last 81 minutes against Chile and set up the second goal for Fabiano, but Dunga admitted concern about the playmaker picking up another booking following his sending off against Ivory Coast, calling it “a problem”.
But Dunga saw enough glimpses of quality from the 28-year-old to know that Kaka is on the right track, while the coach’s no-nonsense attitude has even succeeded in turning the often enigmatic Robinho into a complete team player.
The Santos striker left Manchester City under a cloud but has fulfilled the role required by Dunga in South Africa, swapping positions with Kaka when needed.
“I only need to say a few words, and the players know what they should do and where they should play,” Dunga said. “I have told them that they have the liberty to play. I try to give them advice to guide them, so that they put in the best performance possible.”
Dunga’s only concern is that Brazil must now leave their base in Johannesburg and travel to Port Elizabeth for the quarter-final tie against the Dutch before a possible semi-final match in Cape Town.
“We were very well settled in our hotel in a very favourable atmosphere, and we are now going to have to move from city to city and hotel to hotel, and this causes its own confusion,” he said.
“It would be better to remain where we are.”
- Improving Brazil now have Dutch convoy in their sights - Jun 29, 2010
- Brazil trounce Chile, set up date with Dutch - Jun 29, 2010
- Dutch masters take on Brazil's artists for semi-final place - Jun 30, 2010
- Brazil set-up quarter-final clash with Netherlands (Lead) - Jun 29, 2010
- Brazil feel the familiar weight of being favoured (Group G team profile) - Jun 01, 2010
- Gilberto Silva ready to be Brazil's unsung hero once again - Jun 09, 2010
- Will the real Kaka stand up? Brazil need star to shine - Jun 17, 2010
- Juan ready to stifle Dutch attacking threat - Jun 30, 2010
- Brazil wary of unknown North Koreans - Jun 14, 2010
- Samba drums fall silent as Dunga fails to answer Cryuff - Jul 03, 2010
- The Netherlands upset favourites Brazil 2-1 (Lead) - Jul 02, 2010
- Kaka sent off as Brazil beat Ivory Coast to go through (Lead) - Jun 21, 2010
- Chile have a mountain to climb against Brazil - Jun 27, 2010
- Netherlands favourites against Brazil, says Henk Ten Cate - Jul 01, 2010
- Dunga hints at end of Brazil job - Jul 03, 2010
Tags: beautiful game, carlos dunga, chileans, ellis park, glimpses, groin injury, group stages, ivory coast, luis fabiano, nonsense attitude, north korea, ominous warning, open game, playmaker, port elizabeth, real madrid, robinho, selecao, strict regime, world cup games