Striker
Neymar, who hasn't played since injury in February, was named Monday as the
star of a Brazilian team that coach Tite said has a good chance of winning the
World Cup in Russia.
"Brazil
is one of the favorites given the football it has shown, given its
consistency," Tite said at the team announcement in Rio de Janeiro.
He said the
national team, seeking a record sixth World Cup, stands out for being
"aggressive, scoring goals."
"That's
not being arrogant, it's just telling the truth," Tite said.
Neymar's
return to form will be a key factor. He has been out since requiring surgery
for a broken bone in his foot while playing for Paris Saint-Germain, and is
only now easing back into training.
Team doctor
Rodrigo Lasmar said he was hopeful, with the bone's healing making
"excellent progress."
Neymar should
be able to "regain match fitness" when he takes part in friendlies
against Croatia Brazil will need him showing all the skills that made him the
world's most expensive footballer, with a record 222 million euros ($264
million) transfer from Barcelona to PSG last August.
"We will
be a good deal stronger with Neymar. He's one of the three best players in the
world, but for him to be at his peak he needs a solid team around him,"
Tite said.
Last week,
the team suffered the loss of influential right-back Dani Alves to a knee
injury.
In Tite's
23-man squad Alves place has been comfortably covered by the presence of two
men of similar abilities in Danilo of Manchester City and Fagner, whom Tite
knows from his time at the helm of Corinthians' 2015 national
championship-winning team.
Fagner is
currently carrying an injury of his own but has been cleared by Lasmar to play
in Russia.
Tite praised
PSG's Alves for his "enormous heart, his exemplary courage," but said
the player's disappointment had to be set aside.
"We
can't cry over those who are absent. We have to concentrate on preparing,"
Tite said.
After
sweeping aside South American opponents in the World Cup qualifiers, Brazil are
seen as one of the strongest sides at the World Cup.
The
'Selecao's' current winning ways return the team to the vibe it enjoyed for
decades until a slack period that reached a nadir during Brazil's hosting of
the 2014 World Cup, when the national side crashed out of the semi-finals 7-1
to Germany.
Brazil's
hugely unpopular president, Michel Temer, tweeted his support after the team
announcement.
"With
all due respect to our Russian hosts and friends, and with humility, please
bring the trophy home,"
0 comments
Post a Comment