Since the inception of the FIFA World Cup back in 1930,
the flamboyant nation of Brazil has dominated world football; winning
five world cups. Their skilful, magnetising style of play has set them
apart as the greatest footballing nation on earth.
An alumni of
Brazilians have donned the bedroom walls of Brazilian children – and
adults, for that matter – with such players as PelĂ©, Zico, Garrincha,
Ronaldo, Dunga, Cafu, Rivaldo and Ronaldinho just a few names on a
conveyor belt of Brazilian greats.
Looking at the list above,
there is a certain breed of player that descends from Brazil - a
tenacious, strong, passionate individual. Many Brazilian children first
experience football playing in alleys, streets, favelas. They learn to
play in treacherous conditions; adapting to surroundings - Pele began
his footballing days playing with newspaper-stuffed socks.
All of
these reasons link to why Brazil is the most successful World Cup
nation. To come from kicking about a sock amongst mates in a favela to
entertaining 70,000 Brazilians in the Maracana – the pride of donning
the Brazilian shirt is entirely unique. Not only does that emitting
yellow reflect the culture of Brazil, but every thread represents the
nation’s pride and faith in a sport which defines the country.
The combination of having a dogged, street footballer with exuding
patriotism is something which sets Brazil out of reach from England.
These street footballers, like Pele, learn their trade in conditions
which don’t facilitate for football. And ironically, this makes them
better footballers.
Once you’ve mastered playing with
ever-changing, small-sized socks; playing with a perfectly round
football is peanuts. Once you’ve mastered dribbling amongst lurking,
sharp cans and uneven terrain; running with the ball becomes simple.
The difference in England is our culture and surroundings are too nice.
From the early age of six I recall playing in the playground with a
leather football, on cut grass. Once we’re good at that, there is no
place to progress when playing for a club – you play with a leather
football, on cut grass.
The majority of England has everything at
its disposal. We can see England play at Wembley through forking out
some pocket money; the only route some Brazilians have to seeing their
national stadium is through playing on the hallowed turf itself.
Coming from nothing to something is what the daunting Brazilian culture
provides, whereas in England we already have technology, shelter, food –
there isn’t room for substantial progression from there. Consequently,
wearing the Three Lions on your chest can’t be as significant.
As much as England invented the great sport of football, the culture
and mentality of the nation of Brazil has truly taken the reins on
pioneering it on a global scale. Brazil has reinvented the perception of
how the beautiful game can be played many times in the past, and never
has the famous saying “The English invented it, the Brazilians perfected
it” felt so prominent.
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