Brazil’s traumatic World Cup ended with more throbbing on Saturday as they lost 3-0 to Netherlands in the third-place play-off in Brasilia.
Brazil’s traumatic World Cup ended with more throbbing on Saturday as they lost 3-0 to Netherlands in the third-place play-off in Brasilia.
After that 7-1 mauling of Germany still afresh in their minds, Brazil had a similarly disastrous start against the Dutch, with Robin van Persie opening the scoring from the penalty spot inside three minutes.
With injured star Neymar watching on from the bench, Daley Blind then capitalised on more calamitous defending to make it 2-0 with 17 minutes played, and Georginio Wijnaldum rubbed salt into the hosts’ wounds by adding a third in injury time. Brazil have now lost back-to-back home games for the first time since 1940, and they end the tournament having conceded 14 goals altogether, the most of any side at a World Cup since 1986 and the most ever for a host team.
In stark contrast, Dutch coach Louis van Gaal leaves with a consolation win of taking third place and end the competition unbeaten, with their semi-final exit against Argentina only coming after a penalty shoot-out. The day had not started well for Holland, who saw playmaker Wesley Sneijder withdraw at the last minute due to an injury suffered in the warm-up, with Jonathan de Guzman replacing him in the starting line-up.
Brazil coach Luiz Felipe Scolari had made six changes to his team following the Germany debacle, with one seeing captain Thiago Silva make his return after suspension. The absence of Silva, along with that of Neymar, was a contributing factor in the semi-final humiliation, but the usually inspirational centre-back was at fault as Brazil conceded a penalty with less than two minutes played.
Silva was caught the wrong side of Arjen Robben as the winger latched onto a pass from Holland captain van Persie and was left with a clear path on goal. Robben was pulled back by the defender, with the contact starting outside the box and carrying on into the area. Algerian referee Djamel Haimoudi decided to award a spot-kick but controversially opted against showing Silva a straight red card.
If Silva was let off the hook, van Persie made no mistake from the spot, lashing his kick high into the top right-hand corner to give goalkeeper Julio Cesar no chance. Once again Brazil’s defensive frailties were hopelessly exposed when the Netherlands’ second goal arrived in the 17th minute. De Guzman broke in behind Maxwell in the Brazilian left-back position and got to the byeline, from where his cross was headed back out by David Luiz and straight into the path of Blind, who had time to take the ball down 12 yards out and volley home.
This surely signals the end of Brazilian coach Louis Felipe Scolari which could be best described as excruciating. Brazil needs fresh ideas, more attacking ideology and more than that, a coach that could be ready to take a chance, just like Louis Van Gaal.