
Brazil return to their roots with appointment of Carlo Ancelotti
On Friday, against Ecuador in Guayaquil, Carlo Ancelotti will become the first foreigner to take sole charge of Brazil. For any major country to turn to a foreign coach is always an admission of failure. Apart from England, the only other country to turn to a foreign coach after winning the World Cup is Uruguay, which has a population of 3.5 million, and they didn't do so for half a century after last lifting the trophy (the Argentinians Daniel Passarella in 1999 until 2001 and Marcelo Bielsa from 2023 to today). But the truth is that Brazilian coaching has been in retreat for some time.
The situation is stark. The Brazilian league is by far the wealthiest in South America. Brazilian sides have won the past six Copas Libertadores, and have beaten other Brazilian sides in four of those six finals. Yet four of the past six Brazilian titles have been won by Portuguese coaches while Otto Glória, who led Benfica to the 1968 European Cup final, remains the only Brazilian to have been successful at elite club level in Europe.
Ancelotti's arrival means no national team in the South American confederation is managed by a Brazilian; seven Conmebol sides are managed by Argentinians (not including the Peru coach, Óscar Ibáñez, who was born in Argentina but played for Peru). That is not just a linguistic issue: Brazil have the money, but Argentina have the culture and the knowhow.
Brazilian coaching once led the world. The legend may have it that Brazil won three World Cups between 1958 and 1970 by grabbing some brilliant individuals off the beach but it's not true. Determined to put right what had gone wrong in 1950, when defeat in the final game to Uruguay at the Maracanã had cost them a World Cup that had seemed theirs, Brazil prepared for 1958 like no side had prepared before.
A delegation led by the national team's doctor, Hilton Gosling, assessed 25 sites in Sweden before choosing a training base in Hindås, a resort near Gothenburg. Although attempts to have a local nudist colony closed for the duration of the tournament failed, all 28 female members of staff at the team hotel were laid off for the duration of the tournament 'to reduce distractions'. The players were put through a rigorous fitness regime, while their backroom staff included not only Gosling but also a dentist and a psychologist. The Juscelino Kubitschek government, which provided much of the funding, was thoroughly technocratic as it sought to achieve '50 years' development in five'. The same principle was applied to football: expert advisers and detailed planning were all.
Brazil were also tactical pioneers. The influence of a wave of Hungarian coaches in the 1930s, missionaries of the coffee-house tradition, most notably Dori Kürschner, had led by the 50s to the development of 4-2-4 and, with it, a form of zonal marking. As late as 1957, the great Hungarian Bela Guttmann was managing São Paulo to the Paulista title. There was a continual dialogue with outsiders, and not only those from Europe. Vicente Feola ended up leading Brazil in 1958, but the job very nearly went to the Paraguayan.
The 4-2-4 not only gave Brazil an extra man at the back when out of possession, but allowed their full-backs to advance, the left-back Nílton Santos in particular, offering a wide variety of attacking angles. Hungary had edged towards a 4-2-4 without quite getting there, but this was something radical and new. European observers in Sweden were entranced and in the years that followed almost everybody started experimenting with a back four.
Sign up to Soccer with Jonathan Wilson
Jonathan Wilson brings expert analysis on the biggest stories from European soccer
after newsletter promotion
By the 1962 World Cup, though, Brazil had already moved on, withdrawing Mário Zagallo to create an asymmetric 4-3-3. Brazil were at the cutting edge and remained so in 1970 as Zágallo, by then the coach, put together a compact and balanced team that in effect contained four No 10s and a wide forward.
Despite pioneering zonal marking, Brazil never developed that into pressing. The experience of the 1954 and 1966 World Cups had created a feeling that Brazil could not match European sides physically. As the military government took over all areas of life, Brazilian coaching became increasing focused on the measurable. Telê Santana's sides of 1982 and 1986 represented a throwback, but defeats by Italy and, on penalties, France added to a sense the Europeans were somehow tougher or stronger. That has only grown since their last World Cup triumph in 2002. Brazil have been eliminated by the first European side they have faced in a knockout tie in the past five World Cups.
The excessive focus on physical preparation began half a century ago, but it is now compounded by a short-termism and impatience within Brazilian club football. Lose three games in quick succession at even a medium-sized club and a manager is likely to be sacked. The result is a focus on results at the expense of process, while the classic ball-playing Brazilian midfielder – a Didi, Gérson or Falcão – is all but extinct.
Insularity and complacency, fostered by those five World Cups, discouraged dialogue with abroad. When Tite, the outstanding Brazilian manager of the past 15 years, took a sabbatical in 2014 to observe, among other sides, Ancelotti's Real Madrid, it was regarded by many in Brazil as a controversial indulgence. The crushing 4-1 defeat by Argentina in March, though, has forced radical action.
Appointing Ancelotti doesn't just expose Brazil once again to foreign ideas; it specifically reconnects Brazil with the tradition that made it great. Ancelotti's great mentor as a coach was Nils Liedholm, who coached him for five years at Roma, where he played alongside Falcão, before preparing the ground at Milan for Arrigo Sacchi's revolution, which Ancelotti later joined. Liedholm's great mentor was the avuncular Hungarian Lajos Czeizler, who shaped him as a player at Norrköping and then took him to Milan.
And Czeizler, who was on MTK's books just after the first world war when Kürschner was coach, is a product of exactly that Budapest culture that shaped Guttmann and the other Hungarian pioneers. With Ancelotti, Brazilian football has returned to its roots. As with so many countries, they lie firmly in the Danubian coffee-house tradition.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Reuters
3 hours ago
- Reuters
Brazil central bank chief says tightening cycle still open
BRASILIA, June 2 (Reuters) - Brazil's central bank governor said on Monday that the monetary tightening cycle is still open and that policymakers want to preserve their flexibility to digest incoming data and calibrate the appropriate terminal interest rate. "We are still discussing the hiking cycle," Gabriel Galipolo said at an event in Sao Paulo. "Flexibility means we are open." The bank's monetary policy committee meets later this month for its next rate decision, after raising the benchmark Selic rate by 50 basis points in May to 14.75%, its highest level in nearly two decades. Policymakers last month dropped forward guidance and any mention of the need for a more restrictive rate, instead highlighting the necessity of maintaining a restrictive stance for a prolonged period. The shift was widely interpreted as a signal that the aggressive 425-basis-point tightening cycle may have come to an end. Galipolo said that at this moment, as the central bank calibrates the terminal interest rate, it is "obvious" that the model increasingly weighs how long rates will remain at a contractionary level. Following official data last week showing strong growth in the first quarter for Latin America's largest economy, he emphasized the economy has continued to show surprising resilience, adding that policymakers want to gather more data to be sure activity is on a clear trend. Regarding a controversial hike in the financial transactions tax, Galipolo said it was necessary to wait for the final design of the measure before assessing its impact, an analysis that would be conducted with due caution by the central bank. He reiterated, however, that he does not consider it appropriate to use the regulatory tax as a tool for boosting revenue or supporting monetary policy. His remarks came amid market interpretations that, by making corporate credit operations more expensive, the government's measure could help cool the economy in line with the central bank's goals, potentially reducing the need for further rate hikes.


Reuters
3 hours ago
- Reuters
Brazil antitrust body oks Petz, Cobasi merger, says local media
SAO PAULO, June 2 (Reuters) - Brazil's antitrust body Cade approved on Monday, without restrictions, the merger of pet product retailers Cobasi and Petz ( opens new tab, local news outlet Folha de Sao Paulo reported. The approval could mark Cade's final green light for the merger, unless an appeal is filed within 15 days. If this happens, the case could be decided by an internal Cade panel.


Reuters
3 hours ago
- Reuters
Police find British journalist reported missing in Brazil
SAO PAULO, June 2 (Reuters) - Rio de Janeiro police said on Monday that a British journalist reported missing nearly four months ago had been out of contact with her family voluntarily and the case has been closed. Charlotte Alice Peet, who had worked as a freelance reporter in Brazil for Al Jazeera and British news outlets, went missing in early February. She was located in a Sao Paulo hostel, police said on Monday, adding she "expressed her desire not to have contact with her family."