logo
Ramon Menezes names Brazil U20 squad for friendlies

Ramon Menezes names Brazil U20 squad for friendlies

Yahoo17-05-2025

This article was translated into English by Artificial Intelligence. You can read the original version in 🇧🇷 here.
The current South American champion, the Brazilian Under-20 National Team, was called up this Friday (16) by coach Ramon Menezes for three friendly matches during the FIFA June window. All 23 athletes called up will report on the 2nd. The focus is on preparing for the World Cup in this category, which will be held in Chile between September 27 and October 19. The friendlies will take place in Cairo, the capital of Egypt, against rivals who will be in the competition. The first challenge will be on June 4 against the hosts. Then, on the 7th, Brazil will face Saudi Arabia. And they will take on South Korea three days later. Flamengo (five), Palmeiras, and Athletico (three) were the clubs with the most players called up. There are nine athletes remaining from the South American champion group: Felipe Longo, Leandrinho, Iago, Arthur Dias, Breno Bidon, Gabriel Moscardo, Rayan, Deivid Washington, and Gustavo Prado. Brazil is, with five titles, the second most successful team in the World Cup. Only Argentina (six) has more. The mission is to end a long drought in the competition, as they have not won since 2011 when Oscar, Dudu, Danilo, and Henrique Almeida stood out. They missed the editions of 2013, 2017, and 2019. They were runners-up to Serbia in 2015 and were knocked out by Israel in the quarterfinals in 2023. **See all the call-ups** 👇🏽 **Goalkeepers:** Felipe Longo - Corinthians Lucas Furtado - Flamengo Aranha - Palmeiras **Full-backs:** JP Chermont - Santos Leandrinho - Al-Shabab (KSA) Léo Derik - Athletico-PR Pedro Lima - Wolverhampton **Defenders:** Iago - Flamengo Benedetti - Palmeiras Arthur Dias - Athletico-PR João Souza - Flamengo **Midfielders:** Breno Bidon - Corinthians João Cruz - Athletico-PR Gabriel Moscardo - Reims Rayan Lucas - Flamengo Gabriel Carvalho - Internacional Matheus Alves - São Paulo **Forwards:** Rayan - Vasco Matheus Gonçalves - Flamengo Deivid Washington - Santos Luighi - Palmeiras Gustavo Nunes - Brentford Gustavo Prado - Internacional *Photo: Rafael Riberiro/CBF*

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

🎓 Gustavo Costas switches up his backroom staff
🎓 Gustavo Costas switches up his backroom staff

Yahoo

time22 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

🎓 Gustavo Costas switches up his backroom staff

Racing Club announced that Nacho González will join the first team's coaching staff starting this season. There are updates in Racing's coaching staff. A legendary player from La Academia will begin working as Gustavo Costas' assistant for the upcoming semester. Advertisement Following the departure of Gustavo Campagnuolo, who has taken up a role with the Ecuador national team alongside Sebastián Becaccece, Nacho González is the one filling the vacancy. Until a few weeks ago, Nacho worked in the same role but with the Reserve team led by Pablo Gomis, who left his position after poor results in the Copa Proyección, and is now expected to be replaced by Sebastián 'Chirola' Romero. Nacho González shared the squad with Costas in the 1990s and also has a past at Racing as interim head coach, when he took charge of the team in the 1-0 loss to Estudiantes in 2013, prior to the return of Reinaldo 'Mostaza' Merlo. Advertisement Racing is preparing to play a friendly against Olimpia on June 28 in Paraguay and on Wednesday, July 2, will face San Martín de San Juan in the Copa Argentina. This article was translated into English by Artificial Intelligence. You can read the original version in 🇪🇸 here. 📸 LUIS ROBAYO - AFP or licensors

After Copa América chaos, will Club World Cup and 2026 World Cup be safe? Inside the security challenge
After Copa América chaos, will Club World Cup and 2026 World Cup be safe? Inside the security challenge

Yahoo

time23 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

After Copa América chaos, will Club World Cup and 2026 World Cup be safe? Inside the security challenge

The panicked wails cut through suffocating heat, and told of terror. They came from distressed soccer fans last July 14, and became the soundtrack to 'inhumane' chaos. Mothers and daughters, fathers and friends, hinchas of Colombia and Argentina went to Hard Rock Stadium in Miami for the 2024 Copa América final. Some left traumatized after ticketless fans and security failures turned their evening of celebration into a nightmare. They spent unending minutes crushed together, sweating and suffering, pushing helplessly toward previously breached and resealed gates. Some fainted. Some shrieked for help — for water that wasn't available, for calm that never really came. They 'posed an emergency situation due to the heightened risk of stampedes and potential injury,' a Miami-Dade County police chief later wrote. Authorities ultimately unsealed gates 'to alleviate' the crush, 'therefore avoiding fatal injuries,' but allowing thousands without tickets to enter. Advertisement The entire scene spooked American soccer. It led to finger-pointing and fears that the next major international tournaments on U.S. soil — the 2026 World Cup and 2025 Club World Cup, which kicks off Saturday in Miami — could be similarly unsafe. It stunned New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy, who, the morning after the madness, called a meeting. 'Let's review all protocols,' Murphy told a team that included leaders from MetLife Stadium, which is set to host the Club World Cup and World Cup finals. 'And let's make sure it never happens [here].' That, for the past 11 months, has been a consistent theme of preparations for the two upcoming tournaments. 'I haven't been in a meeting since we've started this collaboration with FIFA and local, state, federal law enforcement,' says JP Hayslip, the VP of security at Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia, where 'that hasn't [been] brought up.' Advertisement Nearly a year later, authorities say they've learned from the Copa América final. In interviews with Yahoo Sports, stadium officials and others expressed confidence in their planning. A few noted that FIFA, the global soccer governing body in charge, has come to the U.S. more prepared than CONMEBOL, the South American governing body that ran last year's Copa. 'There's definitely a more organized feel' this time around, one person familiar with the prep for both tournaments said. But there are still concerns. Many stem from FIFA's unfamiliarity with the U.S.; and from U.S. authorities' unfamiliarity with international soccer, one of the widely cited factors in last summer's trouble. Hard Rock Stadium, site of both the 2024 Copa América final and 2025 Club World Cup opener, has expanded its perimeter to prevent future crowd crushes. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell) (ASSOCIATED PRESS) Lessons learned from Copa América final In one sense, to security experts, the near-fatal flaw that derailed the Copa final was obvious. Fans and cars 'entered the interior parking lots without prior screening,' Carmen Castro, chief of the Miami-Dade Police Department's Strategic Response Division, wrote in an after-action report obtained by Yahoo Sports. The lack of an outer security perimeter allowed un-ticketed fans 'an opportunity to gain access to the stadium,' Castro explained. And in 'overwhelming numbers,' they ruined the experience for thousands with tickets. Advertisement Hard Rock Stadium officials, citing pending litigation, declined to discuss why there was no outer perimeter. In a forward-looking statement, though, a spokeswoman wrote: 'For FIFA Club World Cup 2025, fans should expect to pass through multiple security and ticket check points in order to enter Hard Rock Stadium. All fans will also have their tickets scanned as they enter the property.' A spokeswoman for the Miami-Dade Sheriff's Office added that there would be 'three separate checkpoints that enclose the entire campus.' This layered approach, experts say, disperses crowds both spatially and sequentially. Most problems are detected at initial 'soft checks' long before a fan reaches stadium gates, far away from what FIFA's guidelines call the 'final formal ticket check.' Those who do sneak or bust through can be tracked down in the vast open space between outer perimeter and concourse, without wreaking widespread havoc. 'This approach will ensure the great majority of nefarious non-ticketed fans remain on the exterior,' Castro wrote. For the Club World Cup, most stadiums outside Miami actually won't extend their perimeters far beyond what they typically do for NFL or MLS games, according to multiple officials at those host venues. That is because they aren't expecting capacity crowds; interest in the Club World Cup, dampened by 'alarming' ticket prices, has been lukewarm in most markets. But for next summer's 2026 World Cup, there will be secondary and tertiary perimeters. Although exact plans are still in development, Super Bowl-style structures will surround the stadiums. They're extended in part to accommodate media centers, hospitality areas and sponsor activations, but also to fortify security. Streets and parking lots will be blocked off. 'We don't want somebody that doesn't have a ticket to even get close to our building,' Hayslip says. Advertisement Perimeters, though, are only part of the answer, a superficial solution. Deeper dynamics — the lack of stateside precedent, and the lack of institutional experience with mega soccer tournaments — is 'what is breeding the uncertainty,' one official involved in both preparations said. 'What happened at Copa, yeah, you can point to what the issue was: they needed an outer perimeter. … But it's more complicated than that.' Law enforcement personnel and security agents outside Hard Rock Stadium during preparations for Saturday's opening match in the Club World Cup soccer tournament, Wednesday, June 11, 2025, in Miami Gardens, Fla. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell) (ASSOCIATED PRESS) FIFA's tournament model meets America's stadium machine Seven of the World Cup's 11 U.S. stadiums have hosted Super Bowls. The other four have held a combined 21 NFL conference championships. They've all hosted Taylor Swift and dozens of other attractive events — all of which have contributed to two corollary challenges. Advertisement On one hand, 'there is a risk' that experience can breed 'complacency,' says Mick O'Connell, a security consultant who's worked on megaevents; that 'muscle memory' could blind authorities to the unique characteristics of a World Cup and the 'changed environment they're gonna be operating in.' On the other hand, multiple people told Yahoo Sports that there's been mild friction between stadium officials and FIFA, which is more accustomed to operating men's World Cups on relatively blank slates, in venues without pre-existing security staffs and systems, venues that were purpose-built for the tournament. 'It's clearly been a challenge for them,' Hayslip says. 'It's blatantly obvious that they're not used to this. They always revert back to Qatar' and the 2022 World Cup, whereas the U.S. stadiums revert back to Super Bowls and so on. Meshing those two perspectives into one unified strategy has not been seamless. Experience, of course, is primarily an asset. 'You've got institutional knowledge of what works and what doesn't work,' says Joe Coomer, the VP of security at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta. O'Connell clarifies: "It's good to have muscle memory with regard to systems, procedures and practices that you can rely upon." Hayslip says that he and colleagues have tried 'to reassure [FIFA] that not only do we 'know what we're doing,' we've experienced it.' Advertisement But they have also listened. They have traveled to England and Germany, to Euro and Champions League finals, to see how those with decades of experience in international soccer do it. Because they know that World Cups are different. 'We've done the NFC championship many times, but this is not that,' Hayslip assures. 'This is a different environment, a different culture, … a different, probably more passionate fan base than any of us have ever experienced.' For those who've never hosted high-level international soccer, Coomer has a two-word message: 'Buckle up!' In workshops and on scouting trips, they've learned how fans from various countries express that passion. 'We've all got our eyes on those Argentinian teams, those Brazilian teams,' Coomer says. They've studied videos and brought in foreign experts — less to crack down on the passion, more to ensure they don't misinterpret it as aggression or troublemaking. Coomer and a few Atlanta law enforcement leaders went to Los Angeles for last month's Club World Cup play-in game, where they encountered festive smoke and constant chanting. If they encounter it in Atlanta this month, or next summer, Coomer explains, 'we don't want it to be the first time [officers] react to it.' Advertisement What they also must understand, experts add, is how visitors might react to American policing. 'You're not policing your own citizens anymore,' says Cliff Stott, an expert in crowd psychology. 'You're policing foreign nationals [who] have different culture norms, different values, different relationships with the police.' They may or may not respond well to K-9s. They may or may not be comfortable chatting with an officer — who may or may not speak their language. Communicating with those foreign fans will be crucial, experts say, especially as they hop from one U.S. city to the next, where tactics and rules might be distinct. Miscommunications can lead to confrontations, which can lead to chaos, which is precisely what all these security measures are designed to prevent. Experts also warn against over-policing, which can backfire or take the fun out of the event. Officials hope improved protocols will deliver a safe, enjoyable environment for fans traveling from around the world. (Photo by Roger Wimmer/) (Roger Wimmer/ISI Photos via Getty Images) 'It's a classic all-threat, all-hazard situation' For the 2026 World Cup, within and beyond the 16 host cities, there will also be a vast but unseen network of federal, local and international agencies gathering intel and responding to it. Advertisement This was another takeaway from the Copa América final. Despite massive gatherings outside team hotels; brawls in Charlotte at a semifinal earlier that week; and reports of difficulties in Texas at previous matches, the possibility of gate-crashing 'was not gathered and shared by any intelligence source,' Castro wrote in the after-action report. 'Had this information been known, our plan would have been modified for this contingency.' In 2026, information must flow throughout a messy web of police departments, sheriff's offices, FIFA, security companies and other private entities. The U.S. Department of Homeland Security will also be heavily involved. The World Cup final and other spotlighted games have been designated SEAR 1 events, meaning they're of 'national and/or international importance' and 'require extensive federal interagency support.' The rest will be SEAR 2 events, the second-highest rating. Mexico and Canada, the World Cup's co-hosts, will each have their own nodes as well in what O'Connell calls 'a spider's web' of command centers. All involved will prepare extensively. 'It's a classic all-threat, all-hazard situation,' O'Connell says. They'll prepare for terrorism and gun violence, for cyber attacks and weather, for drunkenness and medical crises. Nowadays, with the Club World Cup near, they are in daily meetings, adapting and planning. When I interviewed Coomer, his team and FIFA's had just completed an hourslong tabletop exercise. When I interviewed Hayslip, he and Philadelphia were prepping for a 'full-scale exercise,' a test of emergency preparedness initiated by DHS with a view toward 2026. FIFA did not make its security chiefs available for interviews. But among organizers, generally, there is confidence that the Club World Cup will pass without major incident. In Miami, where it kicks off Saturday with Lionel Messi and Inter Miami against Al Ahly, security budgets have increased compared to last summer. And 'there will be a significant law enforcement and security footprint in and around the stadium,' the Miami-Dade Sheriff's Office spokeswoman wrote, 'to ensure public safety.'

DFW Airport gears up for 2026 World Cup travel rush
DFW Airport gears up for 2026 World Cup travel rush

Yahoo

time43 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

DFW Airport gears up for 2026 World Cup travel rush

The Brief DFW Airport is preparing for the 2026 World Cup with new efficiency software and reduced wait times. American Airlines, a FIFA sponsor, plans its largest-ever schedule to transport fans to host cities. Travel experts advise booking flights and hotels soon, as availability is decreasing and cancellation policies may be stricter. Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport is typically busy during the summer travel season, so you can imagine how congested it will be during the World Cup. The airport and its major airlines are already planning for the event. What they're saying DFW airport CEO, Chris McLaughlin, is doing all he can to prepare for what is to come next summer. "All eyes will be on this region for the World Cup, and we're doing all we can to make sure we're prepared for it." DFW Airport's new efficiencies include the rollout of new Enhanced Passenger Processing software at passport control in Terminal D. It allows U.S. citizens to get through the checkpoint quicker. Wait times at DFW airport have now decreased by 25%. Fort Worth-based American Airlines is the official sponsor airline for FIFA. American Airlines Senior Vice President, Jim Moses, says they're ready to transport soccer fans to DFW and other host cities come this time next year. "This summer alone we're operating our largest schedule in our history, through DFW Airport, and that only looks to increase," said Moses. Dig deeper Travel expert Gabe Saglie can't contain his own excitement for the 2026 World Cup. "I might see you out there. I was looking at hotels, and I'm like none of these hotels in the downtown Dallas area have availability," said Saglie. Like many soccer fans, Saglie is already planning out his itinerary and suggests other FIFA fans do the same, sooner rather than later. "We're getting to a period where some of those flights will become available. I think a lot of hotels are currently blocking some of the rooms out. So, if you try to get a hotel room for that mid-June to mid-July period, you'll see that a lot of these dates aren't available. And I think hotels are holding out at this point." When it comes to booking flights or hotels for the World Cup this far out, Saglie recommends setting price alerts with your preferred travel website so you can compare prices and deals. The same advice applies to non-soccer fans who may find themselves in North Texas next June. "Most of the availability is around these vacation rentals. Rates are between $700 to $1,000 a night," said Saglie. "I mean they could drop. I wouldn't necessarily nail anything down. The other thing to keep in mind is for folks who are booking hotels, who are looking for vacation rentals. To be very cognizant of some of the restrictions that exist around rooms for dates around these major events." Why you should care To that point, Saglie says cancellation polices may be more restrictive during that time because of demand for lodging during the World Cup. So Saglie recommends you look into travel insurance as an option, in case your travel plans get derailed. The Source Information in this article was provided by the CBP Modernization and Technology press conference on June 6. Additional information was provided from interviews conducted by FOX 4's Alex Boyer.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store