Figure caption,

Was this Neymar’s final goal for Brazil?

Brazil is producing more wide strikers than it knows what to do with, but not enough quality midfielders.

And then there is Neymar. This one is all on the coach. True, the context was not easy. A star-struck public was howling for his inclusion, blind to the weekly evidence that he was nowhere near the player he used to be.

Ancelotti reported that Neymar would only be called up if he deserved the place, that he would not take any injured players – and broke every red line for Neymar.

In a cameo against Scotland he looked like a retired player wandering on for a charity match. It was frankly astonishing that Ancelotti turned to him this time, for a live game. It meant a rejig.

Without the mobility to work back, Neymar had to be used at centre-forward, pushing both Vinicius Jr and Endrick out wide and deeper – further away from the goal, exactly where they should not have been. It opened up the side and, at last, Norway began to get decent service into Erling Haaland. It was all he needed.

Neymar ended the day with his goal from the penalty spot. But he probably should already have been sent-off for a wild kick, a last petulant gesture before he leaves the scene. In his prime he was a magnificent talent, a borderline genius, but this is the end of the line – as it is for many of an ageing squad.

After the match he indicated that this is indeed the end of the line for him, saying: “I tried, I tried… now it’s over! I started here, I finished here,” he told Brazilian channel ge tv, in reference to making his debut at the same stadium in New Jersey for a friendly against the United States in 2010.

Figure caption,

Brazil’s elimination leaves Neymar in tears

“I don’t think this is the end. I think this is the start of a new cycle,” Ancelotti insisted after the Norway loss.

“What I can say, what we can do and what we are going to do, is keep working hard for the national team, keep trying to improve and find new ideas.

“I think we have done a good job, but this is football and this is sport. You just have to deal with it, deal with the sadness and the taste of defeat.

“I am very much used to this and we will handle this. We will use it as fuel going forward.”

The build up to 2030, then, starts now.

Qualification will be absurdly easy – Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay are already there as hosts, staging one game each as a gesture of celebration for the World Cup centenary.

Ancelotti is on a big long-term contract. Is he the man to carry out a massive overhaul? Or is he best as the fixer? The man who with a tweak here and a raised eyebrow there has accumulated triumphs all over Europe.

But not with Brazil. Not this time. Will there be a next time?

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