The Brazil national football team is one that had been feared at all times over the years, when Brazil was Brazil, but not anymore with the one presented at the Brazil 2014 FIFA World Cup.
The Brazilian football national team is known to be playing Samba football which the entire football world admires for a decade or so, a type of football which has it pattern of free flowing football in all departments of the field.
Where a steady flow of the ball is being enjoyed by both players and spectators. Such type of football encourage high scoring which the Brazilians used in intimidating the rest of the footballing nations, which the Brazilians have lost to today’s football as times evaluate, which account for the scandalous lose of 7-1 to the Germany national football team.
Brazil has never been made so ordinary in the history of football, if not that it has lost it originality to the ordinary football being played around in the world today.
Brazil was regarded the country of football as the round leather game is seen as an art being practice in that country. Infact, the game is being regarded as a religion just as it is in Nigeria today.
Football today is the most followed sports and had the influence to bring peace and unity amongst warring nations, the reason some nations today have started establishing football colleges to achieve such a unity and peace generating status.
Why Brazil lost it former status in the 2014 FIFA world cup hosted by them, building a team around two or three players is very risky in a competition like the world cup or major competition, which the Brazilian team did in the 2014 FIFA world cup on their soil. A team is a eleven crop of players specialized in their departments, each player is maintaining, anything more than that is tantamount to embarrassment which the Brazilians faced when they met high flying Germany which has a compact team, where every department is occupied by professional. They were faced with defeat twice scandalously, because of building the team on two or three players, which the Germany and Netherland capitalized on. ###