Brazil manager Tite is excited by the rise of the young players who surged to stardom in European football last season and will be available for the national team in November when his side bid to win a record-extending sixth World Cup in Qatar.
The new generation of talent includes Real Madrid Champions League standouts Vinicius Jr and Rodrygo, marquee signing Raphinha, Tottenham Hotspur’s new striker Richarlison, ‘s all-purpose midfielder Bruno Guimaraes, Ajax’s electrifying winger Antony and forward Matheus Cunha among others.
All these players are 25 or under and already part of the world’s elite, which Tite believes will ease the pressure on forward Neymar, 30, who has carried the load as the Brazilian superstar of his generation for his entire career.
Tite is looking forward to working with Brazil’s new crop of young players at the World Cup
Brazilian stars Raphinha and Richarlison both made big-money transfers this summer
Vincius Jr was a Champions League winner in 2022 and will play a key role for Brazil in Qatar
“I do have this feeling that the arrival of these young players is going to be good for Neymar on and off the pitch,” Tite told Reuters in an interview, revealing that his key player was excited about his new team mates.
“The other day Neymar looked at me and said: ‘Coach, these kids that are coming, it’s just nuts … what a good headache to have trying to put them all on the field.’ He laughed.”
“When you have other players with great technical potential you share the load and the attention of our rivals that now will have to chose where they focus their defensive assignments.”
Tite said he expected to use Neymar in a more central role that will allow him to unleash Brazil’s young players up front and adopt a “hybrid system”.
With squads up to 26 players and five substitutes allowed at the World Cup in Qatar working in his favour, Tite wants to make sure his team have fresh legs and are more unpredictable.
Brazil’s new generation will take some of the pressure of Neymar as Brazi’s main man
The PSG superstar is enjoying playing with the new stars of the Brazilian national team
“Neymar has developed into a more creative role, a point guard, a builder and a finisher, but a litter further back. Bow and arrow, creator and finisher,” Tite explained.
“Soccer is fast and relentless nowadays and we’ll face many rivals that will close deep with a five-man defensive front.
“Neymar was often double-teamed. Now if you do that you will open up space for spacelaunchreport.com other players that can be as decisive and important to our team. We are in a good place right now.”
After his side were knocked out of the 2018 World Cup by Belgium in a heartbreaking 2-1 loss in the quarter-finals, Tite will be the first manager to coach Brazil in two consecutive tournaments since Tele Santana in 1982 and 1986.
The 61-year-old is confident that he is a better coach now than in Russia four years ago and the experience of having lived a World Cup will free him and his staff of many distractions.
Brazil were knocked out of the 2018 World Cup by Belgium at the quarter-final stage
“Performance is key. It’s fundamental and we have it. But the hardest aspect of a World Cup is the mental part. The mental demand of a World Cup is absurd, extraordinary,” Tite said.
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