The Province

Bet on Brazil to bounce back and win

Settled, capable squad relying less on Neymar’s brilliance, and that’s a good thing

- BOB LENARDUZZI Bob Lenarduzzi is president of Vancouver Whitecaps FC. Tickets: visit whitecapsf­c.com/tickets

It’s all soccer all weekend, with four games on both days, as Russia 2018 kicks into high gear.

I’m sure some diehard fans will be up at 3 a.m. on Saturday to watch France play Australia, but for those who prefer to sleep in, Sunday’s late morning match serves up a treat, as Brazil opens its World Cup campaign against Switzerlan­d.

Brazil has always been one of my favourite teams and is my pick to win this World Cup. Four years ago, Brazil was humiliated 7-1 by Germany, and the team has been on a mission to redeem itself ever since.

It took a while for the mission to get going, as former coach Dunga took over and did not enjoy success. Dunga was sacked two years ago, and three-time Corinthian­s coach Tite was put in charge.

Tite immediatel­y turned the team around, as Brazil cruised through qualifying and appears to be a very settled and capable squad.

One of Tite’s objectives was to make Brazil less reliant on superstar Neymar. He seems to have achieved that goal, with wingers Philippe Coutinho and Willian combining well with young Manchester City forward Gabriel Jesus. Now that Neymar has recovered from injury, he’s expected to play on the left, with Coutinho free to drop back into midfield.

As for midfield, Tite has three very good defensive players at his disposal. Real Madrid’s Casemiro has the key holding role, while Barcelona’s Paulinho and Manchester City’s Fernandinh­o are more box-to-box style. When needed, Tite can field all three in midfield, which makes Brazil a tough team to play against.

On defence, the squad has looked good, led by veteran Thiago Silva. However, the recent loss of right back Dani Alves to knee surgery leaves a big hole that’s not easily filled.

Manchester City’s young Danilo seems preferred to Corinthian­s veteran Fagner on the right, but that’s still a big drop in quality compared with Alves. It also leaves Brazil looking a bit lopsided on attack.

Left back Marcelo, along with Coutinho and Neymar, seem much more dangerous than their counterpar­ts on the right.

Brazil is the clear favourite in Group E. Serbia and Switzerlan­d are solid European teams that did well in qualifying, while Costa Rica was very impressive at the last World Cup, winning that tourney’s Group of Death.

Switzerlan­d is actually ranked sixth in the world, according to FIFA, but I think that says more about FIFA’s questionab­le ranking system. The Swiss have some good players, though, including ball wizard Xherdan Shaqiri, ball winner Granit Xhaka and young Breel Embolo up front, who is a player to watch for.

 ?? — GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? Brazil’s defensive leader Thiago Silva, left, talks strategy with offensive dynamo Neymar on Thursday during a training session in Sochi, Russia.
— GETTY IMAGES FILES Brazil’s defensive leader Thiago Silva, left, talks strategy with offensive dynamo Neymar on Thursday during a training session in Sochi, Russia.
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