Los Angeles Times

Good matchup at Rose Bowl

Brazilians want to make up for a poor World Cup. Ecuador is on the rise.

- By Kevin Baxter

Brazil wants to make up for poor effort in the 2014 World Cup. Ecuador is at the top of South American qualifying for 2018.

On the surface, Saturday’s Copa America Centenario game between Brazil and Ecuador at the Rose Bowl looks like the soccer equivalent of two ships passing in the night.

Brazil, the five-time world champion, is struggling. It was pummeled in the semifinals of the 2014 World Cup, which it hosted, has won only two of six games in qualifying for the next World Cup and is without its top goal-scorer and two of its most experience­d defenders.

Ecuador, on the other hand, is ascending and appears well-positioned to make a long run through this tournament. It is tied with Uruguay at the top of South American World Cup qualifying, where it has beaten Argentina and Uruguay, and brings a roster loaded with skill into the Saturday matchup with a crowd of more than 50,000 expected to attend (7 p.m., FS1).

But looks can be deceiving. So while Brazil will be without forward Neymar and defenders Thiago Silva and David Luiz, it won’t be without talent.

“Every player who’s here is good enough to play here and go for the championsh­ip,” said Jonas Goncalves Oliveira, known simply as Jonas, who scored 34 goals for Portuguese club Benfica last season. “We don’t feel like we’re secondhand players.”

The Brazilian roster chosen by Coach Dunga, a former national team midfielder whose penalty kick decided the 1994 World Cup at the Rose Bowl, is a young one: Only 13 players are older than 24 and six are age-eligible for this summer’s Olympics, an under-23 tournament.

Dunga, also known as Carlos Caetano Bledorn Verri, said his emphasis this summer is on the Olympics, which will be held in Rio de Janeiro. Brazil has never won an Olympic title in soccer and doing so at home would help make up for the humiliatio­n of the last World Cup.

But that change in focus doesn’t mean Brazil is conceding the Copa America. Although Neymar is resting for the Olympics and Kaka and Douglas Costa were scratched because of injuries, 13 of those remaining on the roster play for major European clubs, including defender Filipe Luis (Atletico Madrid) and midfielder Casemiro (Real Madrid), who squared off in last week’s Champions League final.

“They have the quality to play on the first team,” Dunga said. “This is a unique opportunit­y to show [that].”

One of those auditionin­g is Gabriel, a 19-year-old forward who is already being hailed as the next Neymar — comparison­s the teenager is doing his best to avoid.

“Gabriel is Gabriel, Neymar is Neymar,” he said quietly in Portuguese following a training session at the Stub-Hub Center. “Those guys clearly are great players. But everyone here has the quality and the level to be a great team in Copa America.”

On the other side, Ecuador, which has not advanced out of a Copa America group stage since 1997, will be getting its inspiratio­n from something bigger than competing for a roster spot.

In April, the country was devastated by a magnitude 7.8 earthquake that killed more than 650 people and left 26,000 more homeless. And the national soccer team has become a welcome distractio­n for a wounded country.

“As Ecuadorans, they talk about the earthquake,” said Mauricio Alarcon, an Ecuadoran-born advertisin­g executive who has led fundraisin­g efforts in the U.S., referring to the national team players.

After the quake, several teams in Ecuador — where nine national team members play — held fundraisin­g matches or turned their stadiums into collection centers for food, clothing and medicine.

In the Copa America, Ecuador will be without leading scorer Felipe Caicedo, who was scratched with an injury. But it will have English Premier League veterans Jefferson Montero (Swansea City), Enner Valencia (West Ham United) and Antonio Valencia (Manchester United).

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