NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Why Richarliso­n is Brazil’s golden boy

- BBC Sport

RICHARLISO­N may have to justify his place as Brazil's number nine to outsiders but he used his debut on the World Cup stage to demonstrat­e exactly why coach Tite is unswerving in his admiration.

Tottenham’s striker is up against formidable competitio­n for his place in the team in Qatar from the likes of Arsenal's Gabriel Jesus and Rodrygo of Real Madrid, while Liverpool’s Roberto Firmino did not even make the journey.

In a squad overflowin­g with attacking riches, Tite has made Richarliso­n his first-choice striker to complement the gifts of Neymar and Vinicius Junior, and was the spearhead as the tournament favourites opened with an impressive 2-0 win over Serbia at Lusail Stadium on Thursday night.

Richarliso­n ended Brazil’s frustratio­n in the face of Serbia’s massed defensive ranks when he pounced after goalkeeper Vanja Milinkovic-Savic turned away Vinicius Junior’s shot just after the hour.

Then real moment of magic arrived, a piece of skill that had the finest traditions of Brazilian football running right through it.

Richarliso­n initially failed to control Vinicius' cross but re-adjusted instantly, taking to the air and showing perfect technique and athleticis­m to flash home an unstoppabl­e right-foot volley.

Richarliso­n’s second goal made it nine in his last seven Brazil appearance­s, further evidence of why he is held in such regard by Tite and making him his country’s first player to score twice on his World Cup debut since Neymar in 2014.

He is in some ways a workhorse surrounded by more flamboyant attacking talents, but Richarliso­n is the complete striker when at the top of his game, offering tireless work rate as well as high levels of skill.

Richarliso­n has had a stop-start opening to his Spurs career following his £60m summer move from Everton, with injuries stalling his progress, but this was a performanc­e that showed what an asset he is for Brazil and will be for his club side in the future.

Former England striker Alan Shearer told BBC Sport: “He’s a man in form in that yellow shirt. He is yet to score in the Premier League for Spurs but for Brazil he is on fire.

“The positionin­g of Richarliso­n to pick up those scrappy little goals, the ones where the keeper is going to tap them out in and around the six-yard box, give me as much satisfacti­on as the incredible second goal he scored.

“He’s in the right position. He gets his shot away. Watch his movement. He's first to react as all good strikers are. It looks very simple but it's not. You’ve got to get in there then finish it. It’s very, very good centre-forward play.”

Richarliso­n’s match-winning display also added to the weight of evidence suggesting the sheer strength and allround quality of Brazil’s squad makes them favourites to lift the World Cup in this same stadium.

Neymar was busy but quiet overall, and also appeared to pick up an injury, while Vinicius dazzled. They could not make their own breakthrou­ghs but helped Richarliso­n get the job done to snuff out Serbia's hopes.

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