Tag: Brazil

  • World Cup 2022: Brazil much stronger than in 2018 – Casemiro

    Brazil, according to Casemiro, are in a much better position at the World Cup in Qatar than they were in Russia in 2018.

    Casemiro, a midfielder for Manchester United, scored the game-winning goal against Switzerland on Monday in the 83rd minute to guarantee Brazil’s advancement from Group G.

    Brazil had been unsuccessful in their attempts to break the tie up to that moment at Stadium 974 due to the injury to Neymar, and they appeared to be headed for a third World Cup stalemate against the Swiss, who they had never defeated in the tournament.

    Brazil is the favorite to win in Qatar after losing to Belgium in the quarterfinals of the 2018 World Cup. Casemiro is confident that the team is stronger this time around.

    “Four years have gone by, there are new players, this year we have a wider range of options, we have more to choose from, without even changing the team we can change the way we play,” Casemiro said in a post-match press conference.

    “If we substitute players we have even more options. There’s no doubt the options are much greater than those in 2018. Not only because time has gone on and we are mature.

    “We have defenders who are more experienced, we’ve had another match without conceding. It’s not Alisson, it’s not the defence, it starts up front with Richarlison.

    “The range of options is much greater than at the last World Cup.”

    Casemiro’s sentiment was echoed by coach Tite, who claimed the real victor of Brazil’s success on Monday was the “process” of developing a younger squad.

    “There’s a wide range of options because there’s a four-year period of developing this,” Tite said.

    “What won today was this four years, and them being able to develop in a natural way, despite being young.

    “If that weren’t the case, it would be very difficult. Who won today? This process, this development. That was the cherry on the cake.”

    Brazil only needs a point from their final Group G match against Cameroon to clinch first place. They will then face the Group H runners-up, who are Portugal, Ghana, Uruguay, and South Korea, in the round of 16.

    Tite was encouraged that Brazil won despite missing their talisman Neymar, who suffered an ankle injury in last week’s victory against Serbia. It is unknown whether Neymar will be able to play against Cameroon.

    Asked if Brazil missed Neymar’s influence, Tite said: “Obviously, Neymar has different skills, he is a player who can make a magical moment.

    “Other players are still getting to that level, and I hope they get there. So yes, we do miss Neymar, he has a great creative power, so we miss him, but we see that there are players that can take the opportunity. Let’s enjoy this win.”

  • Use haters as motivation to come back stronger – Ronaldo to Neymar

    Brazilian legend Ronaldo has advised Neymar to put his recovery from his World Cup ankle injury ahead of the “envy and animosity” of those who have celebrated it.

    Even among Selecao supporters, reactions to Neymar’s exclusion from Brazil’s match against Switzerland and likely the following match against Cameroon have been varied.

    Some have turned against Neymar because of his support for Jair Bolsonaro, the 30-year-old PSG striker who lost the presidential race in Brazil to Lula last month.

    Despite the fact that Neymar seems to be Brazil’s most likely motivator in Qatar 2022, when the team is vying for a sixth World Cup victory, this is the case.

    With his eight goals at the 2002 finals, including two in the final against Germany, Ronaldo was the highlight of the team that won the sixth of five trophy victories.

    He described Neymar as “awesome” in an open letter on Instagram, posted on Sunday.

    Ronaldo added: “I am sure that most Brazilians, like me, admire and love you. Your talent, by the way, has taken you so far, so high, that there is love and admiration for you in every corner of the world.

    “And it is also for this reason, for having reached where you have, for the success you have achieved, that you have to deal with so much envy and malice.

    “On a level of celebrating the injury of a star like you, with a story like yours. How far have we come? What world is this? What message are we passing on to our young people? There will always be people rooting against you, but it is sad to see society on a path of trivialising intolerance, of normalising hate speech.

    “It is against this verbal violence with destructive power that I write to you today: come back stronger! Smarter! Hungry for goals! The good you do on and off the field is much greater than envy towards you.

    “Don’t forget for a second the journey that made you a world football idol. Brazil loves you! The real fans – the ones who are in favour – need your goals, dribbles, boldness and joy! Celebrate the love that comes from most of your country. You will bounce back! And may all the hate turn into fuel.”

    Neymar hobbled off in the 80th minute of Brazil’s 2-0 win against Serbia on Thursday, with medical staff announcing he sustained a lateral ligament injury to his right ankle.

    The former Barcelona forward was fouled nine times in the Serbia game, the most suffered by any player in a single game so far at the World Cup.

  • School shootings: At least 3 people killed and 11 others injured in Brazil

    Local authorities in the Brazilian state of Espirito Santo said that a shooter opened fire at two schools on Friday, leaving at least three people dead and 11 others hurt.

    The attacks happened in the little town of Aracruz, which is located 50 miles north of Vitoria, the state seat.

    Police have detained the alleged shooter, who was shown on security tape with a semi-automatic pistol, dressing in uniform, and hiding his face. Authorities have not yet named the culprit, but the 16-year-old has been recognized by local media, including CNN affiliate CNN Brasil.

    The governor said the attacks took place at the Primo Bitti school and the Praia de Coqueiral Educational Center.

    Police officers on the scene at the Primo Bitti school on Friday.
    Police officers on the scene at the Primo Bitti school on Friday. Kadija Fernandes/AFP/Getty Images

    Speaking to the media, Public Safety minister Marcio Celante said police believe the suspect acted alone based on security video but acknowledged that further investigation was needed to ascertain more details on the incidents.

    Celante also revealed some of what the security video showed.

    “The first criminal action was to access the school by breaking the padlock. He had access to the teachers’ room,” Celante said, adding that “afterward, he moved to another school, where he made more victims.”

    Brazil’s president-elect, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, called the incident an “absurd tragedy.”

    “It’s with sadness that I was informed about the attacks at the Aracruz schools in Espirito Santo. My solidarity goes to the family of the victims in this absurd tragedy,” Lula tweeted.

    Local residents gather outside the police station where the alleged perpetrator of two school shootings is being held in Aracruz.
    Local residents gather outside the police station where the alleged perpetrator of two school shootings is being held in Aracruz. Kadija Fernandes/AFP/Getty Images

    Brazilian minister Victor Godoy also joined his government peers in expressing his sympathies.

    “My condolences to the parents, relatives, and employees of the Primo Bitti State Elementary and Middle School and the Praia de Coqueiral Educational Center, in Aracruz. I submit for the record my repudiation of this manifestation of violence,” Godoy wrote on Twitter.

     

  • Brazil 2-0 Serbia: Richarlison brace hands Samba Boys victory

    Richarlison scored twice as Brazil opened their World Cup campaign with a routine 2-0 win over Serbia.

    The Tottenham forward broke the deadlock with a close-range finish just after the hour mark at the Lusail Iconic Stadium.

    Richarlison then sealed the points with a stunning acrobatic effort 17 minutes from time as Tite’s side made a winning start in Group G.

    The Selecao remain unbeaten in their opening match at the finals since 1934, when they lost 3-1 to Spain in the first round.

    Unbeaten in their past 15 World Cup group games, Brazil controlled the first half but without creating many goalscoring opportunities.

    Casemiro tested Vanja Milinkovic-Savic with an ambitious effort from distance, while the Serbia goalkeeper was quickly off his line to prevent Vinicius Junior latching onto Thiago Silva’s precise throughball.

    The Selecao carved their opponents’ defence open with a neat one-two between Raphinha and Lucas Paqueta in the 35th minute but the Barcelona forward could only shoot straight at Milinkovic-Savic.

    Brazil carried a greater threat after the break. Milinkovic-Savic rescued Serbia by denying Raphinha, who had dispossessed Nemanja Gudelj outside his own penalty area, while Neymar fired wide from close range.

    Alex Sandro rattled the post from 30 yards before the Samba Boys finally broke through in the 62nd minute; Richarlison prodding home the rebound after Milinkovic-Savic parried Vinicius’ initial effort.

    Richarlison then gave Brazil breathing space in emphatic fashion 11 minutes later; controlling Vinicius’ low, hard cross with his left foot, before swivelling and sending a magnificent acrobatic volley flying into the bottom corner with his right.

    Tite’s side almost increased their advantage as Casemiro hit the crossbar and Milinkovic-Savic denied Rodrygo, but the two-goal margin was enough to lift them to the Group G summit.

    What does it mean? Brazil eventually make their dominance tell

    Brazil registered 22 shots to a mere four from their opponents, but just the two goals were enough to earn maximum points for Tite, who became the first coach to lead the South American giants in successive World Cups since Tele Santana (1982 and 1986).

    Meanwhile, Serbia have now lost eight of their 10 matches at the finals since 2006, with only Australia (nine) recording more during that span.

    Richarlison’s rich vein of form continues

    Chosen ahead of Gabriel Jesus to lead Brazil’s line, Richarlison grasped the opportunity with both hands as he sealed the victory with two contrasting strikes.

    The first Selecao player to score twice on his World Cup debut since Neymar eight years ago, the Tottenham forward has now found the net nine times in his last seven international appearances.

    Neymar a marked man once again

    Although he was withdrawn with 10 minutes remaining, Neymar is already the most-fouled player at this year’s World Cup having drawn nine during this contest — four more than any other player.

    The Paris Saint-Germain forward will have been disappointed not to score. But he was involved in a game-high 20 duels, while only Vinicius (four) registered more shots on goal (three).

    What’s next?

    Both sides are back in Group G action on Monday. Brazil look to build on their winning start against Switzerland, while Serbia seek a response against Cameroon.

    Source: Livescore

  • From tears of distress to delirium for Richarlison

    Tears streamed down the face of Richarlison. He was inconsolable. He had shed blood, sweat and tears to force his way into the Brazil squad.

    Then the XI. Yet, just three weeks before Tite named his squad for the FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022™, he was on crutches.

    Blubbering, he struggled to speak. Eventually, the words trickled out. “I’m devastated,” he said. “I was so close to the realisation of my dream. The last time I had this injury I was out for two months.” Furthermore, Tite had already said, reiterated and – irritated – eventually stressed that he would not gamble on players whose fitness was in doubt. It turns out that declaration had a disclaimer.

    “Richarlison, Tottenham,” Tite said as he read out his 26-man list for the flight every Brazilian craved to Doha. Richarlison did not even hear the second word. Tite probably heard the London-based attacker’s wild celebrations all the way from Granja Comary, Rio de Janerio. “I was really, really nervous,” Richarlison admitted, explaining his excitement.

    “The World Cup is the dream of dreams. I was so scared.” Pombo (Pigeon, his nickname) is an absolute teacher’s pet. The coach handed the attacker his debut in 2018 and has made him an ever-present in the frighteningly competitive Seleção squad. So despite Richarlison having only played 100 minutes since his injury, he was named up front for the curtain-rasier. Richarlison, quintessential Richarlison, careered over the Lusail Stadium turf in the first half, harrying defenders and forcing turnovers of possession.

    If the first 45 showcased his desire and indefatigability, the second spotlighted his opportunism and excellence. It was 0-0, just after the hour, when Richarlison reacted to a rebound to fire Brazil ahead from close range. Eleven minutes later he executed a spectacular bicycle-kick to seal the deal. The moment Richarlison had dreamed about so much for so long – the one he thought had evaporated – was even better than he could have concocted.

    “I’m so happy for him,” Antony told FIFA+. “He’s a great guy. He deserves it. That’s Richarlison. You give him a chance, he scores. You should see him in training. He shoots from anywhere and everywhere, all sorts of angles. He’s an incredible player.” “His performance was outstanding,” added Fred. I want to congratulate him. It’s not easy on your World Cup debut, but he scored two goals. The most important thing is that we got the victory. It was a great performance.”

     

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    Source: FIFA

  • Brazil court rejects Bolsonaro party complaint over vote

    Brazil‘s electoral court has rejected a challenge against the presidential election result made by the far-right party of President Jair Bolsonaro.

    He narrowly lost to the leftist former leader, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, and his Liberal Party (PL) claimed without evidence that voting machines were compromised.

    The court said the complaint was made “in bad faith” and fined the party 22.9m reais (£3.5m; $4.3m).

    Lula takes office on 1 January.

    Superior Electoral Court (TSE) President Alexandre de Moraes said the PL complaint was “offensive to democratic norms” and had sought to “encourage criminal and anti-democratic movements”.

    Lula’s victory – with 50.9% to Mr Bolsonaro’s 49.1% – has been ratified by the TSE.

    Mr Bolsonaro has previously claimed that Brazil’s electronic voting system is not fraud-proof.

    He has still not conceded defeat, but has given the go-ahead for a presidential transition. He stepped away from the public gaze after losing the election on 30 October.

    Immediately after Lula’s win was declared, many lorry drivers supporting Mr Bolsonaro erected roadblocks and there were scuffles with police. But Mr Bolsonaro later told them that blocking roads was not a part of “legitimate” protests.

    Some of his followers have continued demonstrating outside military barracks, urging a military intervention to prevent Lula taking office.

    Lula, who previously served as president from 2003 to 2010, is now 77 and will become the oldest person to assume the post.

    His victory was a stunning comeback for a politician who could not run in the last presidential election in 2018 because he was in jail and barred from public office. But his conviction for corruption was later annulled.

    Mr Bolsonaro, a former army captain, drew much support from evangelical Christians and other conservatives anxious to protect family values. But his tenure also saw accelerated deforestation of the Amazon and growing inequality.

    Source: BBC.com 

  • Rodrygo confident he can deliver for Brazil to end 20 years of ‘suffering’

    Rodrygo is confident he can deliver for Brazil at the World Cup as he looks to bring an end to 20 years of “suffering”.

    The South American giants open their campaign on Thursday against Serbia and are among the favourites in Qatar as they seek to end two decades of dominance from European nations.

    Having triumphed in 2002, Brazil have since been knocked out at the quarter-finals in three of the last four tournaments, while being hammered 7-1 by Germany at the semi-final stage on home soil in 2014.

    At 21, Rodrygo is too young to remember the last triumph by the five-time winners but has experienced his fair share of pain as a supporter and set his sights on involvement in Qatar following Brazil’s defeat to Belgium four years ago.

    “Man, we’ve been suffering for 20 years. I was crying when we lost in 2006,” he wrote for the Player’s Tribune.

    “In 2010, I was in Osasco seeing people paint the streets green and yellow. Nobody was working. School? Forget it. It’s not that I skipped school. There was no school. Even the teachers had fled.

    “In 2014, I watched it with my dad in Minas Gerais. I prefer not to talk about it. I’m not even going to say the result.

    “The loss to Belgium in 2018, I don’t ever want to have that feeling again. After the game I sent a message to my dad.  ‘Now we have to train, because in the next one I’ll be there.’

    “I know in Brazil nobody is guaranteed a place in the squad, right? Nobody. I hadn’t even made my senior debut.  But could you blame me? I was the kid with a dream and a fake Selecao shirt.

    “Words have power. Man, I’m living proof. This World Cup, I’m here and I see myself deciding games for Brazil.

    “I just hope that this dream I’m living goes on forever. I don’t ever want to get used to it. I don’t ever want to wake up.”

    After taking on Serbia, Brazil also face Switzerland and Cameroon in Group G.

    Source: Livescore

     

  • Brazil need to capitalise on ‘best mode’ of in-form Neymar says captain Silva

    Brazil must take advantage of having Neymar in his “best mode” at the World Cup, according to captain Thiago Silva.

    Neymar heads to Qatar in supreme form. He has directly contributed to 26 goals for Paris Saint-Germain, scoring 15 and setting up a further 11 this season.

    His tally of goal involvements is the joint-most in the top-five European leagues, along with Erling Haaland (23 goals, three assists) and club-mate Lionel Messi (12 goals, 14 assists).

    With 75 international goals to his name, Neymar needs just three more to overtake Pele and become Brazil’s all-time leading scorer.

    Neymar’s injury in the quarter-finals of Brazil’s home world cup in 2014 is often cited as a major factor in the 7-1 thrashing to Germany that followed in the last four, while he struggled to carry the team in Russia four years later, with the Selecao losing to Belgium in the quarter-finals.

    But with Vinicius Junior, Richarlison, Gabriel Jesus, Rodrygo and Raphinha supporting Neymar in attack, Silva believes Brazil have to make their attacking quality count.

    “Neymar has a good level for this competition,” Silva said in a press conference ahead of Brazil’s clash with Serbia on Thursday.

    “Now, without injury or worry, we see a better Neymar. Best of all, he is humble.

    “Our group has welcomed all of our colleagues and in my opinion they will make Neymar even more at ease.

    “We will share our responsibilities as players and that will help us move forward. I think we need to take advantage of this best Neymar mode.”

    It has been 20 years since Brazil won their fifth World Cup, and Silva – who was captain in 2014 but not in Russia – believes that only serves as extra inspiration.

    “The 2002 win is a great inspiration for all of us,” he explained. “We have images of all the World Cups we have won and that’s a source of inspiration and motivation so we can continue making history.

    “We know it’s up to us. I know those who could lift the World Cup in the past have had beautiful stories. It makes me even more motivated to honour our jersey.”

    Silva believes the blend of youth and experience in Tite’s squad is ideal, as the 38-year-old claimed his experience of captaining Brazil in their disappointing campaign on home soil has only benefitted his own development.

    He said: “Nowadays I am better prepared. Sometimes we need to learn the hard way.

    “Our coaches can tell us but in the end we are the ones who need to learn from our experiences. I am calm, I am at ease, having the trust of all my colleagues.

    “I’m now enjoying the best version of Thiago Silva. I think I’m living the best moments of my career.”

    Source: Livescore

  • National Cathedral: I’m not the first person to use funds from Contingency Vote – Ofori-Atta

    Finance Minister Ken Ofori-Atta has defended the process he used to withdraw money from the consolidated fund to sponsor the national cathedral project by saying former President John Mahama’s government used the same process to approve funds for Ghana’s participation in the 2014 World Cup in Brazil.

    Testifying before the ad hoc parliamentary committee that investigated some seven allegations against him in connection with a censure motion filed by the minority caucus in an attempt to remove him from office, Mr Ofori-Atta said: “Hon. Co-chairs, in preparing the annual budgets, the practice is that provision is made for indicative expenditures that have not been fully costed (sic) at the time of the budget presentation”.

    “Provisions are made in the Contingency Vote to cater for such expenditures”, he explained, citing, for example, “in 2014, there was no specific allocation in the 2014 budget for Ghana’s participation in the FIFA World Cup in Brazil. The Cabinet of President John Mahama, in March 2014, at the time, approved some $9.622 million for that tournament, including that amount which was flown to Brazil in a private jet for the players”.

    “A more current example is Ghana’s participation in Qatar. The Black Stars qualified for the 2022 FIFA World Cup, way after the 2022 budget, presented on 16 November 2021, was approved by parliament. No specific amount was budgeted for it but through the Contingency Vote, we have been able to provide funds legitimately for the team to participate in the competition”, he noted.

    According to him, “expenditures in respect of the National Cathedral were made from the Contingency Vote under the ‘Other Government Obligations’ vote as has been the practice before my tenure (I have copies of several payments from the Contingency Vote dating back to 2015 to share)”.

    Mr Ofori-Atta said “as finance minister, I am fully aware of the approval procedures for the use of the Contingency Fund and have not breached its requirement”, adding: “The national cathedral is 100% owned by the state and is not the president’s cathedral as described by the proponents”.

    “Indeed, the Attorney General issued an opinion on 6 January 2022, that the national cathedral is a state-owned company limited by guarantee, under the Ghana Museums and Monuments Board”, he added.

  • Raw sugar imports into Ghana skyrocket to US$151 million

    Current data from the United Nations COMTRADE database have indicated that Ghana imported US$151million worth of raw sugar in 2020 alone – with the country being ranked 45th largest importer of the commodity globally.

    The commodity is also ranked among the first ten most-imported products into the country, as Ghana’s essential food imports bill continuously rise year by year – currently valued at US$2billion according to the finance ministry.

    The data also added that the imports of sugar and sugar confectionery was US$158.3million in 2019, with Mexico, Brazil, USA, Guatemala, France and India being the lead importers.

    Data from the Ghana Export Promotion Authority (GEPA) show that the country consumes about 370,000 tonnes of sugar annually, with domestic production currently at an all-time low.

    Industrial and domestic supply prospects

    Huge supply opportunities exist for large industrial sugar importers, such as FNJ Investments, Fan Milk, Multi-Pac, Kasapreko, Stallion Industries, Nutrifoods and Blow Chem, among others

    The Ministry of Trade and Industry has further projected that domestic consumption of sugar in Ghana could rise to 872,000 metric tonnes in 2030.

    Similarly, the West Africa sub-region – which is also forecast to experience rapid growth in sugar consumption – also presents a potential sugar export market for Ghana. Amid these market potentials and existing congenial climatic and lithospheric conditions, production of sugar remains at zero.

    The Sugar Industry in Ghana

    Ghana’s sugar industry is virtually fully dependent on imports. Local production remains negligible at a mere 150 tonnes in 2013 according to the UN data, and there’s a mere 6,000 hectares of sugar plantation in existence.

    With two sugar mills in Asutsuare and Komenda, these facilities have been lying idle since 1983 largely due to inefficient management. However, the Komenda Sugar Factory was revived in 2015 and 2016 – but was shut down shortly after due to lack of raw materials.

    Attempts to revive Komenda sugar factory

    In 2016, government secured a US$35million loan from the Export-Import (EXIM) Bank of India and invested it in the factory. An additional US$24million was set aside to support out-grower farmers.

    The factory, which was inaugurated on May 31, 2016 to produce sugar, became stillborn due to a multiplicity of factors that were touted as technical and operational challenges.

    On June 3, 2020, however, Trade and Industry Minister Alan Kyerematen announced in parliament that Cabinet had officially approved Park Agrotech Limited as a new strategic investor to operate the factory.

    That notwithstanding, the current status of the investment by Park Agrotech is unknown.

    Nevertheless, a number of plans, according to the trade ministry, are also underway to develop sugar-cane plantations for a second revival of the Komenda sugar factory.

    Also, plans by multinational trading house Cargill to build a sugar refinery in Tema are a possibility.

    GEPA’s NEDS projections

    Meanwhile, GEPA through the National Export Development Strategy (NEDS) has designed a blueprint for harnessing the full potential of sugar production to curb the rising imports.

    In the NEDS, the Authority has projected revenues from the export of sugar by 2029 to be US$1.2billion.

     

     

  • Richarlison: Brazil ‘will do everything’ to win sixth World Cup in Qatar

    Richarlison says Brazil’s players “will do everything” they can to win a record-extending sixth World Cup in Qatar.

    Brazil are steeped in World Cup history, with more titles than any other country, though their fifth and most recent triumph came in 2002.

    Tite’s men head into the tournament in Qatar as one of the favourites having lost just one match since 2019, their Copa America final defeat to Argentina last year.

    Richarlison will be playing in his first World Cup, having scored 17 goals in his 38 appearances for the Selecao since his debut in 2018.

    The 25-year-old says he and his team-mates will do all they can to bring home the trophy, telling Eurosport: “If we will win? I don’t know, but we will do everything to win the World Cup.

    “I prefer that we work in silence, doing our job and doing our best every day. Certainly, Professor Tite [head coach] will prepare us well for a great World Cup.”

    The Tottenham forward believes Brazil deserve to be among the most fancied teams and is confident they will make an impression in Qatar, saying: “I think there are a lot of good teams, but we are Brazil.

    “We have a lot of history, we’ve never been out of the World Cup and we’re going to the World Cup to honour the shirt. We’re definitely going to get something good for us.”

    Despite his belief in Brazil’s prospects, Richarlison acknowledged other sides he feels have a chance, adding: “There are a lot of good teams.

    “The defending champions, France. Belgium, for example, and Argentina, which has a good squad and won the Copa America.”

    Brazil open their World Cup campaign against Serbia on Thursday, before facing Switzerland and Cameroon in Group G.

    Source: Livescore

     

  • Vinicius feared ‘dirty’ challenges would end his World Cup dream

    Vinicius Junior feared he would miss Brazil’s World Cup campaign through injury after being targeted by “dirty” challenges in the build-up to the tournament.

    The Real Madrid winger has contributed to nine goals in LaLiga this season (six goals, three assists) – a tally only bettered by Robert Lewandowski (17) and Borja Iglesias (10).

    Vinicius has also won 16 senior caps for Brazil after making his international debut in 2019, emerging as a key part of Tite’s team ahead of the tournament in Qatar.

    With the mid-season scheduling of the World Cup being criticised after several big-name players including Sadio Mane and Paul Pogba were ruled out through injury, Vinicius says both he and team-mate Rodrygo were targeted with unsavoury challenges by opponents.

    “What happens on the field stays on the field, but it went too far,” Vinicius told Reuters.

    “You can come strong, but they were being dirty with their challenges. Rodrygo and I suffered a lot in those last games and feared the worst, to get injured and miss the World Cup.

    “When you start to become an important player, rivals come after you harder. You have to learn to deal with that.

    “I learned a lot from Neymar when he played for Barcelona, he suffered a lot too. Cristiano [Ronaldo], when he played for Real, suffered a lot too.

    “But it was Karim [Benzema] who told me to stay calm and have peace of mind, because if the rivals are chasing you it is because you are relevant, because they are afraid of you.

    “So that’s why when I take the ball and burst forward, I do it with a vengeance. Yes, I can get hurt. But I’m prepared for the challenge.”

    Brazil get their quest for a sixth World Cup under way when they face Serbia on Thursday, looking to defend a fine group-stage record at recent editions of the tournament.

    The Selecao are unbeaten in their last 15 World Cup group games, winning 12 (D3), with their last such defeat coming against Norway in 1998.

    Source: Livescore

     

  • Deep rift over climate cash clouds end of COP27

    UN climate talks head to a conclusion on Friday with nations deeply divided over cash to help poor countries cope with the impacts of climate change.

    The idea of phasing down the use of all fossil fuels to limit the rise in temperatures is also the subject of a deep rift as the COP27 talks wind up.

    The Egyptian hosts are trying to broker an agreement among almost 200 countries after two weeks of negotiations.

    But such is the scale of division the talks may overrun into the weekend.

    There’s a real sense of urgency in the Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh as negotiating teams try to conclude agreement on a range of complex questions.

    The Egyptian presidency has presented a draft document that sums up the positions of the different countries.

    Here’s a breakdown of the major areas of disagreement.

    1 – “Loss and damage”

     

    The big sticking point here is the need for a new fund to help countries deal with the immediate impacts of climate change.

    The issue is known as “loss and damage” in the framework of UN talks. Rich countries have resisted this discussion for 30 years, fearing that since they played a major role in causing climate change, they will have to pay for it for centuries to come.

    But the impacts of flooding in Pakistan, Nigeria and elsewhere in recent years have tipped the balance – here in Egypt the issue of the losses and damages due to rising temperatures has finally made it onto the negotiating agenda.

    One of those taking part in the discussions is Tuvalu’s minister for finance Seve Paeniu.

    “People are now going without water, they are being rationed to two or three buckets of water a day,” he told BBC News.

    Drought is hitting the island hard, while at the same time the rising seas are threatening their future as a nation.

    Developing countries like Tuvalu want a new financing facility to be established here in Egypt. The US is not in favour. It prefers a “mosaic” of financial arrangements, not a new dedicated fund.

    The EU has said it would accept a new fund on loss and damage, with some conditions. EU Vice-President Frans Timmermans wanted to expand the number of countries that would pay into this fund to include China. He also wants to tie the establishment of the fund to tougher language on the phasing down of all fossil fuels and greater efforts to keep 1.5C alive.

    Developing countries have also extended an olive branch.

    LulaImage source, Getty Images

    Image caption, Brazil’s president elect was the superstar of the COP

    “For those countries that are that are worried or anxious about liabilities and judicial proceedings, I think we can work around all those anxieties,” said Sherry Rehman, Pakistan’s climate minister, who chairs an important group of emerging economies at these talks.

    2 – Phasing out all fossil fuels

     

    The final discussions at COP26 in Glasgow last year almost fell apart on the issue of coal.

    Richer countries wanted to phase out the use of the most polluting fossil fuel.

    Larger developing economies including India and China did not.

    Cue frantic huddles on the plenary floor as diplomats tried to find a compromise.

    They settled on “phasing down” rather than “phasing out”.

    Here, India and a number of other countries wanted to expand this phrase to include oil and gas.

    However, the draft document published on Thursday did nothing more than restate the Glasgow formula.

    COpImage source, Getty Images

    Many countries, rich and poor, were disappointed – and are pushing for the wider range of fuels to be included.

    “This is supposed to be an implementation COP and that means when it comes to climate change, addressing the transition away from fossil fuels and toward renewable energy,” said Catherine Abreu from the Destination Zero campaign group.

    “So they should be having that debate at the global scale in these halls.”

    3 – Keeping 1.5C alive

     

    This was the mantra of the UK Presidency of COP26, and after Glasgow the concept was on life support, according to Alok Sharma, the minister in charge of the talks.

    A rise of 1.5C is viewed by scientists as the threshold to very dangerous levels of warming – but there has been considerable worry here that the commitment to the idea would be watered down, especially as India and China were concerned it was no longer scientifically feasible.

    Indeed the draft text published by Egypt is seen as a step back to the language of the Paris agreement, where the world would aim to keep the rise in global temperature “well below” 2C and to make best efforts to keep it under 1.5C.

    “I see the will to keep to the 1.5C goal,” said UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres as he returned to the talks.

    “But we must ensure that commitment is evident in the COP27 outcome.”

    4 – US & China

     

    While the recent meeting between Presidents Biden and Xi Jinping has seen some thawing of relations between the world’s two biggest emitters, the lack of concrete areas of co-operation between them is hampering the UN climate process.

    XiImage source, Getty Images

    Image caption, The meeting between the US and Chinese presidents may aid climate talks

    A key example is “loss and damage” and climate finance more generally. Traditionally, the developed nations paid and the larger emerging economies, such as India, China and Brazil did not.

    Now the US and EU want to expand the number of countries that contribute – and China is top of their list.

    “By the end of this decade, China could overtake the US in terms of its historical cumulative emissions, and is the world’s second largest economy, and yet in UN terms it still counts as a developing country,” said Bernice Lee, from Chatham House.

    “But the US has consistently failed to deliver climate finance and shoulder its responsibility as the world’s largest emitter to support the the developing world.

    “If China and the US can come to terms, a whole new solution space opens up for the rest of the world.”

  • Neymar eyeing potential World Cup final meeting with PSG team-mate Messi

    Neymar revealed he and Paris Saint-Germain team-mate Lionel Messi joke about a potential World Cup final between Brazil and Argentina in Qatar.

    Neymar and Messi, alongside Kylian Mbappe, form a fearsome front three for PSG, one that has fired them to a five-point lead at the top of Ligue 1 and reached the Champions League knockout stages.

    But that alliance will be temporarily halted until PSG’s next game on December 28, as the three superstars bid to win the World Cup for their respective countries.

    While he was highly complimentary of Messi and Mbappe, Neymar jokingly hinted that he fancies his Brazil side’s chances in a potential match-up with Messi’s Argentina.

    “We don’t discuss it very much,” Neymar told The Telegraph. “But sometimes we joke about crossing paths with each other in the final.

    “I tell him [Messi] that I’ll be champion and win against him and we have a good laugh.

    “Playing with him and Kylian is a huge pleasure. They’re two greats, with Messi long considered the best in the world.

    “Kylian is a young player who’s been growing and showing his potential and still has a lot to grow. It’s always great to play alongside the greats, I’ve always preferred that because the chances of winning are higher.”

    Neymar feels Brazil are one of the favourites, but also highlighted a number of other teams he believes are capable of making the final on December 18.

    “The World Cup is full of surprises,” he explained. “You get teams that unexpectedly get very far even in the competition even if many don’t believe in them.

    “But I believe the favourites are Argentina, Germany, Spain and France. I think those four along with Brazil are fully capable of reaching the final.”

    At the age of 30, the Qatar World Cup could be Neymar’s last attempt at glory with Brazil, having fallen short in his two previous experiences at international football’s premier tournament.

    One of those was particularly painful, when Neymar suffered a back injury in a victorious quarter-final meeting with Colombia at Brazil’s home tournament in 2014.

    Neymar was ruled out of the semi-final with Germany, a match Brazil went on to lose by a humiliating 7-1 scoreline.

    But the former Barcelona forward says his career would not feel incomplete if he were to never win the World Cup, saying: “No, in my career I’ve achieved things beyond my imagination.

    “So, if it ended today, I would still be the happiest person in the world.”

    The number 10 jersey that Neymar dons for Brazil is steeped in history, having been worn by Selecao legends like Pele, Ronaldinho and Zico.

    Neymar does not experience the pressure that could come with following those Brazilian idols, declaring: “I don’t feel under pressure, quite the opposite.

    “I’m happy to be able to wear the number 10 on the Brazilian team and make history. It’s a great pride and honour to be part of the group of players that wore it and I only feel happiness about it.”

    Source: Livescore

     

  • Legendary defender Cafu bullish about Brazil’s World Cup chances

    Cafu is confident Brazil can end a 20-year wait for World Cup glory, backing Neymar to help “break Europe’s dominance”.

    The former defender lifted the World Cup with Brazil in 2002, a triumph that marked the culmination of a prosperous period for the national side who won the tournament in 1994 and lost in the final to France four years later.

    Since then, however, Brazil have fallen short of expectations and have been eliminated at the quarter-final stage in three of the past four tournaments – with the exception seeing them hammered 7-1 by Germany in the semi-finals on home soil in 2014.

    Brazil head to Qatar in excellent form, though, having stood undefeated across their 17 matches in qualifying, winning 14, and Cafu believes this is the ideal opportunity for the national side.

    “It’s a great opportunity to break Europe’s dominance. It’s the perfect time for Brazil to break the curse and win the title,” he told AFP.

    “Argentina and the Selecao are the two favourites. On the one hand, Brazil is coming off a very good season with great performances, on the other hand, Argentina also has a very good team. These two countries have great potential to win the World Cup.

    “The fact that Brazil has not won the title for twenty years, it affects the fans a little bit and takes away a little credibility from the national team. But this year I think Brazil is back.

    “With Neymar fit, we have a very good chance of winning the World Cup, because he is a player who really makes the difference on the pitch. We pin our hopes on his talent, but he doesn’t play alone.

    “By playing well, by being motivated, I’m sure he will motivate the other players and make them feel that they are important so that they can win.”

    Cafu is aware that a threat is posed by some European nations, however, identifying defending champions France and Brazil’s Group G opponents Serbia as hurdles to overcome.

    “Belgium, Denmark, Portugal and Serbia, as incredible as it may seem. Serbia qualified in first place in its group. They played very well in the World Cup qualifiers,” he added.

    “They have a strong team and are not afraid to play football against any opponent.

    “France, too, will be very strong, as it was at the last World Cup. They will arrive with the label of reigning world champions and fight for the double. They will be one of the great teams to beat.”

    Brazil commence their World Cup campaign on November 24 against Serbia, before facing Switzerland and Cameroon in Group G.

    Source: Livescore

  • Brazil paid GFA $90,000 for pre-World Cup friendly game – Sports Minister Mustapha Ussif

    Sports Minister Mustapha Ussif has disclosed that Brazil paid the Ghana Football Association (GFA) $90,000 for the pre-World Cup friendly in September.

    Black Stars suffered a humiliating 3-0 defeat to the five-time World champions at the Stade Oceane Le Havre, France.

    Tottenham striker Richarlison combined twice with Neymar, sweeping into the bottom corner from the edge of the area, before meeting a free-kick.

    “Per the agreement I have sighted, Brazil paid the Ghana Football Association $90,000 for the friendly match.”

    “We could have gotten more but because it was (at) very short (notice),brazilhad a lot of African nations to play and because it was (at) short notice you either take it or leave and Ghana too needed the game,” Mustapha Ussif said in an interview on Joy Sports.

    Ghana will play an International friendly against Switzerland at the Baniyas club stadium on Thursday, November 17, 2022 to conclude their preparations for the World Cup.

    Black Stars. who are the lowest-ranked team at the tournament have been drawn in Group H alongside Portugal, South Korea and Uruguay.

    Ghana will take on Portugal in their first game on November 24 before playing South Korea and Uruguay on November 28 and December 2 respectively.

  • Brazil not feeling pressure of World Cup expectations, insists Raphinha

    Brazil winger Raphinha says he does not see the favourites’ tag as “pressure” ahead of the World Cup, as the Selecao look to end their two-decade wait for the title.

    Tite’s side head to Qatar 2022 in search of a first triumph in the competition since victory at Korea/Japan 2002, having gone closest with a third-place finish on home soil in 2014 since.

    Despite defeat in the Copa America to Argentina last year, Brazil enter the tournament among the frontrunners, with hopes of bringing a close to their drought.

    Barcelona man Raphinha is among the players hoping to make a difference for the nation, but he says being pegged as potential favourites does not faze him.

    “I’m ready for the World Cup and I’m working hard to get there as good as I possibly can, both physically and mentally,” he told the Blaugrana’s website.

    “The atmosphere is that of a winning national team, ambitious and wanting to win the title. There’s a good vibe among the whole team.

    “I don’t see it as pressure, a team like Brazil is always a contender for the World Cup or any other title that they play for. The demand of the fans is normal because we are a high-quality team, with big names.”

    Raphinha has racked up 11 caps with Brazil since making his debut while at Leeds United last season, and made the switch to Barca ahead of this season.

    It has not been an easy start however, with a Blaugrana team studded with major names slipping out of the Champions League for the second campaign running at the group stage.

    The 25-year-old feels he is still bedding into his new surroundings, adding: “I still see myself in a period of adaptation to the club, I think I’m at a time where it has been quite complicated, especially because of my statistics and because of the way I play.”

    Brazil kick off their World Cup campaign against Serbia on November 24, before further encounters with Switzerland and Cameroon in Group G.

    Source: Livescore

     

     

  • 16 countries announce final squads for World Cup

    Ten (10) days more to the 2022 FIFA World Cup kicks off, and some national teams have already started releasing their rosters.

    FIFA has set November 14 as the deadline for all 32 participating countries to release theirfinal squads.

    During the 73rd FIFA Congress, the World’s football governing body announced that the squad size for the world cup has been increased from 23 to 26.

    Hence all participating countries are expected to name a 26-man squad each for the tournament.

    So far, 16 countries out of the 32 participating nations have released their final list with others set to follow in the coming days.

    The tournament is set to kick start on November 20 and end on Sunday, December 18, 2022.

    All leagues organized by FIFA’s member associations will go on a break within the period of the tournament.

    Here are the six national teams who have announced their final squad.

    Japan

    Japan were the first nation to announce their final squad for the tournament. The Blue Samarai released their squad on Thursday, November 1, 2022.

    Takumi Minamino, Tahiro Tomiyaso, Kawashima, Kaoro Mitoma, Maya Yoshida are the key names in the squad.

    — Sportskeeda Football (@skworldfootball) November 9, 2022

    Costa Rica

    The North Americans were the second nation to release their squad. Joel Campbel, Kaylor Navas, and Bryan Ruiz are the key names on the list.

    Brazil

    Brazil head coach, Adenor Leonardo Bacchi popularly known as Tite, named a star-studded squad on Monday, November 7.

    Arsenal duo, Gabriel Jesus and Gabriel Martinelli, who missed the last call-ups in September, were included in the final list this time.

    Some constants like Thiago Silva, Marquinhos Alisson, Ederson, Casimero, and Vinicius Jr were also named in the squad.

    Meanwhile, Dani Alves made a shocking appearance in the squad at age 39.

    Australia

    The Socceroos named their squad on Tuesday, November 8. Matthew Ryan and Aaron Mooy lead the Australian squad.

    Sengal

    The Tarenga Lions of Senegal are the first African to announce their squad. Head coach Aliou Cisse has named a star-filled squad for the tournament.

    Edouard Mendy, Kalidou Koulibaly, Sadio Mane, Idrissa Gueye, Cheikou Kouyate, Ismaila Sarr all made the squad.

    Demark

    Denmark have also announced their 26-man squad. Christain Eriksen, Christensen, Simon Kjaer, Kasper Schmeichel, and Emile Hojbjerg are the key men leading the Dens’ list.

    ???? ????????????????????????????????: Denmark have announced their squad for the World Cup. ???????? pic.twitter.com/SzRE3Hrz1m

    — Football Tweet ⚽ (@Football__Tweet) November 8, 2022

    France

    France head coach, Didier Deschamps, announced his final list in a press conference on Wednesday, November 9, 2022.

    The surprise omission in the list is Real Madrid left-back, Ferland Mendy.

    ???????????? ???????????????????????????????????????????? ????#FiersdetreBleus pic.twitter.com/PiLvXI2L0Y

    — French Team ⭐⭐ (@FrenchTeam) November 9, 2022

    USA

    USA announced a young talented squad for the World Cup in Qatar. Chelsea star, Christian Pulisic will be leading the Americans.

    THE USMNT SQUAD HEADED TO THE WORLD CUP ???????? pic.twitter.com/Ouyo74QO5x

    — B/R Football (@brfootball) November 9, 2022

    Cameroon

    Cameroon is the second African country to announce their World Cup squad after Senegal.

    Napoli’s Anguissa, Bayern’s Choupo Mouting, Inter goalkeeper, Andre Onana as well as Vicent Aboukar all made the list.

    Official Cameroon squad for 2022 World Cup. ???????????? #WorldCup2022 #Qatar2022 pic.twitter.com/kHzLJJnccq

    — Fabrizio Romano (@FabrizioRomano) November 10, 2022

    Croatia

    Luka Modric will lead Croatia’s 26-man squad in Qatar. Modric won the best player at the last edition and will hope he leads his Country to clinch the ultimate this time after finishing second in 2018.

    — HNS (@HNS_CFF) November 9, 2022

    Germany

    Germany have announced their final squad for the World Cup on November 10, 2022.

    Some of the key names in the list include Götze, Gundogan, Kimmich, Gnabry, Havertz, Neuer, Sané, and Rudiger.

    Youngsters like Musiala, Moukoko, and Adeyemi also make the list for their first World Cup appearance.

    — Germany (@DFB_Team_EN) November 10, 2022

    Belgium

    Belgium head coach, Roberto Martinez has released their 26-man squad for the World Cup.

    Eden Hazard, Kevin DeBruyne, Romelu Lukaku, and Thibaut Courtois are the key players on the list.

    11,59 million Belgians. 26 Devils. 1 goal. ???? #DEVILTIME pic.twitter.com/wwCAMvlU6k

    — Belgian Red Devils (@BelRedDevils) November 10, 2022

    Morocco

    Morocco were the third African country to announce their World Cup squad.

    The list has no surprise omissions as Ziyech, El-Nesyri, Hakimi, Yassine Bono, and Boufal have all been included.

    — Équipe du Maroc (@EnMaroc) November 10, 2022

    England

    England head coach, Gareth Southgate has named his final squad with some suprises misses.

    Tammy Abraham, Fikao Tomori, and Jadon Sancho are the big misses in the squad. Whereas Kalvin Philips, and Kyle Walker who are nursing injuries made the cut.

    Your #ThreeLions squad for the @FIFAWorldCup! ???? pic.twitter.com/z6gVkRTlT3

    — England (@England) November 10, 2022

    Poland

    Robert Lewandowski, Kamal Glik, Aljkadiuz Milik and Zielinski lead the Polish 26-man squad for the tournament.

    They announced their squad on Thursday, November 10, 2022.

    Uruguay

    Ghana’s World Cup Group opponent, Uruguay, have named their final 26-man squad for the upcoming 2022 World Cup in Qatar.

    Barcelona centre-back, Ronald Araujo, who was said to be a major doubt for the tournament due to an adductor longus avulsion injury in his right thigh, made the list, which was released on Thursday, November 10, 2022.

    Some key names like Luis Suarez, Edison Cavani, Darwin Nunez, and in-form Real Madrid midfielder Federico Valverde were all named in the big squad.

     

    Source: Ghanaweb

  • Bolsonaro heightened Brazil’s gun culture. Can Lula keep it under control?

    The number of privately owned guns in Brazil has nearly doubled in the last four years, to nearly 2 million.

    After winning the Brazilian election, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva will be re-elected President of Brazil in January, more than a decade after he last held the position. Despite his narrow victory, current President Jair Bolsonaro received more than 49 percent of the vote.

    Lula, as he is known, will now attempt to roll back many of Bolsonaro’s right-wing policies – including the loosening of Brazil’s gun-control measures, which led to the number of guns in private hands doubling since 2018. But how easy will that be?

  • Bolsonaro breaks his silence without publicly admitting defeat

    Jair Bolsonaro, Brazil’s far-right president, has broken his silence since losing the presidential election on Sunday.

    He expressed gratitude to those who voted for him but refused to admit defeat.

    But, contrary to popular belief, he did not challenge the outcome.

    Ciro Nogueira, his chief of staff, spoke after Mr Bolsonaro’s brief statement, saying that the “transition of power” would begin.

    Even though Mr Bolsonaro did not himself acknowledge defeat in his own words, Brazil’s Supreme Court released a statement shortly after his speech saying that by authorising the transition of power, he had recognised the result of the election.

    Combative statements from the president in the past – such as that “only God” could remove him from office – meant that there had been a tense wait for him to appear in public.

    Before the election, he had also repeatedly cast unfounded doubts about the voting system.

    When he finally appeared in public, 44 hours after the election result was announced, Mr Bolsonaro’s statement lasted only two minutes and he did not take any questions from the assembled reporters.

    In the message aimed at his supporters, Mr Bolsonaro said that “our dreams continue as alive as ever”.

    He repeated the values he says he and his party stand for – “God, fatherland, family, and freedom” – and insisted that he would continue to strive for “order and progress”, the words emblazoned on Brazil’s flag.

    He did not mention Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, his arch-rival who narrowly beat him on Sunday, at all. In a break with tradition, Mr Bolsonaro has still not called the man who defeated him in the election.

    Hardcore supporters of Mr Bolsonaro – who refuse to accept that he lost – have erected hundreds of roadblocks in all but two states of Brazil.

    In his speech, Mr Bolsonaro referred to them as “current popular movements” and said they were “the fruit of indignation and a sense of injustice of how the electoral process unfolded”.

    He added that “peaceful demonstrations” would always be welcome, but that “our methods can’t be the same as those used by the left, which always harmed the population, such as invasion of lands, disrespecting property and impeding the right to come and go”.

    Supporters of Brazil's President Jair Bolsonaro holds protests on the highway Helio Smidt, near the International Airport, against President-elect Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva who won a third term following the presidential election run-off, in Guarulhos, Brazil, November 1, 2022.
    IMAGE SOURCE, REUTERS Image caption, Kneeling protesters disrupted the access to the airport in São Paulo

    The top electoral judge, Alexandre de Moraes, had said earlier on Tuesday that the roadblocks posed “a risk to national security” and ordered that they be cleared.

    But police have struggled to remove all of them, with more than 250 still in place.

    The blockages are causing considerable disruption and affecting food supply chains.

    They started shortly after Brazil’s electoral authorities announced a narrow win for Lula in the run-off of the presidential election. With all the votes counted, Lula had 50.9% of the valid votes against Mr Bolsonaro’s 49.1%.

    Congratulations immediately started pouring in for Lula from across the world, with US President Biden saying the win came “following free, fair, and credible elections”.

    Mr Bolsonaro, who is normally a keen user of social media, stayed silent and out of the public eye. But he started to look more and more isolated as even his close allies congratulated Lula.

    The powerful speaker of the lower house of Congress, Arthur Lira, sent a strong message when he said that “the will of the majority, as it is expressed in the polls, can never be contested”.

    But some supporters of Bolsonaro appeared emboldened by his silence.

    “We will not accept losing what we have gained, we want what is written on our flag, ‘order and progress,” one protester in Rio de Janeiro told AFP news agency. “We will not accept the situation as it is,” the man added.

  • Brazil election: Bolsonaro supporters block roads after poll defeat

    Lorry drivers in Brazil loyal to President Jair Bolsonaro have blocked roads across the country, after his poll defeat to leftist rival Lula.

    Blockages were reported in all but two states, causing considerable disruption and affecting food supply chains.

    With all the votes counted, Lula had 50.9% of the valid votes against Mr Bolsonaro‘s 49.1% in Sunday’s run-off.

    The incumbent far-right president has neither conceded defeat nor challenged the results that divided the nation.

    There are concerns that the outgoing president could complicate the two-month transition period before Lula (full name Luíz Inácio Lula da Silva), a former president, is due to be sworn in on 1 January 2023.

    Pro-Bolsonaro lorry drivers started setting up roadblocks across the vast country soon after the election results were announced.

    By Monday night, the federal highway police reported 342 such incidents, with the biggest protests going on in the country’s south. Some of the blockages were later cleared by police.

    Many lorry drivers have benefited from lower diesel costs during the Bolsonaro administration.

    Jair Bolsonaro. Photo: 30 October 2022
    Jair Bolsonaro is yet to publicly comment on the election results

    Supreme Court judge Alexandre de Moraes on Monday ordered the police to disperse the roadblocks immediately.

    He warned that all those still blocking the roads on Tuesday would be each fined 100,000 Brazilian reals (£16,700: $19,300) per hour.

    Mr Bolsonaro, 67, is said to have gone to sleep after he narrowly lost to his arch rival.

    Combative statements from Mr Bolsonaro in the past – such as that “only God” could remove him from office – mean there is a tense wait for him to appear in public. Before the election, he had repeatedly cast unfounded doubts on the voting system.

    In his victory speech soon after the results were made public, Lula, 77, touched on the political rift running through Brazil which further deepened during a bitterly fought and often acrimonious election campaign.

    “This country needs peace and unity. This population doesn’t want to fight anymore,” he said, promising to govern for all Brazilians and not just for those who had voted for him.

    Congratulations have poured in from across the world, including from the leaders of the UK, China, France, India and Russia. US President Biden said the win came “following free, fair and credible elections”.

    It is a stunning comeback for Lula, a politician who could not run in the last presidential election in 2018 because he was in jail and banned from standing for office.

  • Rishi Sunak congratulates Lula da Silva for winning election in Brazil

    Rishi Sunak has congratulated Lula da Silva for winning the election in Brazil, beating out incumbent Jair Bolsonaro.

    Mr Sunak said this morning on Twitter: “Congratulations to Lula da Silva on his victory in Brazil’s election.

    “I look forward to working together on the issues that matter to the UK and Brazil, from growing the global economy to protecting the planet’s natural resources and promoting democratic values.”

    Labour Leader Sir Keir Starmer also congratulated Mr da Silva, saying: “This win must also be the start of a new era of global cooperation and action in the fight against climate change.”

    Source: Skynews.com

  • Lula is no more than a Brazilian Biden

    If elected president, Lula would likely be unable to lead a transformational, leftist agenda.

    The theme of “return” has dominated the presidential election campaign in Brazil. Many think the country is either going to see the comeback of Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, marking a second pink tide of progressive South American governments, or the return of the Workers’ Party (PT), removed from power after President Dilma Rousseff’s impeachment in 2016.

    Or it is going to face a government takeover by forces associated with the military dictatorship (1964-1985) – right-wing defenders of family, tradition, and property and apologists for political violence and torture of political opponents.

    There may be an element of truth to this interpretation, but sometimes turning to the past to make sense of the present can make it more difficult to discern the major differences between them. Indeed, if Lula were to win the presidential race, Brazil would not go back to the 2000s; nor is a military takeover led by his opponent, incumbent President Jair Bolsonaro, that likely.

    The vote: The poor vs the poorer

    While many saw the results of the October 2 elections as a clear victory for Lula and the Brazilian left, a closer look reveals a different reality. Lula obtained 57 million or 48 percent of the valid votes – less than what many polls predicted – which sent him to a run-off with Bolsonaro.

    The incumbent president obtained 51 million votes, two million more than in the first round of the 2018 presidential election. This is despite the fact that his government failed in its economic policies, the management of the pandemic, the fight against corruption, and the climate change agenda, especially with regard to curbing Amazon deforestation.

    In the parliamentary and governor elections, which also took place on October 2, the right-wing parties and, in particular, the far right, performed much better than forecasts showed. They won more representatives in the two houses of parliament than PT and its allies.

    Among those elected to parliament were former Judge Sergio Moro, who led the anti-corruption probe that saw Lula jailed; Damares Alves, the loudest proponent of the “gender ideology” conspiracy theory, which claims family values are under threat; and former health minister Eduardo Pazuello, who mismanaged the pandemic response. They were all ministers in Bolsonaro’s government.

    The elections did not see a massive migration of the votes from the poor to Lula and his party, as was expected in light of the pro-poor policies in his first two terms (2003-2010). In that period, the country experienced extraordinary economic growth combined with successful income distribution measures, which generated massive support among impoverished Brazilians for Lula in his bid for re-election in 2006. He ended his second term with an 80 percent popularity rating and a GDP growth of 7.5 percent.

    Part of the reason why Lula was unable to rally all of his former electorates may be that financial aid programmes for disadvantaged families introduced by Bolsonaro to address the economic downturn during the pandemic were extended.

    According to Giuseppe Cocco, a political science professor at the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, another reason may be that the effect of anti-Bolsonarism was to some extent mitigated by anti-Lulism – the negative sentiment triggered by corruption cases against Lula and the PT that contributed to bringing Bolsonaro to power in the first place.

    Furthermore, Cocco’s research shows that the incumbent attracted more votes than Lula from the “precariat” – Brazilians who are above the poverty line but, nevertheless, face constant economic insecurity. These are people who are microentrepreneurs, who have gig jobs, small businesses or who are self-employed. They struggle economically and seek the stability that the far-right promises.

    The right-wing tendencies of this layer of Brazilian society became apparent ahead of the 2018 election when a truck drivers’ strike took place. The protest started over rising fuel prices but ended with calls by some participants for the army to intervene and “solve the problems” of the state. Bolsonaro backed the strike, which boosted his popularity ahead of the vote.

    Lula, on the other hand, draws support from the poorest strata, those who are on the threshold of subsistence. They have been the beneficiaries of his signature social programme, the Bolsa Familia, which distributed conditional cash transfers.

    The line between the two groups is blurred, but the tension between them over income and economic opportunity seems to provide a better explanation of the electoral results than a more simplistic analysis that paints Lula as the candidate of the poor and Bolsonaro – as the choice of the elites and the well-off.

    A Brazilian Biden

    The campaign rhetoric Lula adopted was also quite different from previous elections. Unlike in the past, when he openly clashed with the elites, this time around, the PT candidate presented himself as the candidate of the system, as a “Brazilian Biden”, so to speak, putting an end to a Trumpist interlude.

    He gathered an extraordinarily broad front, which included almost the entire left opposition, but also the main representatives of economic power from various sectors, social democrats, conservative liberals, the leftist environmentalist Marina Silva, former officials, such as the social-democratic liberal Fernando Henrique Cardoso, and others.

    His campaign was also not dominated by street mobilisation or sharp factionalism. On the contrary, there were explicit guidelines to supporters not to confront the voters of the other candidate, and even to deemphasise the PT’s traditional colour red at campaign events.

    Although his coalition had prepared a leftist political programme, Lula ignored it in the debates, sidestepped it in speeches to voters and the media, and stressed on several occasions that he would not take divisive positions, especially when it comes to his plans for the economy. Throughout the campaign, he built an image as the promoter of peace, indicating the need to resolve the conflicts that are multiplying in and between different social segments.

    Bolsonaro and the Bolsonarist forces, on the other hand, fully occupied the anti-systemic political space. The incumbent spent the election campaign making verbal attacks against the corporate media – especially against the biggest TV network, Globo – the Brazilian Supreme Court and universities.

    In a country that has traditionally seen intimidation, blackmail, and the murder of electoral opponents in urban peripheries and in the hinterland, Bolsonaro’s rhetoric put Brazil at risk of widespread politically motivated violence. A number of murders were attributed to feuds between sympathisers of the two candidates, while a video of a Bolsonaro supporter licking the barrel of a shotgun went viral.

    Diminished appetite for a coup

    Despite Bolsonaro’s incitement and heightened fears of violence, it is unlikely that a victory for Lula in the run-off would be challenged by the military. Even the prospect of an invasion of the Congress building in Brasilia – like the one that happened in January 2021 in the US – seems less likely.

    The army’s top generals have given clear signals that whoever wins at the polls will assume the presidency. Furthermore, foreign powers, such as the Biden administration, have indicated that they would not support anti-democratic ventures.

    Bolsonaro has been ambiguous about accepting the results. However, the fact that right-wing parties and far-right politicians won the majority of seats in parliament has diminished the appetite for coup talk.

    Whatever the outcome of the election, the struggle for safeguarding minority rights, improving public services, expanding social programmes, protecting the environment, and embracing a security paradigm that is not guided by state violence against underserved populations will remain difficult. A victory for Bolsonaro, which is quite unlikely, would consolidate the far-right takeover of the state, leading to more policies aimed at dismantling public services, destroying the environment, and systematically sabotaging minority protections and academic institutions.

    A win for Lula, which seems more likely, would also pose great challenges. Given the dominance of the right in parliament, it would be difficult to push through progressive policies. Social movements, collectives, and activists would have to focus on the defence of the government, which would take away energy and resources from ongoing struggles, as happened during the 2016 impeachment process against Dilma. The PT and its supporters would face a radicalised and armed opposition on the ground committed to defending “true Christianity”, “family values” and traditional gender roles. In this context, a Lula victory would not mean a return to the “happy Brazil” of the 2000s, as his campaign suggested.

    The way out of the deep crisis that Brazil has plunged into in the last decade could be a Brazilian New Deal that pushes through much-needed structural changes in labour law and market, supports the creative role of minorities, and embraces the centrality of the global environmental agenda, something that Lula seems far from being able to lead, as corruption scandals and worn-off populist rhetoric have broken his spell.

    But his election could at least provide an opportunity to seek reconciliation and rebuild bridges between polarised segments of society. His return could set the ground for the construction of much-needed political alternatives.

    DISCLAIMER: Independentghana.com will not be liable for any inaccuracies contained in this article. The views expressed in the article are solely those of the author and do not reflect those of The Independent Ghana

     

     

  • Brazil’s Bolsonaro and Lula clash in the final debate before the run-off vote

    The far-right incumbent Bolsonaro and the left-wing ex-president Lula trade blows ahead of Sunday’s presidential run-off vote.

    Incumbent Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro and his left-wing challenger Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva squared off in their final televised debate before the tense run-off vote on Sunday.

    According to polls, Lula is the slight favourite to run for a third term, capping a remarkable political comeback following his imprisonment on corruption convictions that were later overturned. However, Bolsonaro outperformed polls in the first round of voting earlier this month, and many analysts believe the election could go either way.

    During Friday’s free-wheeling debate, the deeply polarising figures attacked each other’s character and record, accused each other of lying and refused repeatedly to answer each other’s questions.

    “Brazilians know who the liar is,” said Lula, as the two locked horns over minimum wages and the left-wing politician’s history of corruption allegations.

    “Stop lying Lula, stop lying. It’s getting ugly,” said Bolsonaro.

    Lula, who served as president between 2003 and 2010, also highlighted that Bolsonaro’s government has not yet provided an increase to the minimum wage above inflation.

    “This man governed for four years and there was not one percent of a real increase,” Lula said at the TV Globo debate in Rio de Janeiro, which lasted two and a half hours. He said the minimum wage is now worth less than when Bolsonaro was inaugurated.

    Bolsonaro quickly promised to lift the minimum wage from $229 a month to $265 next year, though that was not included in his 2023 budget proposal sent to Congress, which the incumbent president’s allies control.

    The debate was the second head-to-head confrontation between the two men, and the grand finale of a brutal campaign marked by months of mudslinging, negative advertisements, and a flood of disinformation on social media.

    Lula leads polls

    Still, most analysts and focus groups with undecided voters suggested the president had done little to shake up a race that polls show broadly stable since Lula led the first round of voting on October 2 by five percentage points.

    That result was better for Bolsonaro than most polls had shown, giving him a boost of momentum to start the month, but the past two weeks of the campaign have presented headwinds.

    On Sunday, one of Bolsonaro’s allies opened fire on Federal Police officers coming to arrest him. A week earlier Bolsonaro had to defend himself from attack advertisements after he told an anecdote about meeting Venezuelan migrant girls in suggestive terms.

    In their first head-to-head debate this month, Lula blasted Bolsonaro’s handling of a pandemic in which nearly 700,000 Brazilians died, while Bolsonaro focused on the corruption scandals that tarnished the reputation of Lula’s Workers’ Party.

    On Friday night, both candidates returned repeatedly to Lula’s two terms as president from 2003 to 2010, when high commodity prices helped to boost the economy and combat poverty. Lula promised to revive those boom times, while Bolsonaro suggested current social programmes are more effective.

     

  • Enslaved African Chico Rei hid gold in his hair to raise funds to buy his freedom

    Chico Rei is believed to have hailed from the West Central African Kingdom of Kongo. He was born in the early 1800s into the royal family. His fortunes took a different twist when some members of his family and himself were captured by slave raiders and shipped to work on the plantations in Europe.

    Chico and his family were put in the hilly region of Vila Rica where they worked in the gold mines of Minas Gerais. While working the mines, Chico was determined to attain his freedom from the harsh conditions of the mine pits.

    He began hiding the gold he picked from working in the mines. When he had enough, he sold it to buy his freedom. He proceeded to rescue his family after he made enough profits from a goldfield he bought in Vila Rica, shortly after he became a free man.

    Oral tradition also states that the gold he used to purchase his freedom came from his former slave owner as a gift for his sterling work output. Historical records posit that when Chico and his family established themselves after their freedom, they initiated steps to have the Church of Saint Iphigenia built which is currently being used by the Brotherhood of Our Lady of Rosary.

    Brazilian historian Diogo Luiz de Almeida Pereira de Vasconcelos wrote about the exploits of Chico in his book ‘História antiga de Minas’ published in 1904. Chico has become a folklore legend in Brazilian popular culture with schools and theatres staging drama and plays about his feats. In 1964, Rio de Janeiro’s Salgueiro samba school held a play depicting the heroic deeds of Chico Rei.

    The character Chico symbolizes the horrors of Africans captured and placed in the mines and plantations of European states, their trials while under captivity and their eventual freedom. His story has been used by playwrights and local Afro-Brazilian groups to promote the story of resilience and victory by enslaved people.

    A discovery of a mine blocked with stones by a local resident in 1946 has been named Chico Rei’s mine. The mother of the teenager who found the gold mine was resolute it was synonymous with what was described in Histórias da terra mineira by Maria Bárbara de Lima. It has been decorated with lights to increase visibility in the one-mile-deep mine shaft.

    The authorities have used the place to promote tourism by setting up a small restaurant and opening it to the public. Over half a decade now, there has been a conscious effort to promote the values of Chico Rei in scholarly articles and literature in Portuguese, English, and Spanish.

    His story is important because the Afro-Brazilian population, though in the minority, has become a significant pillar in the history and economic growth of Brazilian society.

    He is believed to have lived the different sordid experiences many enslaved people endured after being shipped from Africa to work in the gold mines of southeastern Brazil and earn his freedom through his ingenuity.

    DISCLAIMER: Independentghana.com will not be liable for any inaccuracies contained in this article. The views expressed in the article are solely those of the author’s, and do not reflect those of The Independent Ghana

    Source: face2faceafrica.com

  • England to host Brazil at Wembley in inaugural Women’s Finalissima

    European champions England will face off against Copa America Femenina champions Brazil at Wembley in the inaugural Women’s Finalissima next year.

    The clash on April 6 has been organised between UEFA and CONMEBOL to follow on from the success of the men’s Finalissima in June, where South American champions Argentina defeated European title-holders Italy in front of a sold-out crowd at Wembley.

    A cross-continent fixture has also taken place at youth level, with UEFA Youth League winners Benfica overcoming Uruguay’s Club Atletico Penarol at the Estadio Centenario in August in Montevideo.

    The clash will give both England and Brazil the opportunity to clinch a further title before the Women’s World Cup in Australia and New Zealand, leading Three Lionesses head coach Sarina Wiegman to outline her excitement for the fixture.

    “The great games keep on coming for us. This time, we have the opportunity to welcome Brazil to Wembley and it will be another big moment after the Euros and USA match,” she said.

    “Like us, they will be thinking about the World Cup next summer. This is a chance to again test ourselves against another top 10 team in the world, an opportunity to win another trophy and give our fans something special to watch, hopefully in a packed-out Wembley.”

    England’s Euro success was only the second senior title they have ever lifted, while Brazil’s triumph against Colombia in the Copa America was their fourth in a row and eighth in the nine editions of the tournament.


    Source: Livescore

  • Casemiro calls for Brazil to stay grounded amid talk of World Cup favouritism

    Casemiro has highlighted the importance of Brazil remaining grounded after being labelled as one of the favourites to win the upcoming World Cup in Qatar.

    Brazil last lifted football’s most prestigious trophy 20 years ago, when Ronaldo Nazario scored eight goals as Luiz Filipe Scolari’s team triumphed in Japan and South Korea.

    However, Tite’s team have been tipped by many to end that drought this year, with the Selecao topping the FIFA World Rankings ahead of the tournament and seeing the likes of Neymar and Vinicius Junior start the club season in fine form.

    Speaking to Manchester United’s media channels, Casemiro said: “There are two sides to it. Of course, there’s no hiding from the fact Brazil are favourites, but the favourites don’t always win in football, the favourites aren’t always champions.

    “We know there are other national teams doing some great work, teams that are also favourites. Football, nowadays, speaks for itself. We know there are other teams playing very well.

    “We know our responsibility, we know we have to respect the teams we come up against.

    “It’s inevitable when we talk about Brazil, though we do this with our feet on the ground and a lot of respect for our opponents.”

    With 65 senior caps to his name, Casemiro appears a certainty to feature when Brazil open their Group G campaign against Serbia on November 24, and he could be joined by United team-mate Antony.

    The winger has scored three goals in his first six Premier League appearances since joining Red Devils from Ajax, and now hopes to make an impact for Brazil on the grandest stage of all.

    “My first call up to the Selecao was this year, so it’s a wonderful experience for me,” Antony said, being interviewed alongside Casemiro.

    “I’ve always dreamed of putting on the Brazil shirt, today I can live that dream leading up to a World Cup.

    “Putting on the national shirt, representing your country and your family is very important to me. I hope to be putting it on more and more and make history with the Brazilian national team.”

    Source: Livescore

  • Brazilian politician throws grenades towards police in Rio de Janeiro state

    A Brazilian politician has been arrested after he threw grenades at police officers who arrived at his home in the state of Rio de Janeiro to arrest him.

    Before surrendering on Sunday, Roberto Jefferson, an ally of far-right President Jair Bolsonaro, wounded two officers.

    Previously, a Supreme Court judge ordered his incarceration for disrespecting Chief Justice Cármen Luca. He had already been placed under house arrest for threatening her.

    Mr Bolsonaro reacted by saying those who fired at police should be arrested.

    The two officers were wounded by shrapnel from a grenade during the attack in Comendador Levy Gasparian, north of the state capital Rio de Janeiro. They were taken to the hospital and later discharged.

    Mr Jefferson, the 69-year-old former leader of the PTB political party, also fired a number of shots from a rifle, shattering the windshield of a police car.

    Supreme Court Judge Alexandre de Moraes had ordered the politician to be detained on the grounds that he violated the conditions of house arrest.

    Political tensions are high in Brazil ahead of Sunday’s presidential election run-off between Mr Bolsonaro and left-winger Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva.

    Lula – who is still seen as the front-runner – fell short of the 50% of valid votes needed to prevent a run-off in the first round earlier this month.

     

  • Bolsonarism has already won in Brazil, even if Bolsonaro loses

    Bolsonaro has gained seats in Congress amid a broader rightward shift that will keep him influential even if Lula wins.

    Three days after the first round of voting in Brazil’s election on October 1, David Nemer, assistant professor of media studies at the University of Virginia, noted that “Twitter is not Brazil. Brazil is not on Twitter.”

    He was echoing the views of many experts who have cautioned that many on both the left and the right had been predicting the outcome of the vote based too much on Twitter trends and hashtags.

    As it turned out, incumbent President Jair Bolsonaro proved pollsters wrong. While he did come second behind former President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva of the Workers’ Party as expected, the five-percentage point gap between them was much smaller than the double-digit gulf that had been predicted. Bolsonaro managed to force an October 30 runoff that would not have been necessary if Lula had secured more than half of the vote.

    Perhaps even more importantly, Bolsonaro’s Liberal Party gave Brazil’s far-right its best-ever election night outcome since the country’s return to democracy nearly four decades ago. It won 99 seats in the lower house of Brazil’s Congress, 23 more than in 2017. It is the single-largest party in the lower house, and with allies, effectively controls almost half of the legislative chamber.

    The verdict is clear: Bolsonarism – the president’s far-right movement backed by political and social conservatives and evangelicals – has already won, irrespective of what happens in the runoff.

    If Bolsonaro defeats Lula, experts fear he might use his numbers in Congress to impeach Supreme Court justices. He could even increase the number of seats on the Supreme Court to appoint ideologically aligned judges – similar to what the military dictatorship did many years ago. The Supreme Court has served as an important counterweight to the government, including investigating a fake news network controlled from the government’s headquarters. Bolsonaro, in addition to attacks against judges of the court, has already said that he might tweak the makeup of the judiciary if he returns to power.

    But even if he loses on October 30, Bolsonaro’s supporters in Congress will have the clout to make governance very difficult for a Lula administration, including by blocking any progressive initiatives.

    “The country that Lula da Silva governed just 20 years ago basically does not exist anymore,” Felippe Ramos, a political analyst and doctoral candidate in sociology at the New School for Social Research told me.

    Brazil has changed

    That’s not to say that Brazilian society under the center-left Lula – who was president from 2003 to 2010 – was progressive. However, the country has witnessed a dramatic political, economic and demographic shift that is underpinning the support for Bolsonarism. “The drivers are much deeper than politics,” Ramos said.

    As Ramos explained, Brazil has undergone a process of deindustrialization in recent years, with agribusinesses increasingly the engine of the economy. That has led to a growth in the economic influence of traditionally conservative states – a change reflected culturally too, with Sertanejo, Brazilian country music, going mainstream.

    Meanwhile, Brazil’s evangelicals – a solid support base for Bolsonaro – have shot up from five percent to over 30 percent of the population in less than three decades, signalling a broader conservative shift. This has given them significant influence in national politics and on how the overall population views moral issues.

    Evangelical denominations have even been accused of spreading fake news that, for instance, Lula might shut down churches if he returns to power or that the former president is a Satanist.

    Tech, too, has played a role, though not Twitter. It is, in fact, WhatsApp that is the main tool that Bolsonaro and his allies use to spread propaganda and disinformation among poorer and more remote communities.

    Rise of Bolsonarism

    Still, the nature of Brazil’s rightward shift, too, has evolved.

    For years, it was an imperfect fit between various far-right forces that managed to coalesce around Bolsonaro. Today there is greater ideological uniformity, with a central tenet at its heart: hard-core Bolsonarism, or extreme loyalty to the leader.

    Bolsonaro has cannibalised the traditional right and centrist poles of Brazilian politics while creating a movement that also overshadows other traditional strains of right-wing extremism.

    For evidence, look no further than the fate of former allies who turned critics and have performed poorly in the election — such as Joice Hasselmann, a former journalist who was elected to Congress in 2018 from Bolsonaro’s party after winning more than a million votes, the most by a female candidate. She subsequently fell out with Bolsonaro. This time, she couldn’t win even 14,000 votes.

    Ironically, Bolsonarism is also helped by the fact that its progressive opponents appear incapable of engaging with ideas outside their bubble even as they have abandoned the trade union struggle.

    A divided nation

    In effect, Brazilian politics today orbit around “two poles that are represented by Bolsonaro on the one hand, and by Lula and the Workers’ Party on the other,” Pablo Ortellado, professor of public policy management at the University of São Paulo, told me.

    The tension between them ends up exploding in the form of political violence. Supporters of the current president have killed several Workers’ Party voters, while in rare cases, Lula supporters, too, have engaged in violence against their counterparts in Bolsonaro’s camp.

    A Bolsonaro victory could mean the deepening of fascism in Brazil. It would facilitate the further growth of evangelical fundamentalism and lead to the increased devastation of the Amazon. It would portend more violence against Indigenous and left-wing activists and herald greater international isolation for Brazil. Whether the country’s democratic institutions would survive intact is doubtful. It’s hard to know whether Brazilian democracy itself would continue to breathe.

    A win for Lula, however, would still leave him facing a strong pro-Bolsonaro parliamentary opposition capable of stalling his plans, in a polarised and increasingly conservative society.

    While Bolsonaro has repeatedly threatened to not respect the outcome of the elections if he loses, he won’t need a coup to retain significant influence. His faithful and strong base of supporters in Congress will ensure that — even if not as president — Bolsonaro will continue to cast a shadow over Brazilian politics.

    DISCLAIMER: Independentghana.com will not be liable for any inaccuracies contained in this article. The views expressed in the article are solely those of the author and do not reflect those of The Independent Ghana

    Source: Aljazeera.com

     

  • Juventus defender Bremer facing race to be fit for Brazil’s World Cup squad

    Juventus have confirmed defender Bremer has sustained a hamstring injury that will keep him out for close to three weeks.

    Bremer, who signed for Juve from Torino ahead of this season, has started all 10 of the Bianconeri’s Serie A games this season.

    The 25-year-old made his debut for Brazil in September, playing 44 minutes as a substitute in a 3-0 friendly win over Ghana.

    However, he now faces a race to be fit in time to make Tite’s squad for the World Cup.

    Juve confirmed on Monday that Bremer, who was taken off in the 52nd minute of Saturday’s win over his former side Torino, had suffered a “low-grade lesion to the hamstring of the left thigh”.

    Bremer faces approximately 20 days out of action, meaning he will miss games against Empoli, Benfica, Lecce, Paris Saint-Germain and Inter during a hectic period of fixtures.

    He might be fit to feature for Juve in matches against Verona and Lazio ahead of the break for the World Cup, which starts on November 20.

    Brazil’s first game sees them take on Serbia four days later. While Bremer’s place in Tite’s squad was by no means guaranteed, the Selecao will be hoping Tottenham forward Richarlison – who has been a key player in recent seasons – recovers from a calf injury in time to make it to Qatar.

     

  • Early exit from 2014 World Cup still hurt – Goalkeeper Fatau Dauda

    Former Black Stars goalkeeper, Fatau Dauda has said failure to progress from the group phase during the 2014 Mundial still hurts him.

    After a brilliant performance in South Africa in 2010, the West African country was with hope of improving their performance in Brazil.

    However, the four-time African champions exited the tournament in the group phase with just a point after three games played.

    The former Ashanti Gold shot stopper featured for Ghana in the 2014 edition in Brazil.

    The tournament was a bad one for Ghana as they finished bottom of their group and failed to win a single game.

    “I have been in the World Cup once, that was 2014 so that’s the World Cup I can talk about,” he told 3Sports.

    “It wasn’t good for us the players because we couldn’t progress in the tournament but it was nice being in the World Cup. It’s good to play in the World Cup as a player.

    “We couldn’t progress from the group stages so that was the most painful thing but it was a very good experience for some of us who were playing in the World Cup for the first time,” he added.

    Ghana opened their campaign with a defeat against the USA before holding the eventual winners of the tournament, Germany to a 2-2 draw before losing 2-1 to Portugal.

    The Black Stars will hope to improve at the 2022 World Cup in Qatar which kick off from November 20 to December 18.

    Source: Footballghana

  • Defence exhibition, conference underway in Accra

    An International Defence Exhibition and Conference (IDEC) to enhance the capability of participants to address Africa’s security challenges is underway in Accra.

    The two-day event, which is also aimed at improving combined combat operations and regional development initiatives on the continent, is on the theme: “Strengthening international collaboration to combat terrorism and transnational organised crimes.”

    It is being participated by Defence Chiefs of Staff and senior officers and executives of security agencies and global partners, as well as advanced solution providers in the field of military technology and manufacturing.

    The delegates are from Brazil, Italy, South Africa, Kenya, Nigeria, Pakistan and Senegal.

    The rest are Cameroon, Ghana, Togo, Cote d’Ivoire, Egypt, Uganda, among other countries.

    Military gear, including weapons and vehicles, as well as defence technological tools, such as drones and communication equipment, are also on display at the event.

    The Dubai-based Great Minds Events and Exhibitions organised the event, in partnership with the Ghana Armed Forces (GAF) and the Gulf of Guinea Maritime Institute (GoGMI).

    Collaboration

    The Minister of Defence, Dominic Nitiwul, called for effective collaboration among armed forces on the continent and their counterparts around the globe to deal with terrorism and transnational crimes.

    He also said establishing strong cooperation and agreement among states worldwide would facilitate mutual legal assistance and extradition to help in the prosecution of cases transcending national borders.

    According to him, transnational organised crimes presented great challenge to the rule of law, economic and social development and the protection of human rights and security, as countries usually had to readjust on trade, economic growth and development after terrorist incursions.

    The minister said political turbulence and corruption continued to hinder Africa’s economic development and technological innovation.

    “It is, therefore, important that we build on the endeavours of Africa’s armed forces to enhance combined capabilities to counter the insecurities that plague the continent.

    “Insecurity directly affects the public financing capabilities of states and can obstruct economic development through tax evasion.

    “Our gathering here today is because our countries’ armed forces and security architecture have a huge stake in dealing with matters governing regional instabilities and security,” Mr Nitiwul said.

    Development

    The minister also said the measures and strategies put in place to revive economies across the African region would largely depend on how countries cooperated and collaborated to eradicate the menace of transnational crimes and terrorism, adding: “International trade cannot flourish without a secure sub-regional peace and security.”

    “My expectation is that concrete networks will be established at the sub-regional, continental and global levels to integrate our strategies and efforts at holistically dealing with these threats,” he added.

    Mr Nitiwul expressed the hope that the delegates would come up with meaningful and workable solutions to issues of transnational organised crime, terrorism and related threats to global peace and security.

    Strategy

    The Chief of the Defence Staff, Vice-Admiral Seth Amoama, said combating transnational crimes required a multi-dimensional strategy that safeguarded the citizenry and broke the financial strength of criminals and terrorist networks.

    Such collaboration, he added, disrupted illicit traffic networks, defeated transnational crime organisations, fought corruption, strengthened the rule of law, bolstered judicial systems and improved transparency.

    “The major outcomes that we expect from this conference and exhibition, in line with the theme, are a common understanding of the problem and developing a regional and international framework to deal, in particular, with the challenges of terrorism and transnational organised crimes, “ Vice-Admiral Amoama said.

    For his part, the Managing Partner at Great Minds Event, Noel Greenway, said peace and security had become a necessary tool for every nation, and that it could only be achieved through collaborations.

    IDEC, he said, provided an ideal platform for global defence suppliers to showcase their latest products and services and also meet defence buyers to negotiate fresh supplies.

     

  • Ghana legend Dan Owusu shares why it is not important to replace Black Stars coach Otto Addo ahead of World Cup

    Former Ghana international Dan Owusu has explained why it is important to replace Black Stars coach, Otto Addo ahead of the World Cup.

    The Black Stars has been paired against Portugal, Uruguay and South Korea in Group H.

    The biggest soccer mundial will be staged in Qatar between November and December with 32 countries set to battle it out for the ultimate.

    The Black Stars will tackle Portugal in the opening game of the Group before facing Asian and South American giants South Korea and Uruguay respectively.

     

    Ghanaians has criticized Otto Addo over his tactics and selection after the Black Stars international friendlies against Brazil and Nicaragua and has therefore called for the replacement of Otto Addo but Dan Owusu thinks otherwise.

    Speaking to Koforidua-based Bryt FM, the three-time Ghana Premier League goal king winner said, “It is too late to replace Otto Addo, we have few days to the World Cup, so it will not be prudent to change the technical team led by Otto Addo, and once he has been given the job, we should try him”

    “We are all coaches and I will advise Otto to take a critical look on his substitutions. His substitutions came late and this are some of things he should check going into the World Cup. He must know the time to make substitution and all that” he said.

    Source: Footballghana

  • Brazil election: He is God so we will vote for him

    In the first of two profiles of the front-runners for the position of president of Brazil, Katy Watson questions if incumbent Jair Bolsonaro is, as his supporters claim, a wonderful leader or someone who despises democracy.

    Wherever Jair Bolsonaro goes, he likes to stir controversy – but few were expecting him to do so on the eve of Queen Elizabeth II’s funeral. As world leaders flew to the UK to mark her passing, President Bolsonaro saw an opportunity to do some campaigning.

    While British mourners accused him and his fans of lacking respect in a period of mourning, he was undeterred.

    “We’re on the right path,” he told his supporters from the balcony of the Brazilian residence, saying Brazil did not want to discuss the legalisation of abortion or drugs, with cheers from the crowd in response. And he repeated his often-cited slogan: “God, homeland, family and freedom”.

    Another familiar mantra at his campaign events is the chant: “Mito, mito, mito.”

    He is, to his fans, a “myth” – a legendary leader – and they are convinced their man will be re-elected in October.

    Despite polls showing his main rival, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, in the lead, nothing will deter Mr Bolsonaro’s greatest supporters from believing the president, who has himself denounced the polls as a lie, is the only man to lead the country.

    Pastor Laura Almeida, at the Mustard Seed Ministry in the northeastern city of Recife, is one of his most committed fans. Standing in front of her Sunday congregation, she sings his praises.

    “We’ll vote for Bolsonaro because he is God,” she tells her members. “He defends the same principles as us in accordance with the word of God.”

    Pastor Laura Almeida, at the Mustard Seed Ministry in Recife, the capital of Brazil’s north-eastern state of Pernambuco
    Image caption, Pastor Laura Almeida says she believes that President Bolsonaro is the saviour who will ease the people’s suffering

    After the service, she explains her thinking to me.

    “Whenever people are suffering, when they believe in an all-powerful creator, I think God raises up a saviour,” she says.

    I ask her if that saviour is President Bolsonaro. “Yes,” she replies. “Today in Brazil, I think that’s him.”

    Mr Bolsonaro sings from the same song sheet as many evangelicals. He preaches the importance of family, he is vehemently against abortion and he is known for his homophobic comments.

    And it was congregations like Laura’s that got him elected in 2018.

    “Evangelicals are growing in Brazil,” says Prof Vinicius do Valle, Director of the Evangelical Observatory information service in Brazil. “They are now about 30% of the population – only two decades ago, it was about 15% so they are increasing very quickly and it’s changing the way we do politics here.”

    But it is not the same way that the church has traditionally been involved.

    “The Catholic Church played a democratic role in the past decades,” says the professor, referring to the Church speaking out during the military dictatorship. “But that hasn’t happened when it comes to evangelical churches. They are playing a role in Bolsonaro’s election and against democratic institutions in Brazil – we see ministers calling people to go to protests against democratic institutions.”

    Mr Bolsonaro does not separate politics from prayer. His campaign language is littered with religious references. Even lifting himself up to a godly status.

    He hit this year’s campaign trail in Juiz de Fora, the city where he was stabbed in 2018 – the place where, in his own words, he was “born again”.

    Gilson Machado
    Image caption, Gilson Machado describes the president as an “old uncle”

    But in the north-east of Brazil, he has a tough job on his hands to convince voters he is the man for them. This is not Mr Bolsonaro’s natural stomping ground. In fact, it was the only region where he lost in 2018.

    The poorest region in the country, it is where Lula was born and with which he has been associated for all of his political careers. For that reason, it has become the ultimate challenge for President Bolsonaro to gain ground here.

    Gilson Machado is an affable local politician. A former tourism minister under Mr Bolsonaro, he is perhaps most well-known – or infamous – for his love of playing the accordion. Now, he is running for senate in Pernambuco, but he is also head of Mr Bolsonaro’s national campaign in the north-east and is a great friend of the president.

    “He’s an old uncle and he likes football, he doesn’t drink, he loves his family, he’s a Christian and he’s a hard, hard worker,” he says. “He’s the man for the world – the biggest right-wing president of the world right now.”

    That feeling is shared by nuclear medicine doctor Mitchell Lewis. Although it is not shared by his medical school friends Geraldo Aguiar and Kalina Sá, who are sitting with him at his dining table, enjoying a glass of wine.

    In such a polarised political contest, it is surprising the three remain friends. So many relationships have fallen foul of politics in Brazil these past few years.

    “What makes you a Bolsonarista [a Bolsonaro supporter] is when he speaks directly to your heart, to your soul,” he says. “Bolsonaro freed this voice from all these people you see in the streets screaming ‘Mito!’.”

    Geraldo says he is going to vote for Lula. Mitchell shakes his head.

    “Bolsonaro lost a great opportunity to be seen as responsible and confront this pandemic in an intelligent way,” Geraldo says, criticising how he behaved during the pandemic. “I don’t think he has the emotional intelligence for this.”

    Kalina though, is on the fence after having voted for Bolsonaro in 2018.

    “I am totally against [Lula’s] Workers’ Party, but I don’t think Bolsonaro was a good leader,” she says. “He has not listened, and with that, he lost my vote. Those who support Bolsonaro do so no matter what, independently of what he does.”

    Ultimate commitment or blind adoration? Mitchell has the last word.

    “I’m not a religious person, I am an atheist, but when Bolsonaro says that he has a mission from God, I start questioning my lack of belief.”

  • 2022 World Cup: 70 per cent of current Ghana squad will be in Qatar – Otto Addo

    Ghana head coach Otto Addo has disclosed that 70 per cent of the squad he summoned for the September friendlies against Brazil and Nicaragua will be selected for the Qatar 2022 World Cup.

    The former Ghana international added the remaining 30 per cent are tough decisions the technical team will make in their monitoring of players outside the current squad.

    The core of the Black Stars team was involved in Ghana’s 3-0 defeat to Brazil on Friday and Tuesday’s 1-0 win over Nicaragua.

    Thomas Partey was the only senior figure in the team not to play a part in any of the two games. The Arsenal man had to leave camp early because of a knee injury issue that flared up in the Brazil pre-game warm-up.

     

    Ahead of the narrow win over the Central Americans, the Borussia Dortmund assistant coach told German outlet, Bild: “70 per cent of the players currently on international duty with Ghana’s squad who meet Nicaragua in Lorca, Spain on Tuesday will be in Qatar.

    “The remaining 30 per cent will be tight decisions. We’re watching the players closely for the next few games to see who could play for Qatar in October.”

    Black Stars captain Andre Ayew shares a similar sentiment with Otto Addo. He specifically mentions some senior players in the current team have the advantage of being selected for the World Cup.

    The Al Sadd midfielder adds other players have to compete for the remaining slots.

    “Apart from senior players who may have an advantage, I believe no one is guaranteed a place in the squad just yet,” he told Graphic Sports.

    “Everyone must prove their quality on the field and everyone has a chance, giving the coach more options and solutions, formations, and I believe it is beneficial to have new players with the right mentality.”

    Source: myjoyonline

  • Richarlison warns racism will continue without punishments

    Brazil’s Richarlison has urged for strong punishments to be issued to those found guilty of racial abuse, after having a banana thrown at him while on international duty.

    The Tottenham forward scored the second of the game in Brazil’s 5-1 victory over Tunisia in Paris but a comfortable win, the last international game before Brazil’s World Cup campaign commences, was marred by the incident.

    A banana was thrown as Richarlison celebrated his goal, his ninth in 20 appearances for the national side, which became the latest racist incident to impact Brazilian footballers.

    Real Madrid forward Vinicius Jr had suffered abuse from Atletico Madrid fans in his side’s recent derby triumph, following on from quotes from a Spanish agent who told him to ‘stop playing the monkey’ in reference to his dancing celebration.

    Both players received a flood of support following the jarring incidents but Richarlison has warned that things will not improve unless the widespread condemnation is followed up with punishments.

    “As long as they say “blah blah blah” and don’t punish, it will continue like this, happening every day and everywhere. No time bro!” he posted on Twitter.

    Brazil’s squad had lined-up ahead of the match to display an anti-racism banner which read: “Without our black players, we wouldn’t have stars on our shirts”.

    Source: Livescore

  • Silva says Richarlison banana incident is ‘not good for football’

    Brazil defender Thiago Silva was “very sad” after team-mate Richarlison appeared to be subjected to racist abuse in a friendly win over Tunisia.

    Video footage showed a banana being thrown at Richarlison as he celebrated scoring Brazil’s second goal in Paris.

    Silva previously played at the Parc des Princes – which hosted a large Tunisian contingent – with Paris Saint-Germain.

    “It hurts me,” the Chelsea defender said of the incident. “Frankly, I’m very sad. That’s not football. Football is about supporting your team.

    “Afterwards, on the field, we give our best for our team. But gestures like that [shown] on video, it’s not good for football.”

    Discussing his return to Paris, Silva added: “It was good to come back to the Parc. Unfortunately, the atmosphere was against us. Normally, here, it is a good atmosphere for me, but today the public was against us.

    “But it was good to come back here. I spent eight years, eight and a half years here – it was a good time to come back.”

    On the pitch, the Selecao enjoyed a dominant performance, with a brace from Raphinha, Richarlison’s goal and a Neymar penalty securing a 4-1 half-time lead.

    A first international goal for Flamengo striker Pedro concluded the 5-1 rout in the second half.

    Neymar’s goal, his 75th for Brazil, moved the forward within two of the Brazil record, held by legendary striker Pele.

    “Neymar is incredible. He is a magician,” Silva said. “Unfortunately, in the past years, he had very important injuries, but this year is different.

    Source: Livescore

  • Five changes Ghanaians would love to see in Ghana’s game against Nicaragua

    Against a less-fancied opponent in Nicaragua, coach Otto Addo has a perfect chance to convince Ghanaians of how his team could look at the World Cup.

    If Brazil were too big a team for him to implement his plans to perfection, a Nicaraguan side that lie 139th on the World Ranking should give him no such headache.

    Following the disastrous display against Brazil, there have been calls for changes, and here are highlights of five things Otto Addo must do in Tuesday’s game.

    Change the system

    Ghana found some stability in the second half against Brazil when Otto Addo switched to the three-back system.

    Many believed that the players in camp are more suited to the three-back system with wings backs and three forwards.

    It is the expectation of many that Otto Addo will go for a 3:4:3 formation.

    Change the goalkeeper

    Though he cannot be solely blamed for the goals conceded against Brazil, there is a feeling that Jojo Wollacott is not really up to scratch.

    He appears to lack the confidence and presence to command the goal areas. With the game being a test match, Otto Addo should try Richard Ofori and Manaf in the post.

    Sports Debate: Ghanaians share predictions for Ghana-Brazil clash

    0 seconds of 12 minutes, 48 secondsVolume 90%

    Protect Ayews and Baba Rahman from further abuse

    Baba Rahman and the Ayew brothers were the most vilified in the aftermath of Ghana’s drubbing at the hands of Brazil.

    Many believe that the three players do not deserve to be in the starting team as they have consistently failed to perform in Ghana jersey.

    Whiles some disagree, it will be right that Otto Addo protects from the public attack by not playing or starting them.

     

    Learn to defend and score from set-pieces

    Two of the goals that Ghana conceded against Brazil were from set-pieces. The mistakes were elementary as on both occasions, the Brazil attacks had a free run to attack the ball.

    Otto Addo must show that it has taken notice of that by working on it in training and showing the result during matches.

    Additionally, the team must also learn to create chances from set pieces they get. Set-pieces have now become an important avenue for goals.

    Give Elisha Owusu, and Afriyie Barnieh a chance

    In his brief cameo against Nigeria in March, Elisha Owusu gave an indication of what he could bring to the team.

    He has however not had enough time to fully convince Ghanaians that he merits his call-up.

    Afriyie Barnieh also deserves his chance to show that he was not just called up to make the numbers but as a potential candidate for the World Cup.

    Source: Ghanaweb

     

     

     

  • Thomas Partey leaves Black Stars camp, set to miss Nicaragua clash

    Vice-captain of the Black Stars, Thomas Partey, is reported to have left the team’s camp to return to London after missing Friday night’s friendly against Brazil.

    According to reports, the Arsenal star is expected to also miss Ghana’s second friendly of this international window against Nicaragua in Spain next week.

    Partey only returned from injury last weekend to play 78 minutes for Arsenal in their Premier League win against Brentford.

    He was then invited for the Black Stars games against Brazil and Nicaragua but he will end up not playing in ant of these two games.

    The 29-year-old is expected back in London for scans on his knee which flared up before the Ghana- Brazil friendly.

    Partey was in line to start for Ghana against the Selecao at the Stade Oceane in Le Havre but was replaced by Baba Iddrisu in the last minutes prior to the game.

    The midfielder was said to have felt uncomfortable around his knee area during the warm-up and was advised to pull out.

    However, a member of the Black Stars medical team confirmed to Joy Sports his withdrawal was only precautionary and that the player should be fine for the against Nicaragua.

    Ghana lost the game with a 3-0 score.

  • Tite pleased by ‘impressive’ Brazil against Ghana

    Brazil head coach Tite has praised the “impressive” performance of his side regaining possession against Ghana.

    The South American side blitzed to a 3-0 win against their African opponents in a friendly in France, Marquinhos opening the scoring inside nine minutes before Richarlison struck a brace before the break.

    Victory in Le Havre raises optimism for the five-time World Cup champions before the tournament later this year, with Tite’s side excelling in the final third and putting their opponents to the sword.

    However, Tite was impressed by the display of his side without possession against Ghana as they quickly responded to win the ball back.

    “In the first half, the team mobilised to, after losing possession, immediately regain control of the ball,” he said.

    “There are several different ways to call it: lose-and-press, five seconds of madness, everyone uses a different term. But our speed in regaining possession was impressive.

    “When the balls stopped, the team also went well, it was clean. Coming to France, without the athletes having to change time zone, helped.”

    In the second half, Brazil were unable to perform entirely up to the standard they displayed in the opening 45 minutes but Tite believes doing so would not have been possible.

    “In the first half, the team had pace and the performance, they dominated and controlled. In the second half, Ghana managed to control for 15 minutes, we could not finish them as they had a wall of five players,” he explained.

    “At the same time, we were solid. If we didn’t create, we didn’t let our opponent create either. With the entry of fresh players [off the bench], we regained dominance.

    “Then we had clear chances to extend our lead. Matheus Cunha had two clear chances, there were chances with Neymar, Rodrygo, Paqueta.

    “So, the team was able to do well in these different stages but being equal to what we did in the first half does not always work.”

    Brazil face Tunisia on Tuesday in their final game before the World Cup commences in Qatar in November.

    Source: Live score

     

     

  • Otto Addo admits Brazil selection gaffe, pledges to do better

    Otto Addo has admitted he made mistakes with his selection on Friday night as Black Stars suffered a 3-0 loss to the Selecao.

    In what looked more like a one-sided game, Brazil’s first-half brilliance did the damage as they put three goals past Ghana.

    Addo’s starting line-up for the game came under huge criticism and the gaffer was quick to admit he made mistakes in the clash against the five-time world champions in Le Havre.

    “I will start with myself because maybe the system was wrong. I have to look at it again and question myself first,” Addo said after the game.

    “The lineup was good, but we have to work harder, especially on the set pieces and we have to work harder to close the lines. There were too many gaps between the lines.

    “I think I made mistakes, I learnt a lot more about my players, and picking the next 11 will depend on the performance in the next game.”

    Addo however, commended the second half performance from his team.

    “In the second half, we showed we can also compete with them not only against the ball but also with the ball. Better positions, we had some half chances. I’m happy that in the second half we didn’t allow [a lot of chances].”

    The Black Stars will face Nicaragua in the next game on Tuesday in Spain.

     

  • Black Stars suffer 3-0 defeat to Brazil ahead of World Cup

    The Black Stars of Ghana on Friday suffered a humiliating defeat against Brazil in preparations towards the 2022 World Cup to be held in Qatar.

    The friendly ended three goals to nil of Neymar’s side at the Stade Oceane in Le Havre, France.

    This is Ghana’s fifth defeat against Brazil. The first half of the game was painful to watch as the Black Stars were whipped with three goals.

    A header from defender Marquinhos and a brace from Tottenham Hotspur forward, Richarlison gave the South Americans a comprehensive first-half lead.

    The second half showed a much better performance from the senior national team, however, they failed to score a goal.

    Head coach Otto-Addo and his players will now look to bounce back when they take on Nicaragua in Spain on Tuesday.

     

  • Ghana vs Brazil: Black Stars’ line up includes Wallacot, Partey

    Ghana is facing Brazil in a friendly today ahead of the 2022 FIFA World Cup to be staged in Qatar.

    Friday’s game is happening in Le Havre.

    Ahead of the game, head coach Otto Addo has released his first 11 players who would make the nation proud tonight.

    They are Wallacot, Odoi, Rahman, Djiku, Amartey, Partey, Kudus, Andre Ayew, Sulemana, Afena Gyan and Jordan Ayew.

    Substitutes for the game are Nurudeen, Ofori, Lamptey, Seidu, Mensah, Salisu, Aidoo, Iddrisu, Kyereh, Owusu, Afriyie, Semenyo, Issahaku, Bukari and Williams.

    Brazil promises to be a fierce contender for the Black Stars as it has claimed five World Cup trophies. However, captain of the Black Stars, Andre Ayew, has pledged victory for Ghana.

    Ahead of the game, Brazil’s biggest newspaper Globo, Tite said the country is set to approach the game with a 3-2-4-1 formation against the four-time African champions.

    Liverpool shot-stopper, Alisson, is expected to start in goal for the Samba boys while Marquinhos, Thiago Silva and Eder Militao will be the three centre-backs.

    The head coach is also reported to have settled on a midfield two with Alex Telles partnering Casemiro.

    Ghana’s line up:

  • PSG forward Neymar eyes Brazil top scorer record

    PSG’s Neymar will be chasing Brazil’s top scorer record which is currently been held by Pele.

    Brazil will take on Ghana in an international friendly tonight in Le Havre, France and the former Barcelona attacker will get the opportunity to break that record.

    Pele scored 77 goals after 92 appearances from 1957 to 1971. Neymar is currently on 74 goals after making 119 appearances from 2010 to 2022.

    Brazil has been labelled as the favourite in this encounter. Both countries are using this friendly to prepare for the 2022 World Cup which will be held in Qatar.

    Brazil head coach Tite shocked football fans when he left out Arsenal striker Gabriel Jesus.

  • Snubbed Joseph Paintsil wishes Black Stars well ahead of Brazil clash

    In-form Ghana winger Joseph Paintsil has sent well wishes to the Black Stars team ahead of their game against Brazil on Friday, September 23.

    The Black Stars will take on Brazil in their first international friendly on Friday, September 23rd in France before travelling to Spain to play Nicaragua on September 27th.

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    Despite missing out in Otto Addo’s 29-man squad, the enterprising Genk winger has wished the team well ahead of the Brazil encounter.

    “All the best guys” he tweeted while replying to a tweet from the Black Stars official page.

    Source: footballghana

     

  • Athletic Bilbao forward Inaki Williams set to make Ghana debut against Brazil

    Spanish-born forward Inaki Williams could make his debut for Ghana when they face Brazil tonight.

    Ghana will play Brazil on Friday, September 23 in a pre-World Cup friendly and the 28-year-old who recently switched allegiance to play for the West African powerhouse will most likely make his debut.

    Inaki, who holds the most consecutive La Liga games record earned his maiden call up for the friendlies against Brazil and Nicaragua this week.

    Williams is expected to start in attack for Ghana when they take on five times world champions Brazil in Le Havre on Friday night.

    Ghana will play Nicaragua three days later in Spain as preparations continue ahead of November’s World

    Source: footballghana

  • Brazil vs Ghana: Brazil should not expect easy game – Ayew

    Ghana captain, Andre Ayew has promised that the Black Stars of Ghana will pose a strong challenge to the Selecao of Brazil when both teams lock horn on Friday in an international friendly match.

    The match is expected to take place in Le Harve, France before the Black Stars jet out to Spain for another friendly against Nicargaua on September 27.

    According to Ayew, Brazil is the best in the world with the quality of players they have playing for top clubs in Europe.


    He, however, stated that they will be unintimidated by that when they face the Samba boys.

    He said at a pre-match conference, “Brazil for me is currently the best in the world. So we are playing the best and we have to acknowledge that they have players playing in the top clubs week-in-week-out, winning trophies.

    “We are not going to compare ourselves to them. That will be making mistake. But we are going to challenge and go into the battle. That’s 100%.”

    Source; Vanguard

  • Ghanaians on social media confident about Black Stars beating Brazil

    Ghanaians are feeling confident about the Black Stars beating Brazil in an international friendly on Friday, September 23, 2022.

    Ghana kick off their preparations for the 2022 FIFA World Cup with a big test against the five-time world champions, whom they have not beaten in four meetings.

     

    Ghanaians on social media are in an optimistic mood as many believe the Black Stars are capable of recording their first victory over Brazil today at the Stade Oceane.

    Meanwhile, there is a who opined that the World’s number one ranked team will take Ghana for a ride and trash the four times African Champions.

    The match is set at 18:30 kickoff time at the Stade Océane in France.

    Check out some reactions below:

     

     

     

    Source: Ghanaweb

  • Brazil’s possible line-up to face Ghana in pre-World Cup friendly

    Brazil held their final training session on Thursday ahead of the friendly game against Ghana on Friday, September 23 in Le Havre.

    The five-time world champions will lock horns with the Black Stars as part of their preparations for the 2022 FIFA World Cup to be staged in Qatar.

    According to Brazil’s biggest newspaper Globo, Tite is set to approach the game with a 3-2-4-1 position against the four-time African champions.

    Liverpool shot-stopper, Alisson, is expected to start in goal for the Samba boys while Marquinhos, Thiago Silva and Eder Militao will be the three centre-backs.

    The head coach is also reported to have settled on a midfield two with Alex Telles partnering Casemiro.

    Raphinha, Lucas Paqueta, Neymar and Vinicius Jr are expected to play behind Richarlison, who will be the head of the attack.

    Here is Brazil’s possible starting line-up for the game: Alisson, Militão, Marquinhos, Silva; Telles; Casemiro; Raphinha, Paqueta, Neymar, Vinicius; Richarlison.

    The game is scheduled to kick off at 18:30 GMT with live commentary on Joy 99.7 FM.

    Source: Myjoyonline

     

  • Watch as Neymar joins Brazilian teammates in final training for Ghana game

    Like the Black Stars of Ghana, the Seleção Brazil held their final training session for today’s game in France.

    With the full complement of their squad, coach Tite and his technical team wrapped up preparations by practicing set-pieces, and penalties and assessing the sharpness of their goalkeepers.

    PSG star, Neymar who suffered a slight knock has recovered fully and took part in the training.

    Just like the Black Stars who appear relaxed and confident, the Brazilians also had fun and had smiles on their faces.

    The likes of Richarlison, Vinicius Jnr, Allison, Thiago Silva, and other stars participated in the exercise.

    Meanwhile, trusted Brazilian newspaper Globo is predicting that coach Tite will go for a three-back system against Ghana.

    Their predicted lineup has Liverpool goalie, Allison in post with Thiago Silva, Marquinhos, and Eder Miltao as the three center-backs.

    In midfield, they go for a two-man midfield with Casemiro sitting deep alongside Alex Telles of Manchester United.

    Vinicius Jnr and Raphinha both flank Neymar and Lucas Paqueta in the central midfield and central attacking midfield roles.

    The lone striker is Tottenham’s Richarlison who per the report has been picked over Liverpool’s Robert Firmino.

     

    Source: Ghanaweb