Footballing nations, like empires, often collapse not because they run out of talent, but because they become prisoners of memory. The most dangerous moments in their history arrive not when they are weak, but when they begin confusing sentiment with strategy, when the romance of the past starts dictating the decisions of the present.
Brazil, perhaps more than any footballing civilization on Earth, has long lived under the spell of nostalgia.
And history has returned with cruel symmetry.
In 2002, the country stood at a similar emotional crossroads. Across Brazil, public pressure reached fever pitch as fans demanded the inclusion of Romário in the World Cup squad. The hero of 1994 was in superb domestic form, and for many Brazilians, his brilliance seemed the obvious cure for a stuttering Seleção struggling to inspire confidence.
Yet while the nation pleaded with its heart, Luiz Felipe Scolari listened to football itself.
He understood a truth supporters often resist: football evolves faster than memory. Romário’s genius remained intact, but modern football had become increasingly dependent on intensity, transitional speed, and physical dynamism. To maximize the devastating potential of Ronaldo and Rivaldo, Brazil required not a monument to the past but a player who embodied the future.
So Scolari made the politically dangerous decision.
He gave the number 11 shirt to a young, awkward, buck-toothed Ronaldinho.
The public saw betrayal. Scolari saw structure.
Months later Brazil lifted its fifth World Cup.
The lesson was never about Romário. It was about courage, the willingness to reject emotional comfort in pursuit of tactical necessity.
Twenty-four years later, Brazil appears to have forgotten that lesson.
Now it is 2026. The names have changed. The anxieties remain.
The Seleção once again enters a World Cup cycle searching for identity. The midfield remains creatively unstable, the squad lacks an obvious focal point, and Brazil no longer carries the aura of inevitability that once accompanied every tournament appearance.
But where Scolari once resisted public mythology, Carlo Ancelotti appears to have surrendered to it.
By recalling a physically diminished Neymar while excluding Chelsea’s João Pedro, Brazil has not merely made a squad selection. It has revealed a deeper philosophical crisis: an inability to detach itself from an era that, despite its brilliance, never truly conquered world football.
This is not simply about age.
It is about evolution.
Modern football increasingly punishes passengers. International tournaments are no longer won through isolated moments of brilliance alone; they are won through systems, through collective movement, pressing structures, tactical elasticity and relentless physical intensity.
João Pedro represented precisely that evolution.
Entering his physical prime, producing elite numbers in England, and operating as a modern hybrid attacker capable of linking play while maintaining defensive intensity, he embodied the qualities Brazil increasingly lacks.
Neymar represents something different.
No decline in talent, few footballers of his generation possessed greater imagination, but a style increasingly at odds with football’s direction.
For years Neymar's game has depended upon gravitational centrality. He slows rhythms, invites contact, demands the ball repeatedly, and turns attacking sequences into personalized stages. At his peak this was tolerable because his individual genius justified structural compromise.
But age alters football’s mathematics.
A physically fragile superstar demands collective compensation. Defensively, others must run more. Structurally, others sacrifice space and rhythm. In elite tournaments decided by microscopic margins, those concessions become expensive.
Football's modern landscape rarely forgives luxury.
And perhaps that explains Brazil’s deeper tragedy.
For over a decade, Neymar has simultaneously been the face of the Seleção and its defining dependency.
Since the decline of the Kaká-Robinho generation, Brazilian football has searched desperately for another mythical figure - a new heir to the lineage of Pelé, Romário and Ronaldo. Neymar accepted the burden and, statistically, thrived. He became Brazil's all-time leading scorer and delivered moments of extraordinary artistry.
But World Cup history possesses a brutal memory.
Legacy is not measured by aggregate numbers accumulated over qualification campaigns or continental fixtures. It is forged in the furnace of decisive nights.
And Neymar's World Cup journey increasingly resembles a paradox: dazzling individual episodes interrupted by injuries, emotional volatility and unfinished narratives.
Perhaps his greatest limitation has always reflected a broader flaw within Brazilian football itself, the belief that complexity is inherently superior to simplicity.
Football increasingly rewards speed of thought over beauty of gesture.
The simple pass released early. The immediate transition. The quick decision.
The transformation of Vinícius Júnior into a truly decisive global superstar arrived when he abandoned excess, reduced unnecessary touches and accelerated his choices.
Neymar never fully made that evolution.
Brazil never fully made it either.
That may explain why, for the first time in generations, Brazil enters a World Cup not as a feared favorite but as a nation uncertain of itself.
Injuries to key players such as Éder Militão, Estêvão and Rodrygo have already reduced the margin for error. This squad no longer possesses enough overwhelming individual talent to sustain an arrogant footballing identity.
Ancelotti inherited an imperfect team.
To compensate, he needed structure.
He needed pressing.
He needed collective resilience.
He needed the future.
Instead, Brazil appears once again seduced by the oldest temptation in football: the fantasy of one last miracle from one last hero.
The symbolism surrounding Neymar’s return, the emotional rehabilitation story, the narratives of redemption, the romance of a final mission, creates a compelling spectacle.
But World Cups are profoundly indifferent to sentiment.
They have no memory. No gratitude. No nostalgia.
Scolari understood this in 2002.
Great footballing empires survive because they know when to let go of yesterday. They understand that dynasties are preserved not by honoring legends but by replacing them.
Brazil once possessed that ruthlessness.
Today it seems increasingly uncertain.
Until the Seleção rediscovers the courage to prioritize collective structure over individual mythology, the sixth star may remain what it has become for an entire generation:
not a destination, but a memory of a future that never arrived.
Thank You
Faisal Caesar




