Saturday, June 20, 2026

Can Endrick Replace Raphinha on Brazil's Right Wing?

Brazil’s commanding 3-0 World Cup group-stage victory over Haiti should have been remembered as another demonstration of the Seleção’s attacking abundance. Instead, the match may ultimately be recalled as the evening Brazil lost one of its most structurally important players.

When Raphinha limped off in the 38th minute with a suspected hamstring injury in Philadelphia, Carlo Ancelotti instantly faced a problem larger than a simple personnel replacement. Brazil did not merely lose a winger; they lost width, defensive discipline, pressing balance, and one of the side’s most intelligent tactical interpreters.

The question now confronting Ancelotti ahead of the decisive clash with Scotland is not simply who replaces Raphinha, but rather: how should Brazil evolve without him?

And within that dilemma emerges the most intriguing possibility of all - Endrick on the right flank.

More Than a Number Nine

At first glance, Endrick appears an unlikely solution. He is naturally a centre-forward, a striker whose instincts revolve around attacking central spaces, exploding into the penalty area, and finishing sequences with ruthless directness.

Yet modern attacking football increasingly blurs positional boundaries, and Endrick possesses qualities that allow him to transcend the limitations of a traditional No. 9.

As a naturally left-footed attacker, operating from the right wing transforms him into an inverted forward rather than a conventional touchline winger. Instead of stretching the field horizontally like Raphinha, Endrick attacks diagonally. His first instinct is not to cross, but to invade central corridors - cutting inward onto his stronger foot, accelerating through half-spaces, and turning transition moments into immediate scoring situations.

This profile fundamentally changes Brazil’s attacking geometry.

With overlapping support from Danilo and creative combinations through Lucas Paquetá, Endrick would not be asked to imitate Raphinha’s role. He would instead become a secondary striker beginning from a wider launch point.

That distinction is critical.

The Lyon Experiment

Importantly, this tactical possibility is not theoretical improvisation.

During his 2025/26 loan spell at Olympique Lyon, Endrick was deliberately tested in wider attacking roles to accommodate more static central forwards. The experiment revealed dimensions of his game often overshadowed by his reputation as a pure finisher.

From the right side, his acceleration became even more devastating in open grass. His physical resistance allowed him to survive isolated duels against full-backs, while his direct dribbling gave Lyon an aggressive vertical outlet during transitions.

Most notably, Endrick showed an ability to move from wide to central spaces with frightening speed - a trait that mirrors the evolution of many elite modern forwards. Rather than remaining fixed to the wing, he drifted inward like an auxiliary striker, constantly threatening the blind side of defenders.

For Brazil, that dynamic could become enormously valuable.

A Different Brazil Entirely

Replacing Raphinha with Endrick would not be a like-for-like alteration. It would create an entirely different attacking ecosystem.

Standard Structure (with Raphinha)

Vinícius Júnior - Matheus Cunha - Raphinha

In this version, Brazil’s attack maintains width and positional balance. Raphinha stretches defensive lines, tracks back relentlessly, and provides creative delivery from advanced areas. His movements create spacing for Vinícius and allow Cunha to drift between lines.

Altered Structure (with Endrick)

Vinícius Júnior -  Matheus Cunha - Endrick

This version is more chaotic, more vertical, and considerably more aggressive.

Cunha’s tendency to drop deep and connect play could create channels for Endrick to attack from the weak side. Instead of receiving to create, Endrick receives to destroy - attacking depth immediately, flooding the box alongside Vinícius, and transforming Brazil into a side built around direct penetration rather than controlled width.

The consequence is obvious: Brazil would gain another goal threat but sacrifice some tactical equilibrium.

Raphinha offers defensive volume and structure. Endrick offers unpredictability and violence in transition.

Against a deep defensive block, that trade-off might actually benefit Brazil.

The Alternatives on Ancelotti’s Board

Still, Ancelotti possesses more orthodox options.

Rayan

The immediate substitute against Haiti, Rayan represented the safest in-game adjustment. His inclusion suggested Ancelotti initially preferred preserving positional symmetry rather than redesigning the attack mid-match.

Luiz Henrique

Perhaps the purest tactical replacement available. A natural right winger, Luiz Henrique offers authentic width, touchline progression, and crossing ability — the closest approximation to Raphinha’s natural role.

Gabriel Martinelli

Though primarily left-sided, Martinelli’s relentless pressing intensity and tactical versatility make him a viable solution anywhere across the front line. His work rate would preserve much of Brazil’s defensive structure out of possession.

Each alternative maintains balance.

Endrick, however, changes the emotional temperature of the attack itself.

The Final Calculation

Can Endrick play on the right wing?

Absolutely.

His left-footed profile, explosive acceleration, and instinctive inward movements make him naturally suited to the role of an inverted right-sided forward. The evidence from Lyon demonstrates he can execute those responsibilities at a high level.

But the deeper question is whether Brazil should make that shift.

Deploying Endrick wide would not simply replace Raphinha - it would signal a philosophical adjustment from controlled positional play toward a more ruthless, transition-heavy attack. Brazil would become less stable, but potentially far more dangerous.

And perhaps that is exactly the temptation confronting Carlo Ancelotti.

Because in tournament football, there are moments when tactical balance matters less than raw devastation in the final third.

An asymmetrical front three of Vinícius Júnior, Matheus Cunha, and Endrick may lack traditional harmony.

But it could also become Brazil’s most terrifying attacking weapon of the World Cup.

Thank You

Faisal Caesar 

Paraguay’s Defiant Victory Leaves Türkiye on the Brink as Galarza Writes World Cup History

Paraguay breathed life back into their World Cup campaign with a fierce and unforgettable 1-0 victory over Türkiye in Group D — a match defined by relentless pressure, heroic resistance, and a goal that entered football history within seconds.

Inside a thunderous stadium in California’s Bay Area, where Paraguayan drums echoed throughout the night, La Albirroja produced a performance built not on possession or dominance, but on courage, discipline, and survival.

The decisive moment arrived almost instantly.

Just 64 seconds after kick-off, Matías Galarza unleashed a stunning long-range strike that flew past the Turkish defence and into the net, giving Paraguay the fastest goal of this World Cup and the earliest winning goal ever recorded in tournament history. Timed at 1 minute and 4 seconds, it surpassed Ismael Saibari’s earlier record set for Morocco the same day and became the quickest decisive goal in FIFA World Cup history.

For Paraguay, still haunted by the humiliation of their 4-1 defeat to the United States in the opening round, the goal was more than a breakthrough — it was an act of rebellion.

Türkiye responded with urgency and sophistication. Vincenzo Montella’s side monopolised possession, at one stage controlling nearly 79 percent of the ball, and bombarded the Paraguayan goal with wave after wave of attacks. Yet football, cruel and irrational as ever, refused to reward them.

Kenan Yildiz, Arda Güler and Hakan Çalhanoğlu orchestrated much of Türkiye’s attacking play with elegance and invention, but their finishing collapsed under pressure. Türkiye ended the match with an astonishing 32 attempts and no goals, mirroring the wastefulness of their opening defeat to Australia, where they had managed 30 shots without scoring.

Across two World Cup matches, Türkiye have now produced 62 shots without finding the net — the highest total by any team across a two-game span without a goal since records began in 1966.

Paraguay, meanwhile, defended as though every clearance carried the weight of history.

Their task became even harder just before halftime when Miguel Almirón was shown a red card after VAR reviewed comments directed at Mert Müldür while the Paraguayan forward covered his mouth — the first dismissal under FIFA’s new anti-discrimination protocol regarding concealed speech during confrontations.

Reduced to ten men, Paraguay retreated deeper and suffered longer. Türkiye attacked relentlessly, but desperation increasingly replaced precision. Every missed chance amplified the tension. Every Paraguayan tackle drew louder roars from the stands.

At the centre of Paraguay’s resistance stood Julio Enciso.

Coming into the tournament under an injury cloud after suffering a knock against Nicaragua in a warm-up match, the Strasbourg midfielder delivered a performance of extraordinary maturity and influence. Alongside his assist for Galarza’s goal, Enciso created four chances, completed six successful dribbles, and won nine of his twelve duels.

At just 22 years and 148 days old, Enciso became the youngest Paraguayan player since 1966 to register two assists in a single World Cup tournament. He also joined Francisco Arce and Roque Santa Cruz as only the third Paraguayan player ever to provide assists in multiple World Cup matches.

The statistics surrounding Paraguay’s victory only deepened the sense of improbability.

Türkiye completed nearly 79 percent possession — the sixth-highest figure recorded in a World Cup match since 1966. Defender Abdülkerim Bardakcı completed all 98 passes he attempted, setting a new tournament-era record for flawless passing accuracy in a World Cup match. Yet none of it mattered.

Football ultimately belongs not to the team that dominates the ball, but to the one that survives the moment.

Paraguay have always carried a reputation for resilience on the world stage. Their golden run to the quarter-finals in 2010 — ended only by eventual champions Spain — remains the greatest achievement in the nation’s football history. Against Türkiye, echoes of that stubborn spirit resurfaced.

Of the last four occasions a team has won a World Cup match after receiving a first-half red card, Paraguay are now responsible for two — the other coming against Slovenia in 2002.

For Türkiye, the defeat was devastating.

Montella’s side played with ambition, technical quality, and attacking bravery, but lacked the ruthless instinct required at this level. Elimination now looms after two matches that showcased promise everywhere except in front of goal.

“I’m sad, but I’m proud of my players,” Montella admitted afterward. “They gave everything until the final whistle. That’s football.”

For Paraguay, however, this was football at its most emotional and unforgiving: a night where suffering became strength, where ten men stood against an avalanche, and where Matías Galarza’s strike after 64 unforgettable seconds transformed despair into belief once again.

Thank You 

Faisal Caesar 

Brazil Wins, But Questions Remain Beneath the Scoreline

Brazil finally found relief in the 2026 World Cup, though not yet a complete conviction. Against a limited Haitian side in Philadelphia, Carlo Ancelotti’s team secured a comfortable 3–0 victory built almost entirely in a dominant first half. The result lifted Brazil to the top of Group C, but beyond the scoreline, the performance revealed both the promise and the unfinished identity of this new Seleção.

The atmosphere inside the packed stadium - more than 68,000 supporters filling the stands - carried the weight of expectation. Brazil entered the match under pressure after an uninspiring draw against Morocco, and Ancelotti responded with decisive changes. Danilo returned to the defense, Matheus Cunha reclaimed the center-forward role, and the structure gained greater verticality and aggression.

The most important conclusion from the evening was tactical rather than statistical: Brazil currently looks far more dangerous in transition than in positional domination.

That reality became clear in the opening half. Haiti, despite its defensive limitations, refused to completely retreat into its own penalty area. Whenever the Caribbean side attempted to circulate possession, Brazil’s pressing traps emerged. Lucas Paquetá, Bruno Guimarães, and Matheus Cunha compressed the central spaces aggressively, while Vinícius Júnior and Raphinha attacked the channels with relentless speed.

The first goal summarized the philosophy of the night. Cunha initiated the play himself with a recovery in midfield. Bruno Guimarães accelerated the sequence with a precise forward pass, Vinícius attacked the space, and Cunha finished the move he had started. It was less a crafted positional attack and more a vertical burst of intensity - direct, ruthless, and efficient.

The second goal followed the exact same script.

Paquetá recovered possession, Vinícius immediately drove into open grass, and Cunha once again punished Haiti with a powerful finish. Brazil’s best football did not emerge from patient circulation or sophisticated combinations around the penalty area. It emerged from chaos - from forcing turnovers and attacking before the opponent could reorganize.

That is perhaps the clearest fingerprint of Ancelotti’s Brazil so far.

Vinícius Júnior remained the emotional and technical engine of the team. Even when Brazil struggled collectively, the Real Madrid forward transformed transitions into danger almost by instinct. He participated in all three goals and scored the third himself after Paquetá broke Haiti’s midfield line with a subtle feint and through pass. Vinícius’ acceleration, decision-making, and freedom without defensive responsibility gave Brazil its sharpest attacking weapon.

Yet the match also exposed several concerns hidden beneath the comfortable scoreline.

Brazil lost intensity after halftime. The pressing became slower, the midfield less compact, and the defensive distances wider. Haiti suddenly found space to circulate possession and finished the second half with significantly more attacking presence. Alisson was forced into important saves, particularly from aerial situations, and the Brazilian defensive structure again looked vulnerable when unable to sustain pressure high up the pitch.

The contrast between halves revealed a team still searching for control.

Brazil can overwhelm weaker opponents with athleticism, transitions, and individual brilliance, but the collective organization remains inconsistent. The spacing without the ball is not always coordinated, the central pressing can become passive, and prolonged possession phases still lack rhythm and imagination. Against stronger opponents, these issues may become decisive.

The night’s biggest concern, however, arrived before halftime.

Raphinha, one of Brazil’s most aggressive runners behind the defensive line, left the field with pain in his right thigh. The injury occurred during the action that led to the second goal - symbolic of the sacrifice demanded by Brazil’s transition-heavy approach. His departure visibly worried Ancelotti’s staff. If imaging confirms a muscle injury, Brazil could lose one of its most important tactical pieces for the remainder of the tournament.

Even so, the substitutions offered intriguing glimpses into the squad’s depth.

Rayan entered with personality and gradually grew into the game, participating in several dangerous attacks during the second half. Gabriel Martinelli added fresh movement from the left side, constantly attacking diagonally into space, while Endrick provided the explosive unpredictability supporters had been waiting to see. Though his goal was ruled offside, his movement and timing immediately altered the rhythm of Brazil’s attacks.

Still, this victory should be interpreted with balance.

Brazil won comfortably because the difference in individual quality was enormous and because the first-half pressure suffocated Haiti before the match could settle. But the performance did not erase the broader doubts surrounding the team. It merely postponed them.

There are encouraging signs. Matheus Cunha rediscovered confidence and justified his return to the starting lineup with two goals and tireless pressing. Vinícius continues to evolve into Brazil’s unquestioned attacking leader. The team also demonstrated greater focus and tactical discipline compared to the opening match.

Yet Ancelotti’s larger challenge remains unresolved: transforming a collection of elite talents into a side capable of controlling matches without depending entirely on transition moments.

For one night in Philadelphia, Brazil surfed on the momentum of Cunha’s finishing, Vinícius’ brilliance, and the emotional relief of a first World Cup victory. But beneath the celebration lies a more complex reality. The Seleção is improving, certainly  - though still far from complete.

And perhaps that is the most honest reading of this 3–0 victory: Brazil won convincingly, but not conclusively.

Thank You 

Faisal Caesar 

Friday, June 19, 2026

The Goal That Announced a King: Pelé, Wales, and the Birth of Football Immortality

The reactions of Jack Kelsey, Mel Charles, and Stuart Williams told the entire story before history itself could. They stood stunned - not merely beaten, but bewildered - by a teenager who had dismantled them with a moment of impossible brilliance.

Yet this was no ordinary 17-year-old.

In only his second FIFA World Cup appearance, the young Brazilian named Pelé had not yet become a global icon. The world did not know that this skinny teenager from Três Corações would go on to conquer an unprecedented three World Cups, reshape football’s imagination, and become simply “The King.”

But on that June afternoon in Gothenburg in 1958, football witnessed the precise moment immortality began.

Pelé received Didi’s header on his chest inside a crowded Welsh penalty area. In one breathtaking movement, he flicked the ball over himself and away from the desperate reach of Mel Charles. Before the defenders could recover, he struck the bouncing ball low toward goal. A slight deflection off Stuart Williams wrong-footed Jack Kelsey, Wales’ heroic goalkeeper, and the ball rolled into the net.

The stadium erupted. Brazil exhaled. Football changed forever.

“It was the most important goal of my career,” Pelé later told FIFA.

“It was the only goal against a strong Wales team. And for me personally, it was the start of everything.”

And indeed, it was.

That strike made Pelé the youngest goalscorer in World Cup history - a record that still stands. More importantly, it marked the birth of football’s first truly global superstar.

Brazil’s Burden Before Glory

To understand the weight of that goal, one must first understand Brazil’s scars.

Eight years earlier, the nation had suffered the devastating trauma of the 1950 World Cup final defeat to Uruguay at the Maracanã - a national tragedy still remembered as the Maracanazo. The pain lingered. Brazil’s disappointing campaign in Switzerland in 1954 only deepened fears that the country’s immense footballing talent would never translate into world dominance.

By 1958, Brazil approached football almost scientifically. They travelled to Sweden with psychologists, fitness experts, and an unusually large support staff - revolutionary thinking for the era. The nation was determined not merely to entertain, but to win.

Yet doubts remained.

Brazil opened strongly against Austria, but a frustrating goalless draw against England exposed hesitation within the squad. Two extraordinary talents, Pelé and Garrincha, watched from the bench.

Pelé was considered too young. Garrincha, according to team psychologists, was supposedly too irresponsible and mentally fragile for high-pressure football.

History would soon humiliate that assessment.

Against the Soviet Union, both men were finally unleashed. Garrincha terrorised defenders with anarchic dribbling and struck the post within moments. Pelé combined brilliantly with Vavá as Brazil defeated one of world football’s emerging superpowers.

Brazil had discovered its soul.

Wales: The Forgotten Giants

Waiting in the quarter-finals was a Welsh side far stronger than history often remembers.

This was Wales’ first and, for 64 years, only World Cup appearance. They were disciplined, resilient, and fiercely organised. Draws against Sweden, Hungary, and Mexico demonstrated their stubbornness, while a playoff victory over Hungary secured their place against Brazil.

But Wales entered the match wounded.

Their greatest player, John Charles - one of football’s rare complete footballers, equally world-class in defence and attack - had been injured after brutal treatment from Hungary. Many still believe Wales could have defeated Brazil had Charles played.

Without him, Wales defended heroically.

Jack Kelsey produced save after save. Mel Charles marshalled the defence magnificently. For over an hour, Brazil’s dazzling attackers found no way through the red wall before them.

Then came the moment.

Not a thunderous strike. Not an elaborate team move. Just a split-second of genius that separated a gifted footballer from a future myth.

The Beginning of a Legend

The goal itself was not aesthetically perfect. Stuart Williams’ deflection helped deceive Kelsey. Yet greatness in football is often measured less by beauty than by inevitability.

Pelé created inevitability.

Cliff Jones, Wales winger and future Tottenham Hotspur star, remembered the shock vividly:

“We’d heard of Didi, Vavá and Garrincha, but we didn’t know about this young kid called Pelé.

We soon found out and the world of football found out.”

The world truly did.

Brazil defeated France in the semi-final, with Pelé scoring a sensational hat-trick. In the final against hosts Sweden, the teenager scored twice as Brazil lifted their first World Cup trophy.

The boy had become football’s future.

Why Pelé Endures

Statistics alone cannot explain Pelé’s enduring mythology.

Many players have scored goals. Few have transformed football into poetry.

Pelé represented possibility - the idea that football could be art without losing its brutality, joy without losing competitiveness. He combined technical genius with athletic power, imagination with efficiency. He could dribble, create, score, dominate physically, and mesmerise emotionally.

As Cliff Jones later reflected:

“He had pace, ball control, both feet, was great in the air and was physical. He was an outstanding individual.”

The respect Wales held for Brazil after 1958 became so profound that the Welsh were invited to South America before the 1962 World Cup for warm-up matches. Pelé scored repeatedly against them again, but by then, Wales understood exactly who they were facing.

Not merely a footballer.

A phenomenon.

The Goal That Still Echoes

When Wales finally returned to the World Cup in Qatar 2022, memories of Sweden 1958 resurfaced once more. Pelé’s goal - the strike that ended Wales’ greatest football adventure  - remained embedded in the nation’s football identity.

After Pelé’s death, Gareth Bale described him simply as:

“A giant of the game and the reason so many of us love football.”

The Football Association of Wales echoed the sentiment beautifully:

“Pelé broke our hearts in 1958 to score his first World Cup goal to knock Cymru out. Today our hearts are broken again.”

And perhaps that is the true measure of greatness.

More than six decades later, the image still survives: a teenage boy in yellow controlling the ball with his chest, escaping defenders in one impossible movement, and quietly announcing himself to the world.

A goal.

A beginning.

The creation of a king.

Thank You 

Faisal Caesar 

Thursday, June 18, 2026

Conviction or Confusion: Brazil’s Tactical Dilemma

Brazil arrive in Philadelphia carrying an old uncertainty disguised as tactical experimentation.

Under Carlo Ancelotti, the Seleção have shown flashes of elite potential, moments where individual brilliance briefly masks the deeper structural questions surrounding the team. Yet as Brazil prepare to face Haiti in the World Cup, the central issue is no longer about personnel alone. It is about identity.

Ancelotti continues his familiar ritual of secrecy regarding the starting lineup, but training sessions at Columbia Park have already revealed the direction of his thinking. The Italian appears inclined to return to the 4-2-4 system that has shaped much of his tenure — a formation designed to stretch the field horizontally, isolate defenders in space, and maximize Brazil’s attacking talent in transition.

The probable alterations are subtle but revealing. Danilo is expected to replace Ibañez in defence, while Luiz Henrique may come in for Lucas Paquetá, offering greater width and directness. Yet even as the personnel shifts, uncertainty remains the defining theme around this Brazil side.

Recent training sessions exposed the fragility beneath the experimentation. Gabriel Magalhães trained separately as Brazil carefully monitored fatigue in his left thigh adductor, unwilling to risk aggravating the issue into something more serious. Meanwhile, Raphinha continues to recover from painful blisters suffered against Morocco, forcing Ancelotti to reduce his workload. Léo Pereira and Gabriel Martinelli stepped into the provisional side during Wednesday’s session, though indications suggest the regular starters may still be trusted against Haiti.

The midfield remains perhaps the clearest symbol of Ancelotti’s indecision. Fabinho partnered Bruno Guimarães in training, yet Casemiro — a figure of authority and continuity — still hovers over the selection debate. Before his substitution against Morocco due to a yellow card precaution, Casemiro had started twelve of Ancelotti’s thirteen matches in charge. Whether Brazil choose control, balance, or aggression in midfield will ultimately define how this formation functions.

But beyond the tactical diagrams lies a more troubling concern: conviction.

A national team can survive injuries. It can survive poor form. What it struggles to survive is uncertainty from the touchline.

Criticism emerging from within Brazilian football circles has focused less on the individual changes and more on the absence of a settled footballing philosophy. The issue is not whether Brazil play in a 4-3-3 or a 4-2-4. Modern international football demands flexibility. The real concern is whether the players themselves fully understand what the team is supposed to become.

“Lack of conviction undermines the athlete’s confidence,” one critic observed. “The coach can change players according to the opponent, but what cannot happen is uncertainty about the model itself.”

That distinction matters.

The comparison with Lionel Scaloni and Argentina is unavoidable. Scaloni evolved his system throughout Argentina’s rise, but every adjustment emerged from a stable foundation. By the time tactical flexibility became a weapon, the players already understood the identity of the side. The mechanisms were tested. The chemistry was trusted.

Brazil, by contrast, arrive at this World Cup still searching for certainty.

Throughout the cycle, there has been no sustained run of performances convincing enough to establish a definitive model. Formations have shifted. Midfields have rotated. Partnerships have changed. Individual quality continues to rescue moments, but collective clarity has remained elusive.

And perhaps that is what makes Brazil simultaneously dangerous and vulnerable.

Dangerous because a squad filled with elite attacking talent can explode into brilliance at any moment. Vulnerable because tournament football punishes hesitation with ruthless efficiency.

Against Haiti, Brazil are still expected to dominate. The technical gap is undeniable. Yet the deeper question surrounding Ancelotti’s side extends far beyond one group-stage fixture in Philadelphia.

Brazil are not merely trying to win matches.

They are still trying to discover who they are.

Thank You 

Faisal Caesar