Nike and Puma Had Coach Parreira as Hostage, Say Brazilian Fans

Brazil returned home from the World Cup on Monday, June 3, to little fanfare, and coach Carlos Alberto Parreira escaping out a back door to avoid fans and the media.

Brazil’s 1-0 defeat to France in Saturday’s quarterfinal left most Brazilians with a feeling of resignation rather than anger. Only a few supporters even bothered to turn up to jeer the squad on its return.

"I would have preferred not to have a scored a goal and to have come home a champion," said midfielder Gilberto, who netted in the 3-1 group-stage win over Japan. "For me, (my goal) didn’t do very much."

Gilberto was the only player cheered by fans at the airport and one of the few to talk to the press.

Later, Parreira held a press conference at the Brazilian Soccer Confederation headquarters and said he regretted the loss as much as anybody else.

"No one here wanted to be champion of the world more them me," he said.

On his future as coach, Parreira said he would only discuss that after talking with confederation president Ricardo Teixeira.

Asked whether Real Madrid defender Roberto Carlos was to blame for the hole in Brazil’s defense which allowed the winning goal, Parreira said, "We’re not going to look for a scapegoat where one doesn’t exist. We lost and France won. If no one made any mistakes and everyone was perfect all games would end 0-0."

Most fans, however, were quick to pin all the blame on Parreira.

Jorge Ganem, a 55-year-old lawyer, said Parreira didn’t use his bench more because of contractual obligations to sponsors.

"Look what Parreira’s done, he had a great bench but he didn’t use them because he’s beholden to Nike and Puma or whoever," Ganem said.

Many younger Brazilians couldn’t remember the team coming home before the final.

Pravda – www.pravda.ru

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil 3-0 Soccer Loss to Argentina in Beijing Drives President Lula Mad

The president of Brazil, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva criticized sharply the spirit of ...

20 Minutes and Tickets for Brazil’s Carnaval Were Gone

Tickets for Rio’s famous Carnaval parade, the centerpiece of Brazil’s annual pre-Lenten festival, sold ...

Brazil Adopts 99 Measures to Stem US$ 30 Billion in Losses to Piracy

Brazil’s National Council to Combat Piracy and Intellectual Property Violations (CNCP) unanimously approved, March ...

Brazil to Teach a Man to Eat Fish

Fish consumption in Brazil is still modest. The average Brazilian eats only seven kilograms ...

Brazil Opens Technology Center in Africa

The opening of a Brazilian Agricultural Research Corporation (Embrapa) office in Africa is going ...

All Signed for Brazil to Start Getting US$ 10 Billion Chinese Loan

Petrobras, the Brazilian state-controlled oil and gas multinational, informed that it has signed a ...

With Varig’s Demise TAM Becomes Brazil’s Number One Airline

Brazilian Airline TAM. which was already Brazil’s largest domestic company, has now become also ...

U.S. GDP Scares Brazil’s Bulls

Brazilian and Latin American equities continued to falter, as weakness in the U.S. negatively ...

Brazil Misses Another Chance to Do Indians Justice

Earlier this month, on January 3, Brazilian Justice Ellen Gracie of the Supreme Federal ...

200 Landless Families Invade Brazilian Farm Belonging to Paper Company

Under renewed pressure from the Landless Rural Workers Movement (MST), the Idaph, Brazil’s Forest ...