Five challenges Ancelotti faces as Brazil reign kicks off

Five challenges Ancelotti faces as Brazil reign kicks off
Brazil's national football team head coach, Italian Carlo Ancelotti, during a training session in Sao Paulo, Brazil on June 3, 2025, ahead of the FIFA World Cup 2026 qualifier football match against Ecuador on June 5 at the Monumental Stadium in Quito. (AFP)
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Updated 04 June 2025

Five challenges Ancelotti faces as Brazil reign kicks off

Five challenges Ancelotti faces as Brazil reign kicks off
  • The 65-year-old Italian led his first training session on Monday in Guayaquil, Ecuador, ahead of what should be his first match, if his move from Real Madrid passes scrutiny by football’s governing body FIFA
  • The top six in the 10-team group qualify directly for the World Cup. Brazil are fourth, six points clear of Venezuela in seventh with four matches to go

SAO PAOLO: After a warm welcome to Brazil, Carlo Ancelotti, the Selecao’s first foreign coach in more than 50 years, is on a mission to fix a stuttering team and win back fans which starts on Thursday against Ecuador in a World Cup qualifier.

The 65-year-old Italian led his first training session on Monday in Guayaquil, Ecuador, ahead of what should be his first match, if his move from Real Madrid passes scrutiny by football’s governing body FIFA.

AFP identifies five issues Ancelotti faces:

“The only goal is to win the 2026 World Cup,” said Ancelotti when he took the job. First he has to get there.

The South American group is a two-year, 18-match marathon. Brazil’s campaign has included a first-ever home World Cup qualifying defeat, 1-0 at the Maracana to old enemy Argentina, part of a run of three straight defeats in 2023 that ended the coaching reign of Fernando Diniz.

Their last match was a 4-1 humiliation in Argentina in March that finished off former coach Dorival Junior. Yet the format is forgiving.

The top six in the 10-team group qualify directly for the World Cup. Brazil are fourth, six points clear of Venezuela in seventh with four matches to go.

Ecuador may be second in the group, but are only two points ahead of Brazil, who then host Paraguay, who are fifth.

Qualifying ends in September with a visit to last-place Chile and a home game against struggling Bolivia.

Brazil is still churning out dazzling attackers but the production line has stalled on No. 9s. In this century, Romario, Ronaldo and Adriano have all led the attack and banged in the goals.

The nearest player to a classic No. 9 in Ancelotti’s first squad is a player he coached at Everton, Richarlison, now of Tottenham.

Yet Ancelotti has won without a central striker before. His 2024 Champions League winning side was led by two Brazilians: Vinicius Jr, who is in Ancelotti’s squad, and Rodrygo, who he did not select. Ancelotti also has Raphinha of Barcelona, who was joint top scorer in this season’s Champions League.

A bigger problem might be supplying the attackers, veteran Brazilian football journalist Juca Kfouri told AFP.

With Brazil’s youth academies focusing on defensive midfielders and quick wingers rather than classic creators, the Selecao faces a shortage of ideas in midfield.

In Brazil’s last two outings Dorival Junior tried Bruno Guimaraes, Gerson, Andre and Joelinton in the role. None convinced.

At Madrid, Ancelotti “had Toni Kroos as a supply line for Vini. Brazil does not have a Toni Kroos,” said sports writer Tim Vickery on his ‘Brazilian Shirt Name’ podcast.

Ancelotti has recalled Kroos’s former Real Madrid midfield partner Casemiro, although the 33-year-old now with Manchester United is primarily a defensive player to add, the coach said, “charisma, personality and talent.”

The supply of swashbuckling fullbacks, such as Carlos Alberto, Cafu and Roberto Carlos — another hallmark of great Brazil teams — has also dried up.

Ancelotti has recalled Carlos Augusto, part of the Inter Milan team crushed in the Champions League final, and picked Flamengo duo Wesley Franca and Alex Sandro after seeing them play last week in a 1-0 victory over Venezuelan team Deportivo Tachira in the Copa Libertadores.

Ancelotti needs to rebuild the bond between the team and the public. Part of the problem is that after Brazil won five World Cups playing — mostly — the “jogo bonito” (the beautiful game), fans have little patience with mediocrity.

But many supporters have been turned off by the way the famous yellow jersey has been hijacked as a symbol by supporters of far-right former president Jair Bolsonaro.

“This issue of the extreme right appropriating the jersey has distanced part of the country,” said Kfouri, adding Ancelotti called on the fans when he took the job saying, “I hope to have the support and help of the country.”


Aaron Rai uses rare feat to tie Tommy Fleetwood for Abu Dhabi Championship lead

Aaron Rai uses rare feat to tie Tommy Fleetwood for Abu Dhabi Championship lead
Updated 08 November 2025

Aaron Rai uses rare feat to tie Tommy Fleetwood for Abu Dhabi Championship lead

Aaron Rai uses rare feat to tie Tommy Fleetwood for Abu Dhabi Championship lead
  • He described the shot after the round, which left him at a 14-under 130 through 36 holes and tied with Fleetwood
  • To maintain a share of the lead, Fleetwood mixed seven birdies and a bogey to finish with a 66 following his opening-round 64

ABU DHABI: Aaron Rai holed his approach shot from 218 yards out to score a rare albatross, highlighting a round of 64 that left him tied for the lead after 36 holes at the Abu Dhabi Championship on Friday.

Rai entered the second round at Yas Links Golf Club two strokes behind a quintet of co-leaders, including fellow Englishman Tommy Fleetwood, but quickly made up ground on the par-5 No. 2 hole. His second shot landed on the green and rolled into the cup, allowing him to pick up three shots on the hole.

He described the shot after the round, which left him at a 14-under 130 through 36 holes and tied with Fleetwood.

“The wind was a little bit down off the left and that green was so fast,” he said. “It slopes front-to-back, pitching a few yards on to the green, actually caught it a little bit clean off the face, the line was great. Finished around the front edge and chased its way down there. You couldn’t see it from the back of the fairway, so it was a nice surprise.”

To maintain a share of the lead, Fleetwood mixed seven birdies and a bogey to finish with a 66 following his opening-round 64. He is a two-time winner of the event and confident heading into the third round on Saturday.

“Really good day. I got off to like the perfect start. Birdie, birdie, birdie,” he said. “That was good, especially when you’ve had a good round the day before. They always say it’s hard to follow up a good round with another good one, or a low one with another one.

“Starting good was really important. I just did a really good job — I hit a lot of good shots but a few times today where I drove it into the rough and we read the lies really well. I felt like we did a great job of controlling the ball out of the rough, and that was really pleasing. I feel like I putted solid again; 6-under was a very good score.”

Rai and Fleetwood are two shots ahead of Andy Sullivan (67) of England, Denmark’s Nicolai Hojgaard (67) and Richard Sterne (68) of South Africa.

Irishman Shane Lowry, another past champion, is one of four players three shots behind the leaders at 11-under. He shot a 69.

Rory McIlroy of Northern Ireland, ranked No. 2 in the world, is 8-under for the tournament and tied for 20th place after back-to-back rounds of 68.