Brazilian football is not just tactics or a scheme. It is art, music, dance, and magic. When we say "Brazilian style," yellow jerseys, dribbling, feints, and samba after a goal come to mind. Brazil is the only country that has participated in all World Cups and won them five times. But the main thing is not the trophies. The main thing is how they play. With joy, improvisation, and a taunt at the opponent. This style was formed under the influence of street football, poverty, and music. Let's figure out what its essence is.
The Brazilian style was born in the favelas, where children played barefoot on dusty vacant lots, using rags instead of a ball. This is where the fantastic dribbling and ball control come from. Freedom, no coaches. In the 1930s, professionals adopted this style, adding tactics. The first golden period was 1958: Pelé, Garincha, Didi. The victory at the World Cup in Sweden conquered the world with dribbling and feints. In 1970, the team with Pelé, Jairzinho, Rivelino, Tostão played "touch," mesmerizing. Since then, the Brazilian style has been the standard.
The main characteristic of the Brazilians is the ability to play one-on-one. Feints: "elastico" (Rivelino, then Ronaldinho), "chapa-de-suya" (a feint with a step), "pedalada" (imitation of bicycle movement). Dribbling for them is not just a way to pass a defender, but self-affirmation. A Brazilian will never kick the ball out of bounds if he can dribble around. The signature move is "pause" (paradinha), when the player stops and waits for the opponent to fall.
Brazilians do not play by pattern. Coaches can draw up a scheme, but on the field, players act according to the situation. An unexpected pass with the sole, a shot through the body, a header while falling — all this is Brazilian heritage. Famous goals by Pelé in 1958 (threw the ball over his head and scored), Ronaldinho in 2002 (a shot from outside the penalty area). Improvisation is a response to rational European football.
Some moves have become a hallmark. "Elastico" (or "animal") — a sharp transfer of the ball from the outer to the inner side of the foot. "Roman candle" — throwing the ball over the head to oneself and the opponent. "Reverse pasta" — a back pass with the sole. And Ronaldinho came up with the "water bottle trick" (now everyone copies it). These tricks are not always effective, but they make the game spectacular.
After a goal, Brazilians do not just run to the center of the field, they dance. Samba, furaçaó, passu. Sometimes the whole team. This is not disrespect, but joy of life. At the 2018 World Cup, Brazil organized a choreography after every goal, annoying Europeans. But that's their culture. In response to criticism, Brazilians say: "We play for happiness."
"Jogo Bonito" — "beautiful game" — is a philosophy. Even defenders in Brazil know how to handle the ball. Beautiful play is more important than the result. This sometimes gets in the way (remember the 1:7 defeat by Germany in 2014, when Brazilians were too caught up in attacking). But without "jogo bonito," there would be no Brazilian football.
Today's Brazilians — Neymar, Vinicius Junior, Rodrigo, Antony, Richarlison — continue the traditions. Neymar, despite criticism for simulation, is virtuoso. Vinicius in Real Madrid shows feints worthy of Pelé. Antony spins "the somersault" (a 360-degree feint). However, European clubs restrict their freedom, demanding pragmatism. But in the national team, they let loose.
The Brazilian style is accused of inefficiency against organized defense. "Jogo Bonito" often loses to "catenaccio." In the 1990s, Brazil played more pragmatically with Dunga, but fans were upset. In 2026, the national team under the coach (after Tite) is trying to find a balance between beauty and result. It doesn't always work out.
The Brazilian style has influenced everyone. Spanish "tiki-taka" borrowed short passes, but without dribbling. Argentines and Uruguayans use Brazilian feints. Even the English try to learn "elastico." Brazilian coaches (Carlos Alberto Parreira, Luiz Felipe Scolari) have worked all over the world, instilling "jogo bonito." Without Brazil, football would be as boring as chess.
The Brazilian style of playing football is a hymn to life. It teaches that sport can be art, not just a struggle. Yes, sometimes Brazilians lose due to their self-confidence. But when they play to their strengths, the stadium is frozen in admiration. As long as there is a Brazilian who does the "elastico," football will not die.
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