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The first Brazil national team, 1914 Brazil's first match at home against Exeter City in 1914. It is generally believed that the inaugural game of the Brazil national football [34] team was a 1914 match between a Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo select team and the English club Exeter City, held in Fluminense's stadium.
The Brazil national football team represents the country of Brazil in international association football. It is fielded by the Brazilian Football Confederation (CBF), the governing body of football in Brazil, and competes as a member of CONMEBOL, which encompasses the countries of South America. As hundreds of players have played for the team ...
This category contains past and present players of the senior Brazil national football team (but not players who have only been capped at Olympic, Under-21 or other junior levels). Players in this category should also be left in category:Brazilian men's footballers .
17-year-old Real Madrid-bound sensation Endrick has earned a milestone call up to the senior Brazil men’s national team.. Interim Canarinha head coach Fernando Diniz announced his squad on ...
Brazil 1–0 Uruguay, 27 August 1980 Brazil 3–1 Venezuela, 13 October 2015 118,496 (vs. Uruguay, 27 August 1980) 9–1–1 81% 9 Arruda: Recife, PE: Brazil 1–1 Switzerland, 19 May 1982 Brazil 8–0 China, 10 September 2012 101,670 (vs. Argentina, 23 March 1994) 8–1–0 88% 6 Engenhão: Rio de Janeiro, RJ
Brazil has appointed a new national team coach. Fernando Diniz has been hired as head coach of Brazil’s national team on a 12-month contract that will be due to expire when Carlo Ancelotti’s ...
Ederson was named in Brazil's provisional squad for Copa América Centenario [27] but was cut from the final squad due to injury. [28] His debut for the national team came in a 3–0 win over Chile in a 2018 World Cup qualifier on 10 October 2017. [29] In May 2018, he was named in Tite's final 23-man squad for the World Cup in Russia. [30]
However, these two clubs' importance to Brazilian football cannot be understated: Santos's Os Santásticos was the most dominant Brazilian side ever, winning six Brasileirão and eight Campeonato Paulista titles in the 1960s; and Botafogo hold the record for most capped players for the Brazil national football team in World Cups.