Pele Says Neymar Can Handle World Cup Pressure
Pele is counting on Neymar to lead Brazil to World Cup
victory and erase the painful memory of the last time the football-mad country
hosted the tournament. Considered by many to be world's best player, Pele was only
9 years old when Brazil lost to Uruguay in the final match of the 1950 World
Cup. Pele then led Brazil to the title eight years later, when he was 17, and
again in 1962 and 1970.
With Brazil hosting the tournament this year, the pressure
is on the 22-year-old Neymar, who scored a hat trick last week in a friendly
against South Africa.
"Neymar is a great player. I know him very well,
because he played for Santos and my son was goalkeeper there, and then coached
in the youth teams," the 73-year-old Pele said a news conference at Paris
City Hall, where the World Cup trophy has been on display since Sunday.
"I think the pressure you speak of exists. What's
important is that he plays for Barcelona and the fact he left Brazil means that
he gained in experience."
After a difficult start to his career in Spain, Neymar has
shown glimpses of his potential, scoring a hat trick in the Champions League
against Celtic and a further seven goals in 20 league games. Pele thinks leaving the comfort zone of Santos will prove to
serve Neymar, and Brazil.
"In Europe it's more difficult and it's been a great
experience for him to leave Brazil. The six months have been a great opportunity
for him," Pele said through a translator. "So he will go to Brazil
having gained in experience. But the pressure won't just be on Neymar, it will
be on the whole of the Brazil team."
But much of the weight of a nation's expectation will rest
on the slender shoulders of Neymar, who has scored 30 goals in 47 matches for
his country. "It's going to be very hard. Brazil has a real football
history. The only World Cup held in Brazil was when we lost against Uruguay, so
the Brazilians still remember that," said Pele, who scored 77 goals in 92
games for Brazil. "It will be our chance for revenge. I really hope the
final is against France and I really want to beat France. It would be great
because France has beaten Brazil the last three times they've played in the
World Cup."
Pele's mesmerizing performance in 1958 thrust him into the
spotlight and, in a career where he scored more than 1,000 goals — most of them
for Santos — he went on to become the game's first genuine superstar. Still, that 2-1 loss to Uruguay in 1950 in front of 200,000
disillusioned fans at the Maracana Stadium in Rio de Janeiro haunts him.
"The first World Cup memory I have is not the best, I
remember hearing my father crying," Pele said. "The idea is to wipe
away that memory."
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