Brazil’s road to the next World Cup has felt unusually bumpy, and the latest sequence of results is intensifying a question that has hovered for months: are we approaching the end of Neymar as a central figure for the Seleção?
The five-time champions have struggled to build momentum since their quarter-final exit to Croatia at the last World Cup, a defeat that still looms large in the national conversation. Since then, Brazil have failed to re-establish the aura of inevitability that once defined their tournament cycles, exiting in the quarter-finals again at the 2024 Copa América and enduring an inconsistent qualifying campaign.
Across that run, the most striking theme has been instability rather than a single catastrophic moment. Brazil’s qualification route included multiple losses and an uncharacteristically low points return for an 18-game Conmebol format, alongside mixed outcomes in friendlies — including a 3-2 defeat to Japan and a 1-1 draw with Tunisia late in the year. Those results, and the broader trajectory since 2022, were outlined in the original report that has sparked renewed debate about the team’s direction and the place of its biggest star. Source: The Guardian (football).
So where does Neymar fit into this?
Neymar remains one of the most gifted footballers of his generation, but Brazil’s current situation is forcing a more pragmatic discussion. A side searching for rhythm, balance and identity cannot rely purely on reputation. The question is less about his talent and more about whether the team’s next phase demands a different focal point: more collective speed, more intensity off the ball, and a clearer structure that doesn’t depend on one player improvising solutions.
Brazil’s recent defeats have also highlighted vulnerabilities that glamour alone cannot mask — defensive transitions, game management, and a tendency to drift in high-leverage moments. When results wobble, the spotlight naturally swings toward the leaders and headline names. Neymar, long the face of the post-2010 era, is therefore inseparable from the conversation about what comes next.
Infographic: Brazil’s recent direction check
Form Trend: Patchy, with major tournament exits and uneven qualifiers
Pressure Point: Identity and leadership amid results that don’t match Brazil’s standards
Big Question: Build around Neymar again — or transition to a new core?
Key Takeaways
- Brazil’s post-2022 cycle has lacked momentum, with major exits and inconsistent performances.
- Qualifying and friendly results have fuelled scrutiny over leadership and tactical direction.
- Neymar’s role is under renewed debate, not because of ability, but because Brazil may need a different structure.
- The next managerial and squad-building decisions will shape whether Brazil recommits to a Neymar-centric model.
For Brazil, the coming months are about more than qualifying boxes ticked on a spreadsheet. They are about restoring authority. Whether Neymar remains the symbol of that restoration — or a legend gently moved from the centre of the project — may define the next World Cup story before a ball is even kicked.