Ranked: Every Brazil No.9 since Ronaldo

Richarlison made his first start for his country wearing the hallowed No.9 shirt.

The Everton man bagged a brace in his second outing for the Selecao, one goal with either foot. Two stunning finishes that really mark him out as the next big thing in attack for Brazil. That he and not Roberto Firmino wore Ronaldo’s No.9 shirt was a big statement of faith in him from Tite (that and the fact he got the call-up ahead of Gabriel Jesus).

There was criticism of Jesus during the World Cup, and Richarlison’s performances in the No.9 won’t have done the Manchester City man any favours. The Everton striker is a powerful and skilful presence in attack, the only question now is can he be a consistently menacing presence in front of goal? Can he fill the void that Ronaldo left when he retired?

It’s certainly a void that Brazil have tried to fill with multiple players. Some to a good degree of success, some not so much. We here at Squawka decided to get surgical with it and rank all of the No.9’s Brazil have used since Ronaldo. Who falls where? Read on and find out!

10. Jonas

12 caps, 3 goals

He may be an absolute legend for Benfica (122 goals in 152 games!) but Jonas’ brief time as Brazil’s No.9 at the 2016 Copa América Centenario was pretty atrocious. He was pitiful in the 0-0 draw with Ecuador and was taken off at half-time against Haiti with his side 3-0 up. They won 7-1 in the end and Jonas played no part in their final group game. That was it for Jonas as Brazil’s No.9.

9. Diego Souza

7 caps, 2 goals

With Gabriel Jesus injured and unable to be selected by Tite, the Brazilian coach temporarily bestowed the No.9 on Diego Souza. The attacking midfielder (!) started one game, played a handful of minutes at the end of two more games and that was it. Not a disaster like Jonas, but not good either.

8. Diego Tardelli

14 caps, 3 goals

When the 2015 Copa América rolled around, Brazil were looking to bounce back hard from the abysmal end to their 2014 World Cup. Neymar had just come off an incredible Champions League win where he showed what he can do alongside a great No.9 – unfortunately for Brazil he only had Diego Tardelli. The No.9 started the opening game before being demoted to sub. He didn’t even have the decency to take a penalty in Brazil’s shootout loss, either.

7. Pato

27 caps, 10 goals

Pato was once the next big thing of not just Brazilian football but perhaps the world game. His career went significantly off the rails, and even when in his pomp he played off a striker. But at the 2011 Copa América Pato donned the famous shirt and had a reasonably decent showing! He was scoreless in the first two games but bagged a brace in Brazil’s final group game; although he could do nothing against Paraguay and was subbed off before Brazil absurdly missed all four penalties.

6. Ricardo Oliveira

16 caps, 5 goals

Ricardo Oliveira is far from a big name, but he actually had a decent impact as Brazil’s No.9. He started five games out of six at the 2005 Confederations Cup and actually played reasonably well, scoring twice. His run could have continued (at least in the short-term) but for injury.

5. Vagner Love

20 caps, 4 goals

Unquestionably the best name in football history, Vagner Love was a pretty great No.9 for Brazil too. The braided wonder was Brazil’s starting No.9 during the 2007 Copa América, playing all but the last 10 minutes (+30 of extra time) against Uruguay in the semi-final. He scored once but set-up multiple goals, including one in the final as Brazil ran out 3-0 winners. He played a few more games before being usurped by Luis Fabiano.

4. Gabriel Jesus

22 caps, 10 goals

The current No.9, well, maybe the previous No.9… Gabriel Jesus played a huge rule for Tite’s Brazil, combining selfless work-rate with intelligent positional play. Jesus facilitated the attacking thrusts from the likes of Neymar and Coutinho whilst scoring himself; only Edinson Cavani scored more than his 7 goals in World Cup qualification. Unfortunately when the actual tournament rolled around he didn’t manage to score a single goal and it may have cost him his spot with the shirt.

3. Fred

39 caps, 18 goals

It’s easy to laugh at Fred but this legendary playboy is a genuine skilled poacher and in the early days of Luiz Felipe Scolari’s second run in charge of Brazil. He lacked all the flair and finesse you’d want to see from a Brazilian striker, but he put the ball in the back of the net. A huge presence for Brazil when they won the 2013 Confederations Cup, injury prevented him from being anywhere near his best in the 2014 World Cup. His display was so poor that he was removed 70 minutes into the dreaded 7-1 loss and hasn’t been seen since.

2. Luis Fabiano

45 caps, 28 goals

Luis Fabiano has actually had two spells as Brazil No.9 Рthe first was during the 2004 Copa Am̩rica when Brazil sent out an under-23 squad; there he led the line with distinction, playing every game, scoring twice and even notching in the semi-final shootout win.

Luis Fabiano’s second spell as Brazil’s No.9 came when Dunga was in charge. And here is where he really took off. He was never the most skilful player but he was a player of great power and technique; he always found a way to the back of the net and he loved the big occasion. He was colossal as Brazil won the 2009 Confederations Cup, scoring twice in the final. He also bagged three goals in the 2010 World Cup as Brazil exited the tournament at the quarter-final stage. As Dunga left, so did he, but when he had the shirt he was an absolute brute.

1. Adriano

48 caps, 27 goals

The legend with the lethal left-foot technically did his best work for Brazil before Ronaldo retired, but never when Ronaldo was in the team. He wore No.7 in the 2004 Copa América as he outshone Luis Fabiano to lead Brazil to victory.

He wore the No.9 in the 2005 Confederations Cup and led the line superbly in what was unquestionably Brazil’s best tournament showing since 2002 when they won the World Cup. His five goals were a tournament-high and his brace in the 4-1 demolition of Argentina showed that he should be the man to lead Brazil in the true post-Ronaldo era.

Sadly Brazil chickened out and brought an overweight and immobile Ronaldo back for the 2006 World Cup and as a result Adriano personally and Brazil as a whole suffered enormously. Personal problems dragged Adriano down afterwads, but he played two games in the No.9 since then; once helping an understrength Brazil thrash Chile 4-2, and then once he led the line as Brazil were defeated in the brutal altitude of La Paz.

Still, for all those times he thrived without Ronaldo around, and for a performance that should have ushered in the post-Ronaldo era two years earlier than it actually did, no one but Adriano can be number one.

The post Ranked: Every Brazil No.9 since Ronaldo appeared first on Squawka News.



From Squawka NewsSquawka News https://ift.tt/2CSGNx0

No comments:

Post a Comment