Children and Football in Brazil: Favelas, Talent and Hope In Brazil, football begins not with an academy, but with a patch of dusty ground between tin huts. Here children start playing at three years old, barefoot, with a dirty rag ball. Football is not just entertainment for them — it is the only chance to escape poverty. Every boy in the favela dreams of becoming the new Pele, Ronaldo, or Neymar. The talent selection system in Brazil has been refined for decades, but it is cruel: only a few out of thousands of players make it to professionals. In this article, we will explore how Brazilian children live, train, and dream, for whom football is everything.Street Football: A School of Life In the streets of Rio, São Paulo, and Salvador, there are no special pitches. Impromptu goals are made of two stones or backpacks. The ball may be deflated, but they play until darkness falls. There are no referees, no coaches. The only rule is: score more. Street football develops dribbling, creativity, and the ability to play without a pass. Children learn to shoot with both feet, dribble, and play aggressively. Many stars (Ronaldinho, Romário, Neymar) went through this school.Football Schools and Scouts Scouts start noticing talented boys at 7-8 years old. They come to the favelas, watch street tournaments, organize tests. The best are invited to free football schools (usually at professional clubs: Flamengo, Santos, Corinthians). There are already coaches, uniforms, a normal field. But the competition is fierce. The dropout rate in schools reaches 95%. If you are not taken into the youth team at 12, your career is likely not to take off.Poverty as a Motivator Brazilian children from the favelas are not afraid of work. They are ready to train for 6 hours a day, endure pain, run in the heat. Football is their ticket from tin shantytowns to a mansion with a swimming pool. Many parents encourage their children to play, even if they themselves do not eat. Neymar's mother worked thre ...
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