World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
In Brazil's 1 1 draw against Morocco in their World Cup opener, 19 year old Endrick sat on the bench for the entire match. The Real Madrid prodigy, who just completed his redemption at Lyon, is locked in a tactical cold war with head coach Ancelotti, dragging Brazil's Group C prospects into a quagmire. June 20 against Haiti is his last chance.
The final whistle dragged a long tail across the sky above the Morocco stadium. 1-1. Brazil's World Cup opener had been dragged into the mud by a group of North Africans who played with the ferocity of wild dogs.
That image stung more than any scoreline—
Endrick sat in the seat closest to Neymar on the substitutes' bench, his lips moving slightly, the shape caught perfectly by the broadcast camera: "Se eu pudesse, já teria entrado." If I could, I would have already been on.
Neymar, sitting next to him, glanced sideways and said nothing.
19 years old. €80 million. From Palmeiras to the Bernabéu, groomed as Vinícius Jr.'s successor—then unable to secure even a stable rotation spot all season at Real Madrid, shipped off on loan to Lyon in Ligue 1.
This was his first World Cup.
He hadn't even broken a sweat.
Roll the clock back 8 days.
June 6th. Cleveland, USA. Brazil vs. Egypt. The final warm-up match before the World Cup.
Endrick wasn't in the starting lineup. No one was surprised—the half-season at Lyon had just ended, his body and mind still recalibrating. But Ancelotti placed him in the very front seat on the bench.
He came on as a substitute and scored the winning goal.
2-1. A last-minute winner.
After the goal, he didn't do any flashy celebrations. He sprinted straight to the sideline, towards Ancelotti, and made a gesture of cupping his hands behind his ears.
You know what it means. "Hear that? Do you hear my voice now?"
Then he pointed both hands to the sky, dedicating the goal to his wife, to the unborn child in her belly.
After the match, in an interview, he said something that would be shared endlessly on Chinese forum Hupu, sounding like a prayer hymn:
"Unfortunately, I didn't get enough time at Real Madrid. But God has guided me down the most correct path of my career so far—going to Lyon. There, I found myself again."
A 19-year-old kid, describing the bitter experience of being frozen out at a giant, loaned to Ligue 1, and considered a 'question mark' by the national team, as if he were preaching in a church.
He didn't complain. He dared not complain.
But that "hear that" gesture had already said everything he left unsaid.
Did Ancelotti hear it?
He heard it, but only half.
In the post-match press conference, he did say "Endrick is a very important player for us." He stressed the "very" heavily, a word the Italian old man added spontaneously before reading his prepared statement.
But between "important" and "starter" lies the entire breadth of Ancelotti's tactical calculus.
June 13th, before Brazil's opener against Morocco.
Endrick posted on Instagram: "Thank God for always being by my side and fulfilling my dream of playing in the World Cup. Let's all move forward together with the Brazilian people!"
The post was screenshotted by countless Brazilian fans, usually captioned with the same line: "You deserve to start."
He waited on the bench the entire match.
Analyzing the tactics boils down to two words: insubordination.
According to Brazilian media outlet UOL, Ancelotti's requirement was simple—the number 9 forward must apply high-intensity pressure on the opponent in possession, executing tackles and interceptions properly. The Italian had coached too many teams; he knew modern football's number 9 needs not only to score but also to be the first line of defense.
But Endrick had a habit ingrained from playing on the streets of Brazil: he would instinctively drop deep into midfield to receive the ball.
This drop created a vacuum in front of the defense. Those Moroccan players, seasoned in European leagues, had noses keener than dogs'.
Ancelotti coached Mbappé, Vinícius Jr., Rodrygo—a slew of talents at Real Madrid. He could tolerate genius, but he would never tolerate genius failing to execute tactical discipline. This was the bottom line shared by him and top-tier managers like Guardiola, Klopp, and Mourinho.
His answer: He would rather bring on Igor Thiago, who had just joined in the winter window, than let Endrick come off the bench.
Thiago's performance? To put it bluntly—a disaster. Invisible for most of the match, his number 9 position used by the Moroccan center-backs as if he were their own defensive midfielder.
But Ancelotti preferred swallowing Thiago's disaster over breaking his own established rules in the first group stage match of the World Cup.
That's the Italian manager's gamble: Rules are paramount, even if losing means the rules are still upheld; winning means his discipline is proven.
Gamble this way, and winning is called iron-fisted, losing is called stubborn.
Public opinion began to backlash.
Overnight, Endrick's Instagram gained nearly 600,000 followers.
More than Vinícius Jr.'s surge. More than Neymar's surge.
What signal was this? Brazilian fans were voting with their feet—if you won't play him, we'll prop him up with our attention.
Ronaldo—yes, the 2002 five-star Ronaldo, the Alien, the god of the number 9 position—said something on ESPN that nailed the 19-year-old's place firmly:
"Currently, he is the third attacking option, behind Matheus Cunha and Igor Thiago."
The Alien himself stamped it: third.
Harsh enough.
But statistically, Endrick shouldn't be third.
At Lyon, in less than 6 months, 21 games, 8 goals, 8 assists. Back with the national team, his 17th appearance, 489 minutes, 2 starts, 4 goals, 1 assist. Goal efficiency didn't lag behind Cunha or Thiago.
Why is he still third?
Because he's 19. Young.
In the Italian's dictionary, youth is a sin—especially on a big stage like the World Cup. Italians don't bet on unknowns, even if that unknown is a God-given talent.
More crucially, after that caught sentence on the bench was magnified by the media, the rift between Ancelotti and the Brazilian prodigy was impossible to hide.
Foot Mercato's report hid an even more potent detail: a division within Real Madrid regarding Endrick's usage.
On one side was Ancelotti—he valued face and discipline. A number 9 who didn't follow orders should be disciplined from the bench.
On the other side was Florentino Pérez—he valued image. I spent €80 million on the future, and you give him zero minutes in a World Cup? How would the Bernabéu members feel? What about the commercial sponsors?
Even more thrilling, José Mourinho's name was inserted in the middle.
Yes, the Portuguese manager was already on Real Madrid's coaching staff (source: Foot Mercato's report on internal matters at Real Madrid). He and Florentino disagreed on "whether Ancelotti should have called up Endrick"—one wanted to discipline the newcomer to establish order, the other wanted to go with the flow to appease the player.
Vinícius Jr.'s fatigue at the World Cup was evident. Ancelotti's youth card was already stretched thin.
And Endrick's card was being forcibly pinned to the bench.
This wasn't just a 19-year-old player's grievance. It was a collision of four lines—the Bernabéu, Madrid, Rio de Janeiro, Milan—on the World Cup stage.
Cut to June 20th.
Brazil vs. Haiti.
This was Endrick's second chance.
Perhaps his last.
Because next up was Scotland on June 25th. If he doesn't play against Haiti, doesn't play against Scotland, then the suspense over Brazil's escape from Group C won't just be on the pitch—it will spill into the dressing room, into rumors, gossip, media headlines, even into next summer's Real Madrid pre-season.
Group C's situation was delicate. What did a 1-1 draw in the opener mean? It meant no margin for error for Brazil. Haiti was a must-win three points; Scotland was a knockout-level six-pointer. Two out of three games were do-or-die.
And Endrick was precisely the type of player who "doesn't buckle under pressure."
Brazilian media had long labeled him—"shows up in crucial moments." Of his four national team goals, many were scored when the team was trailing or the game was tight.
Ancelotti could see this.
Ancelotti knew this.
But he still wouldn't play him.
Why? Because playing him would mean admitting his starting lineup choice was wrong in the first match; starting him would mean bowing his head to a 19-year-old in front of the whole world.
Italians don't bow their heads. It's a sickness, and a fate.
In the dressing room, among twenty-six players, Ancelotti once said, "Whoever comes on will give their all."
Yes. But who comes on?
This was the weakest Brazil squad in 20 years in terms of traditional "number 9" identity. Cunha isn't a 9, Thiago isn't a 9, Raphinha isn't a 9—they are all wing attackers, neutered by modern football, forcibly squeezed into the center-forward role.
Endrick was the only one in this Brazil squad who possessed the aura of a traditional number 9, yet defied the movement patterns of a number 9.
This was precisely the type Ancelotti disliked most.
And also precisely the type Brazilian football needed most.
After Endrick was caught on camera on the bench, Ancelotti was asked in the post-match press conference, "Why didn't you play Endrick?" His face clearly soured, and he replied coldly, "I don't comment on individual players. I'm here to talk about the team."
An Italian manager using that tone with a reporter at a World Cup press conference must mean—
He knows he was wrong, but he will never admit it.
Admit it, and the rules collapse. Collapse, and the dressing room is in turmoil. Turmoil, and an Italian manager at a big club never survives a second year.
So he chose to hold his ground. Even if it meant holding through a 1-1 draw, holding through a match that should have been three points.
This is a 19-year-old's first World Cup. He brought half his life from Lyon, his wife's unborn child, God's guidance, 600,000 new followers—
He sat on the bench, watching his own number on the screen.
Two matches.
Endrick had two chances.
Ancelotti had two chances to prove whether he was "a strict disciplinarian Italian manager" or "a puppet held hostage by the dressing room."
And Group C's qualification spot no longer had room for error.