Brazil’s Magical World Cup Atmosphere Full Of Passion, Patriotism (Photos)

by abournenesn

Jul 1, 2014

brazilEditor’s Note: NESN.com’s Nate Waters was in Brazil for two weeks for the 2014 FIFA World Cup. In his last blog, Nate shares what it was like to see soccer’s biggest tournament from a Brazilian perspective.

Great soccer players say that when their feet cross the line, they jog onto the freshly cut grass and glance down at the name on their chest. Nothing else in the world matters. They’re required to forget about what happened the previous day. Everything pauses, because nothing is bigger than the next 90 minutes. After traveling down the coast of Brazil and attending three World Cup games, it seems as if the country has paused to enjoy watching the Seleção attempt to sew a sixth star into Brazilian soccer history.

Attending the World Cup is like no other trip I could imagine. Each corner is equipped with stands selling jerseys, every park is packed with people cheering for their home country and the taxi drivers couldn’t be more busy. It’s an atmosphere of excitement, passion and patriotism. I was caught up in the magic of it all.

Every activity was determined by the games being played that afternoon. We weren’t sure if we should visit the Christ the Redeemer statue because United States was playing Portugal that night. Waiters brought out food and drinks only during commercial breaks and halftime. And I quickly realized that sporting the canary yellow Brazil jersey was the safest choice one could make while cruising through Rio de Janeiro.

While being swept up in the awesomeness of crossing the street into Copacabana Beach, you would not think to look down and notice “Go Home FIFA,” stenciled into the crosswalk, as if it was included when the streets were first painted.

However, thousands pass by each day glancing down at the bitter reality that this World Cup has brought to Brazil. The tourists probably never noticed the fare increase for the Metro or that the Brazilian workers outside the stadiums have “Volunteer” printed on their official shirts because FIFA does not pay most of its employees. The only concern was to arrive before kickoff and be squished with 10,000 other fans on the burning sand to watch the game in the FIFA Fan Fest.

Brazil is caught up in hosting the World Cup, and the riots seem to have been overshadowed by a 22-year-old striker with a crazy mohawk and four goals for his country. Maybe it’s Neymar or simply the amount of tourists that outshine all of the problems we read about before, but the Brazilian dream of playing soccer on the beach and enjoying the breathtaking beauty all seemed to be true.

I watched the Brazil-Cameroon game with a Brazilian family in São Paulo, and following Neymar’s second goal, they all cheered, calling him the best player in the world. I laughed for a second and questioned if they truly thought he was better than Messi or Ronaldo or Van Persie, even referencing other great Brazilian players like Ronaldinho. I honestly had never seen such confusion before as I was almost asked to leave the room and find a different place to watch the game.

It’s true — nothing is bigger than soccer in Brazil. It’s their culture. It’s what unites the country. It’s the beautiful game.

Click here to see a photo gallery of Waters’ trip to the 2014 World Cup>>

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