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© AFP | Brazil's Neymar celebrates after scoring against France

 
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Fri, 27 Mar 2015   ||   Nigeria,
 

Brazil delivered France's first defeat since the World Cup when a perfectly executed second-half performance earned them a 3-1 win in a friendly game at the Stade de France in Paris on Thursday.

Neymar and Luiz Gustavo scored after the interval with Oscar having cancelled out Raphael Varane’s first-half opener as the visitors notched a seventh consecutive win in the aftermath of their embarrassing World Cup campaign on home soil.

Brazil have now scored 17 goals and conceded two since they hosted the finals, which they finished in fourth place after a humiliating 7-1 semi-final defeat by eventual champions Germany and a 3-0 loss to the Netherlands in the third-place match.

World Cup quarter-finalists France enjoyed a great start in a lively clash but with the influential Paul Pogba benched due to injury they were eventually overwhelmed in midfield.

“We were punished for our mistakes. They are very quick up front,” said France coach Didier Deschamps, who skippered France to their 3-0 World Cup final win against a Brazil side captained by his counterpart Dunga in 1998.

Brazil dominated possession early on but Les Bleus were the most dangerous side, with Karim Benzema’s point-blank header spectacularly saved by Jefferson in the 12th minute.

The Brazil keeper, however, could do nothing nine minutes later when Varane headed home from Mathieu Valbuena’s corner as the visitors’ defence again proved clumsy on set pieces.

Brazil levelled five minutes before the break when Oscar scored their first goal at the Stade de France in four visits, pushing the ball between goalkeeper Steve Mandanda’s legs after being nicely set up in the box by Firmino.

Eight minutes into the second half, Neymar fired a powerful angled shot into the roof after being played in by Willian.

France came close to an equaliser shortly afterwards but Benzema skied his volley over the bar.

Deschamps: Losing ‘a blow’

Luiz Gustavo then headed home from Oscar’s corner to make it 3-1 and wrap up a deserved win—Brazil’s first in France since 1992.

Two minutes later, Willian raced down the left but was denied by Mandanda, who was deputising for the injured Hugo Lloris and did not have a particularly impressive match.

Deschamps admitted the loss was a blow to a side that was undefeated in six games going into the match.

“When you are on a good run losing like this is always a blow. They were more clinical than us,” said Deschamps.

“We can’t be satisfied at conceding three goals, even if we acknowledge the quality of the opposition."

“We hadn’t lost for a while, but it was a top-level game full of quality against one of the top teams. Matches like this give us a chance to find out how we get on in adversity.”

Dunga also recognised the importance of the victory – arguably the best win yet for 51-year-old in his second spell in charge of the national side.

“It’s difficult to play France here in a packed stadium. In football you win and lose, but it’s always good to win against a team as strong as them,” he said.

France, who only have friendlies to play until they host the Euro 2016 finals, play Denmark in St Etienne on Sunday.

There was a minute’s silence before the match in memory of the 150 people who died in the Germanwings flight 9525 that crashed in France on Tuesday.

(FRANCE 24 with REUTERS, AFP)

 

 

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