RIO DE JANEIRO — Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva drew laughs on Friday with a lighthearted joke about star striker Neymar, Brazil’s all-time leading men’s international goalscorer, who remains sidelined by a lingering calf injury at the ongoing World Cup hosted in the United States. The 34-year-old, who has notched 79 goals for the Seleção since his senior debut, only stepped back into collective training with the national squad this week after completing his rehabilitation from a right calf injury picked up in late May. This fitness setback has already forced him to miss Brazil’s opening group stage clash against Morocco, which ended in a 1-1 draw, and head coach Carlo Ancelotti opted to leave Neymar out of the matchday squad for the nation’s second group game against Haiti, scheduled for the same day as Lula’s quip.
Speaking at a public hospital inauguration ceremony in Belo Horizonte, a major city in Brazil’s southeast, Lula responded to a young attendee who brought up Neymar’s name with playful surprise. “Neymar? He is not even playing!” Lula said, before doubling down on his joke: “Neymar is the first player to be called up (to the national team) who is working remotely.”
This is not the first time the Brazilian president has leaned into football-related humor in recent days, following a viral joke from earlier this week that he was considering calling up Argentine icon Lionel Messi — Neymar’s long-time club teammate at Barcelona — to wear the Brazil shirt. The quip came just days after Brazil’s opening draw with Morocco, and has gone viral across Latin American social media.
Neymar’s fitness has been a persistent concern throughout 2024. After leaving Paris Saint-Germain to return to his boyhood club Santos earlier this year, the striker has missed nearly half of his side’s domestic matches due to repeated niggling injuries and major fitness setbacks. He has not represented Brazil at international level since October 2023, and his inclusion in the final World Cup squad sparked widespread surprise given his inconsistent availability over the past 12 months.
Local Brazilian media reports that Ancelotti and his coaching staff have deliberately taken a cautious approach to Neymar’s comeback, unwilling to rush the star back into competitive action and risk worsening his injury ahead of potential knockout stage matches later in the tournament. Neymar finally joined his teammates for full training for the first time on Wednesday, marking a key milestone in his recovery. The striker has been a core part of Brazil’s squad in the last three World Cup tournaments, bringing experience and attacking flair that few other players in the squad can match.
Brazil will wrap up its group stage campaign against Scotland in Miami on June 24, and fans are still waiting to see whether Neymar will be fit enough to feature before the knockout rounds get underway.
