Greatest moments of the decade: Brazil 1-7 Germany, World Cup semi-final
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In the latest in a series looking back at some of the biggest sporting moments of the decade, chief football writer Phil McNulty
revisits the night of 8 July 2014, when hosts Brazil were humbled 7-1
in the World Cup semi-finals by eventual champions Germany.
The
theme of redemption was the thread running through the 2014 World Cup
in Brazil - the chance to heal a wound that had scarred a sporting
nation for 64 years.
Despite all their success, Brazil had never
fully recovered from the loss to Uruguay in their own iconic Maracana
Stadium in Rio de Janeiro in the 1950 final.
With the tournament's
return, this was the summer when football was going to dance to the
samba beat with a sixth World Cup triumph - but, significantly, this one
would be won in front of Brazil's own fans in their own football
temple. It really was coming home.
Instead, on a balmy
July night in Belo Horizonte, the city built on hills, a drama unfolded
that will never be forgotten by anyone who witnessed it, whether in the
sprawling Estadio Mineirao or among the millions watching elsewhere in
the vast country.
And for this observer, if there is one occasion
to take away and keep forever, it is the night Germany inflicted a 7-1
World Cup semi-final humiliation on the hosts, their first competitive
home defeat in 39 years.
No-one saw defeat on such a scale. Every
Brazilian you met felt coach Luiz Felipe Scolari, who led the nation to
World Cup glory in 2002, and his team were guided by destiny.
How wrong they were.
Each
minute of that day recalls a vivid memory, from watching every morning
television programme covering every cough from the Brazil camp,
presenters even bedecked in David Luiz wigs.
The kick-off may have
been in the evening but even the journey to the stadium, made hours
before, saw streets crammed with supporters gathering to witness what
they believed would be a Brazil victory.
And then there was the
emotion. Lots of it. Too much of it, you now reflect, and Brazil's
players and fans were unable to even think straight.
So much of it
centred around the absence of Neymar, Brazil's superstar and poster boy
for the whole showpiece, who had been left injured and in tears after
being roughed up by Colombia in the quarter-finals.
Brazil bought into the sorrowful story of Neymar's absence, and there were more tears around the stadium as their team arrived.
Scolari
led his men off the coach wearing a white "Forca Neymar" baseball cap.
Goalkeeper Cesar and captain for the night Luiz held up his number 10
shirt during a stadium-shaking version of Brazil's national anthem.
It
was moving but instantly aroused suspicions among those of us inside
the cauldron as impartial witnesses. It was just, well, a bit too much.
Brazil honoured their injured striker Neymar before the match beganGermany, a very talented Germany, were impassive, controlled. Brazil looked out of control even before kick-off.
And then the nightmare unfolded.
Germany did not look like scoring every time they attacked. They actually did score every time they attacked.
Brazil
were 5-0 down after only 29 minutes and the outpouring of raw emotion
from this nation, with football as one of its shining symbol, is another
everlasting memory.
As the goals went in, each one greeted with
increasing disbelief, the tears flowed again. Hundreds of men and women
inside the Estadio Mineirao were overcome by the nature of the
embarrassment they were seeing. They were crying. Fans held each other
in comfort and consolation.
It bordered on the surreal. The pain of defeat, and this kind of defeat, was too much.
For
the last 15 minutes of the first half, periods of strange silence
descended on the stadium after the cacophony of the build-up.
Brutal reality was dawning. Brazil were 5-0 down at home in a World Cup semi-final.
There
had been a lingering suspicion throughout the tournament that Scolari's
defence was suspect - and, robbed of suspended captain Thiago Silva, so
it proved.
It was then, as the second half started, that emotion was overtaken by raw anger and the Brazil team became the target.
Ironically,
in a reference to previous World Cup triumphs, Brazil's team bus had
been decorated with the slogan: "Brace yourself - the sixth is coming."
It
certainly was - but not the sixth they had planned for as Andre
Schurrle added to the pain. Germany effectively declared at 7-0, some of
their players later admitting they started to sub-consciously take it
easy.
Oscar made it 7-1 in stoppage time, but by then the Brazil
supporters were cheering Germany's goals and passing movements,
whistling at their own team's. Striker Fred was viciously abused.
As
the stunned fans streamed out into the Belo Horizonte streets, anger
was heavy in the air. The odd flag was burned and any television camera
lurking nearby quickly had Brazil fans bellowing into it demanding heads
roll and inquests be held.
In a packed, steamy media room, the man who had known the greatest glory was now trying to explain away the most painful defeat.
Scolari
was softly spoken, apologetic and treated with a sympathy from
Brazilian journalists that surprised many. On what he described as "the
worst day", he was perhaps spared because he had credit in the bank from
2002.
The usually animated features were downcast as Scolari
admitted he would be remembered as much for this defeat as his World Cup
win.
For those of us there to witness, describe, and recount
events, there was a mixture of excitement and disbelief that we had been
present at something so emotion-charged and seismic in a nation's
consciousness.
It was a painful privilege.
It was, quite
simply, the sporting experience of a lifetime. The location, the game,
the result - we may never see another match like it.
In front of the devastated Brazil fans, Germany were 5-0 up inside 29 minutes
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