Italy playmaker Andrea Pirlo gave Brazilian fans a taste of what they were missing as he marked his 100th international appearance by orchestrating his side’s 2-1 win against Mexico in the Confederations Cup on Sunday. Brian Homewood has more...

[attach id=260842 size="medium"]Andrea Pirlo scores from a free-kick against Mexico.[/attach]

The notoriously difficult to please Maracana crowd was united in its adulation of 34-year-old Andrea Pirlo, appreciating the sort of player their own country has struggled to produce and even shunned.

Pirlo’s role as a deep-lying playmaker is an alien concept in Brazil, where any midfielder who sits just in front of the defence is expected to perform a purely destructive role.

Most Brazilian teams, including the national side, field two “guard dogs” in front of the back four, whose job is to snuff out danger and stop anything that moves, by fair means or foul.

Tactical fouls, such as a tug of shirt or sneaky trip, are considered perfectly acceptable by such players, while venturing forward and helping the attack remains taboo.

At the 2010 World Cup, coach Dunga used the brute force of Gilberto Silva and Felipe Melo in the centre of midfield, which gave plenty of protection to the defence but limited Brazil’s creative options, putting most of the burden on a half-fit Kaka.

Mano Menezes, who took over after the tournament, was more adventurous, and encouraged all his midfielders to attack but when he was sacked and replaced by Luiz Felipe Scolari in November, there was a quick return to the old approach.

“I don’t go with this story that the defensive midfielders have to go forward all the time and try and score goals,” Scolari said shortly after taking over.

“What we have to do is not concede goals.”

Brazilian critics believe that Chelsea midfielder Ramires has been left out of the Confederations Cup because he likes to charge forward, while Lazio’s Hernanes has been relegated to the substitutes bench for the same reason.

Scolari made it clear after the 2-2 friendly draw against England at the start of June that he was not happy with his team’s performance after Hernanes came on at half-time, even though he set up Brazil’s first goal.

It would be fascinating to know what Scolari makes of Pirlo and Italy, where Daniele De Rossi was the only player in their five-man midfield who could be considered a tackling specialist.

Italy were certainly exposed to Mexico’s attacks in Sunday’s match but that was more than compensated for by the number of openings created.

Pirlo’s team-mates are in no doubt about the qualities of a player who gave Italy a 27th-minute lead against the Mexicans.

“When you see Pirlo in action it’s hard not to sit back and enjoy it. I know how that feels because I’ve been watching him for years,” keeper Gianluigi Buffon said.

“To cap it all, he topped it off with a pearl of a free-kick and when you put it all together, it’s only natural to end up getting the crowd’s support.”

Defender Giorgio Chiellini said there was nothing better than to have to option of giving the ball to Pirlo.

“As a defender and a team-mate of Andrea’s in the national side and at Juventus, I couldn’t ask for anything more in this life,” he said.

“To look up and see a player like him in front of you is all you can ask for as a defender. You know when you give him the ball that he’s going to get the team moving forward. He’s like the oil in our engine.”

Confederations Cup fixtures

Group A      
  Brazil vs Japan 3-0  
  Mexico vs Italy 1-2  
Tomorrow Brazil vs Mexico Fortaleza 21.00
Tomorrow Italy vs Japan Recife 24.00
June 22 Italy vs Brazil Salvador 21.00
  Japan vs Mexico Belo Horizonte 21.00
       
Group B      
  Spain vs Uruguay 2-1  
  Tahiti vs Nigeria 1-6  
June 20 Spain vs Tahiti Rio 21.00
June 20 Nigeria vs Uruguay Salvador 24.00
June 23 Nigeria vs Spain Fortaleza 21.00
  Uruguay vs Tahiti Recife 21.00
       
Semi-finals      
June 26 1A vs 2B Belo Horizonte 21.00
June 27 1B vs 2A Fortaleza 21.00
       
Third-Place play-off      
June 30 SFs losers Salvador 18.00
       
The final      
June 30 SFs winners Rio 24.00

Sign up to our free newsletters

Get the best updates straight to your inbox:
Please select at least one mailing list.

You can unsubscribe at any time by clicking the link in the footer of our emails. We use Mailchimp as our marketing platform. By subscribing, you acknowledge that your information will be transferred to Mailchimp for processing.