World Cup 2018: Neymar sparks debate with dives, flicks and tears
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2018 Fifa World Cup on the BBC |
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Host: Russia Dates: 14 June - 15 July |
Live: Coverage across BBC TV, BBC Radio and BBC Sport website with further coverage on Red Button, Connected TVs and mobile app. |
Neymar scored the second injury-time goal in Brazil's first win of the 2018 World Cup against Costa Rica on Friday.
But no-one was discussing that.
Instead, everyone was focused on the dives, the audacious showboats and the big cry at the final whistle.
Love him or hate him, the world's most expensive player always gets people talking.
Bringing out the tricks in injury time
Neymar followed up Philippe Coutinho's injury-time opener with a second in the 97th minute by tapping in Douglas Costa's cross.
It means the 26-year-old Paris St-Germain star has scored 56 goals in 87 matches for his country - only Pele and Ronaldo have scored more.
But the goal itself paled in comparison to a moment of magic skill, when he hooked a dead ball with both feet - or in football speak, a rainbow flick - over the head of Yeltsin Tejeda and left the Costa Rica substitute's legs in a tangle.
But not everyone was feeling the showboating love. In fact, he was the lowest-scoring Brazil player among BBC Sport users on the player rater with just 3.72 out of 10.
Maybe that's because of an earlier incident...
Diving for glory
The impressive backbend and slow-motion fall fooled referee Bjorn Kuipers momentarily before VAR proved Neymar did go down a bit too easily under pressure from Giancarlo Gonzalez.
Cue outrage from all four corners of the internet.
The public display of emotion
It was all too much for the lad at full-time. The whistle blew and Neymar dropped to his knees and sobbed into Russian grass.
Yes, it's only a group match. But this is the World Cup and he's from Brazil.
In a passionate Instagram post, external after the game, the forward wrote: "Not everyone knows what I went through to get here...The crying is of joy, of overcoming, and a will to win."
Some wanted to give the player a big hug. Others were feeling less generous.
- Published22 June 2018
- Published22 June 2018