In Brazil, football begins not with an academy, but with a patch of dusty ground between tin huts. Here children start playing at three years old, barefoot, with a dirty rag ball. Football is not just entertainment for them — it is the only chance to escape poverty. Every boy in the favela dreams of becoming the new Pele, Ronaldo, or Neymar. The talent selection system in Brazil has been refined for decades, but it is cruel: only a few out of thousands of players make it to professionals. In this article, we will explore how Brazilian children live, train, and dream, for whom football is everything.
In the streets of Rio, São Paulo, and Salvador, there are no special pitches. Impromptu goals are made of two stones or backpacks. The ball may be deflated, but they play until darkness falls. There are no referees, no coaches. The only rule is: score more. Street football develops dribbling, creativity, and the ability to play without a pass. Children learn to shoot with both feet, dribble, and play aggressively. Many stars (Ronaldinho, Romário, Neymar) went through this school.
Scouts start noticing talented boys at 7-8 years old. They come to the favelas, watch street tournaments, organize tests. The best are invited to free football schools (usually at professional clubs: Flamengo, Santos, Corinthians). There are already coaches, uniforms, a normal field. But the competition is fierce. The dropout rate in schools reaches 95%. If you are not taken into the youth team at 12, your career is likely not to take off.
Brazilian children from the favelas are not afraid of work. They are ready to train for 6 hours a day, endure pain, run in the heat. Football is their ticket from tin shantytowns to a mansion with a swimming pool. Many parents encourage their children to play, even if they themselves do not eat. Neymar's mother worked three jobs to pay for his school. Ronaldinho's father died early, but the dream remained. Success stories inspire millions.
Most children do not pass the selection. By 14-15, they are dropped from academies. They return to the favelas, often disappointed, feeling like failures. Some turn to crime, drugs. Others try to play in lower leagues, but without prospects. This is the dark side of Brazilian football: millions of shattered hopes. Psychologists say that the system should include not only sports training but also psychological assistance.
In wealthy areas of Brazil, children train on excellent fields, with doctors, dietitians. In the favelas, there is even no normal ball. The system reproduces social inequality. However, it is from the favelas that geniuses often come out because they are not confined to tactical frames. They have freedom. The "Football School for All" program (2020-2025) built 200 fields in poor areas, but this is not enough.
It was harder for girls before: football was considered a man's sport. But after the success of Marta and Formiga, attitudes changed. Now there are women's football schools in Brazil where thousands of girls train. They also dream of the national team. In 2026, the government allocated grants for the development of women's football among children.
Brazilian footballers experience immense pressure. Parents, agents, coaches all expect success. Psychological breakdowns, depression, suicide attempts are known. After the tragedy in 2021 (a 15-year-old player killed himself due to expulsion), clubs started hiring psychologists. But the problem remains. In 2026, mandatory psychological tests for young footballers were introduced.
At 16, Brazilian talents can sign contracts with European clubs. Agents hunt for children, sometimes taking them away illegally. FIFA regulates the transfers of minors, but there are bypasses. Many boys who left for Portugal or Spain at 16 cannot withstand the pressure and return. Those who survive (Vinicius, Rodrigo, Neymar) become stars. But it's a lottery.
In Brazil, the family plays a key role. Mothers and fathers drive their children to training for tens of kilometers, pay for boots, sacrifice. But often they also create a neurotic atmosphere, demanding victory at any cost. School usually takes a back seat: many young footballers drop out of school. In 2026, a law was introduced: you cannot play in the youth team without satisfactory grades.
In 2026, AI-scouting is introduced in Brazil: drones film street games, algorithms select promising children. This gives a chance even to those who live far from clubs. Covered arenas are being built to train in any weather. But the most important thing is that faith does not die: every Brazilian boy knows that his idol started the same way — barefoot on dusty ground.
Children and football in Brazil are not just a sport. It is an epic of hope, blood, tears, and dances. Every year, thousands of boys and girls dream of becoming the next Pele. Thousands break. Dozens become heroes. But as long as they play football in the favelas, the soul of Brazil lives.
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