A fine finish from captain Neymar helped secure a come-from-behind 3-1 win for Brazil over France in a friendly in Paris on Thursday as they maintained their perfect record since the return of Dunga as coach.
Real Madrid defender Raphael Varane headed the hosts in front on a cold night at a packed Stade de France, only for Oscar to equalize late in the first half.
Barcelona forward Neymar then controlled a Willian pass and lashed the ball high into the roof of the net from the left in the 57th minute to put the visitors in front and a Luiz Gustavo header secured the victory midway through the second period.
Photo: EPA
Brazil have now won seven consecutive international friendly matches under Dunga following the heavy defeats to Germany and the Netherlands that saw their World Cup campaign on home soil last year end in catastrophic fashion.
The latest success against an accomplished France side will have been particularly pleasing to Dunga at the venue where he captained the Selecao in a painful 3-0 World Cup final defeat to France in 1998.
“In football you win and lose, but it’s always good to beat a team as strong as France,” Dunga said.
“The team played well, but nothing was perfect. We still made mistakes that could have been avoided,” he added.
In the opposite dugout this time was Didier Deschamps, the current France coach who skippered Les Bleus on that glorious night 17 years ago.
“We were punished for our mistakes,” Deschamps told TF1 television after the game.
“Even if the World Cup was a trauma for them, they still have very, very good players and they did reach the semi-finals,” he said. “It was good for us tonight to have to face up to a difficult situation. We will learn from this.”
Seeing Deschamps and Dunga lock horns once again added extra intrigue to an occasion that was also notable for the French Football Federation’s decision to honor those who have won at least 100 caps for France.
World Cup winners Marcel Desailly, Patrick Vieira, Thierry Henry and Zinedine Zidane were all received by French President Francois Hollande inside the stadium and then presented to the crowd before the game.
France, without goalkeeper Hugo Lloris and midfielders Yohan Cabaye and Paul Pogba due to injury, had themselves not been beaten since exiting last year’s World Cup in the quarter-finals to Germany and had not lost an international friendly since a 3-0 defeat in Brazil in June 2013.
They started the game well and only a remarkable save by goalkeeper Jefferson prevented Karim Benzema — wearing the captain’s armband in the absence of Lloris — from opening the scoring from point-blank range early on.
That chance had come from a corner and it was from another corner that the hosts got the breakthrough in the 21st minute, Varane rising to meet a Mathieu Valbuena delivery from the left and heading home.
It was a second goal in as many international outings for the defender, who also scored with his head in the 1-0 friendly defeat of Sweden in November last year.
Neymar had forced a good low save out of Steve Mandanda just before that and Brazil slowly grew into the game, threatening through Robert Firmino, before Oscar leveled five minutes prior to the break.
The little Chelsea midfielder exchanged passes with Firmino, before stabbing a shot low under Mandanda from just inside the penalty area.
Dunga’s men started the second period strongly, too, and Mandanda beat away a Luiz Gustavo shot before they took the lead thanks to Neymar’s 43rd international goal.
Benzema blazed over from a Valbuena cross and Jefferson tipped over a long-range strike by Antoine Griezmann, but it was Brazil who struck again on 69 minutes.
Patrice Evra had gone down injured during a France attack, but Brazil played on and Oscar saw a shot turned around the post by Mandanda.
The corner that followed was delivered from the right by Willian and Luiz Gustavo — the only starter on the night along with Oscar who also started in the infamous 7-1 loss to Germany last year — headed powerfully home.
That put the final outcome beyond doubt, although substitute Nabil Fekir, making his France debut, curled a shot just wide shortly before the end.
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