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BRAZIL

Neymar: "They'll have to swallow what they said"

The Barcelona forward hit out at his critics after Brazil secured gold in Rio and said that he no longer wants to captain the national team.

Neymar: "They'll have to swallow what they said"
Lars BaronGetty Images

After a rollercoaster Olympics for the hosts, it took just one kick of a ball from Brazil's poster boy Neymar to make a nation's dream come true. It is unusual for football to become the main event of the Games, but, for the most successful nation in World Cup history, the hitherto lack of Olympic gold had become an obsession.

Winning penalty

Neymar finally succeeded where the likes of Ronaldo and Ronaldinho had failed when he coolly slotted into the top corner to edge a penalty shootout 5-4 against Germany at a packed Maracanã on Saturday after a 1-1 draw.

"This is one of the best things that has happened in my life," said the tearful Barcelona star.

Neymar quits as captain

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Lars BaronGetty Images

However, he added that he no longer wishes to act as captain of the national team: “I have spoken to my family and as of now I don’t want to be captain of the team any more. It’s a message for the new coach, Tite: I don’t want to be captain.”

It was a fitting finale that after queries and criticism of Brazilian fans' penchant for treating every sport like football, the biggest crowd of the Games packed the Maracanã to do what they know best.

"Brazil could have won gold medals in everything but if it hadn't been in football then nothing would have counted," said jubilant fan Leila Lopes da Silva, 70, to summarise the mood of a jubilant nation.

7-1 "Maracanazo"

Neymar's spot-kick also exorcised some of the demons that have dogged Brazilian football since Germany sent them packing from their own World Cup with a humiliating 7-1 thrashing just two years ago.

"This phase now has passed. We can look forward to the future more confident and more proud. Brazilian football is not dead," said Brazil coach Rogerio Micale.

Talk of revenge was exaggerated. Not one player played in both Belo Horizonte 775 days ago and in Rio on Saturday. However, so wounded was Brazil's pride that another capitulation on home soil was unimaginable.

It is for that reason that Neymar was selected for the Games instead of the Copa América -- where Brazil crashed out at the group stages -- back in June. The end justified the means. Neymar also struck a stunning free-kick in the final to open the scoring, taking his tally to four in the last three games.

Criticism

However, it was far from a smooth ride to gold. Neymar was roundly criticised and Brazil booed off as they were held to 0-0 draws by South Africa and Iraq in their opening two games. One young boy's decision to scratch out Neymar's name on the back of his shirt to replace it with captain of the Brazil women's team Marta went viral.

"Now they'll have to swallow what they said," added a vengeful Neymar. Fast forward two weeks and a packed Maracanã serenaded him with chants of "ole, ole, ole Neymar."

"This is part of the Brazilian culture. We love and hate from one day to the next," said Micale. "We knew we had to give a response to the Brazilian people and we did that. We won."