The former Manchester City manager, Pep Guardiola, is wanted by some supporters of one national team who are calling for huge changes after their World Cup exit
Brazilian supporters have called for head coach Carlo Ancelotti to be dismissed and replaced by Pep Guardiola after their elimination from the World Cup.
The five-time World Champions suffered a shock 2-1 defeat to Norway in the round of 16, with Erling Haaland scoring both goals. A brace from Manchester City striker Erling Haaland in the second half sealed Brazil’s fate, despite Neymar’s late penalty, their second of the match after Bruno Guimaraes had one saved in the first half.
That defeat means their quest for a sixth World Cup triumph continues. The nation last claimed the trophy in 2002.
Speaking following the final whistle, Ancelotti said: “We must continue to work and improve, and find new ideas. I believe that this loss is not the end, but the beginning of a new cycle.”
Despite his measured response, Brazilian supporters took to social media to demand his dismissal. “Bruno is at fault, Endrick is at fault. But the main one responsible for the elimination is the cowardly and arrogant Carlo Ancelotti,” one wrote.
“He clearly instructed the team to let Norway have the ball. Coward. It went wrong, obviously, but he didn’t want to fix it. Arrogant. Best coach in the world… who should never coach the national team again.”
A second added: “Carlo Ancelotti is an absolute coward. An utter disgrace. He should be fired tonight.
“I like Carlo Ancelotti – who doesn’t – but I am completely unmoved by this result, and he deserves the sack,” said a third. “To choose Neymar over Joao Pedro is an injustice punishable by this sort of disgrace. I understand football is emotional, but you’re not serious if you pick Neymar in 2026.”
FOLLOW OUR MAN CITY FB PAGE! Latest news and analysis via the MEN’s Manchester City Facebook page
Supporters are in little doubt over who they’d like to see take the reins. One wrote: “This selection is begging for Pep Guardiola.” A second added: “The only manager who can save Brazil, Pep Guardiola.”
“Hey @CBF_Futebol, take advantage of this Pep Guardiola guy slipping up in the market and pay the buyout clause,” a third said.
Guardiola is currently without a club after departing Man City this summer, with former Chelsea and Leicester City boss Enzo Maresca stepping in as his successor at Etihad Stadium. The Catalan coach has been touted for the Brazil role on several occasions previously, including as recently as this year.
Back in 2015, former Brazil and Barcelona full-back Dani Alves disclosed that the iconic tactician had coveted the position ahead of the 2014 World Cup. “Pep said he wanted to make Brazil a World Cup champion and had an entire strategy to make us a world champion,” Alves told ESPN Brasil in 2015.
Thousands of Man City fans upgraded their matchday last season. This is how they did it.

Official premium experiences at the Etihad are available now for the 26/27 Premier League season. Make it easier than ever to turn a regular fixture into something genuinely unforgettable.
“They didn’t want it, because they said that they didn’t know if Brazil would accept a foreign coach. Pep is the best coach in the world, the greatest sports manager I’ve ever seen. He revolutionised football, revolutionised a team, and we had the chance to have him with us. If you let an opportunity like this go by, then you are not really thinking about the national team.”
Guardiola himself has conceded that he may be receptive to managing at the international level. When quizzed back in May about whether he would consider taking charge of England, he said: “I don’t have any absolute plan about my future.
“I go to rest and recover the time I missed with my kids, even though they are grown, and do many things I’ve not done that I want to do. I don’t think for one second about anything related to football for the next years. I need to rest, I need to reflect, I need to see what happened in my 17, 18 years, in my time with Barcelona, in Germany [with Bayern Munich] and here.
“After, we see what happens. I didn’t do in the past stupid things that I want to do.” Asked if this was not a no, Guardiola said: “Yeah – [but] nobody cares.”










You must be logged in to post a comment Login