Dunga blames virus for Brazil woes
Brazil coach Dunga blamed a mystery virus for his team’s shock Copa America exit to Paraguay on Saturday as the most successful football playing nation on the planet struggled to digest another tournament setback.
Dunga said as many as 15 members of his squad had been affected by the virus, which he said had disrupted preparations for the quarter-final against the Paraguayans.
“I’m not making excuses, but around 15 players had viruses which limited our training,” Dunga said.
“Some had headaches, back pain, body aches.
“Some players felt it more than others and had to reduce training, some players vomited. [This] was a game where we needed speed and we didn’t have it,” he added.
Dunga’s explanation caused confusion amongst members of his squad, with midfielder Filipe Luis telling reporters he was unaware of any mass illness amongst his team-mates.
“I didn’t know anything about that,” the Chelsea player said.
“Some of the other guys might have had a problem, but I didn’t.”
Goalkeeper Jefferson however backed his manager.
“Everyone woke up with a fever, headache and body aches,” he said, before playing down the extent to which it had affected the result.
For the second Copa America in succession, Brazil exited at the quarter-final stage to the Paraguayans on penalties.
Dunga’s side looked to be in control during the first half when Robinho fired them into a 15th-minute lead.
But Derlis Gonzalez levelled from the penalty spot for Paraguay in the second half, and then struck the winning spot-kick in the shoot-out to clinch a famous win and set up a semi-final with Argentina.
CONCEPCIÓN-NAMPA/AFP
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