World Cup 2014: Julio Cesar the hero of Brazil after penalty heroics

There were pivotal twists and dramatic turns, moments of boundless ecstasy and crushing agony, tears of frenzied joy and unthinkable despair – but in the end, it came down to the work of a man who could not get a game in the second tier of English football last season.

While Julio Cesar probably intends to forget about the past 12 months as quickly as possible, what happened at Estadio Mineirao on Saturday will stay with him for ever.

The dramatic events will also remain with all who witnessed this remarkable World Cup last-16 tie – as hosts

Brazil knocked out Chile on 3-2 on penalties

in Belo Horizonte to keep their dreams alive and destroy those of La Roja.

The tension was simply unbearable: 1-1 after 90 minutes of football, the Brazil crossbar rattled in the final minute of extra time, the hopes of 200 million people resting on a single set of spot kicks.

Julio Cesar

QPR goalkeeper Julio Cesar saved penalties from Mauricio Pinilla and Alexis Sanchez before Gonzalo Jara hit the post

Suddenly there was no singing from the stands; the carnival atmosphere had been replaced by the sound of a collective mumbling. Was this really happening? Were Brazil actually on the verge of losing early at their own tournament? The nation came to a standstill.

The scenes on the pitch were replicated off it: some hugged, others prayed, many debated. Who should take the penalties? In what order? What happens if…? Anxiety reigned.

Luiz – scores. What noise! Pinilla – saved. Even louder! Willian – wide. Stunned silence. Sanchez – saved. Huge eruption! Marcelo – scores. Almost there! Aranguiz – scores. Surely irrelevant! Hulk – saved. Oh no! Diaz – scores. Trouble! Neymar – scores. Back on track! Jara – post. Paradise!

From the park to penalty hero

Julio Cesar

  • Julio Cesar won his 84th Brazil cap in the game against Chile
  • However, the man who made over 200 appearances for Italian giants Inter found himself third-choice goalkeeper at QPR in the Championship last season
  • He made just one appearance for the club he joined in 2012 following their relegation from the Premier League – a 4-0 FA Cup defeat to Everton
  • He would train by himself at a local park, buying a new pair of gloves to keep it a secret, before he joined Toronto on loan in February
  • His penalty heroics against Chile helped banish the memory of his error in the quarter-finals of the 2010 World Cup, as his hesitancy allowed Netherlands to equalise, before they went on to win 2-1

As the Brazil players found energy in their weary legs to race across the pitch and mob Cesar, the goalkeeper’s journey had come full circle. The villain of 2010 was the hero of 2014.

Four years ago in South Africa it was Cesar’s uncharacteristic mistake in failing to deal with a long ball into the penalty box that

led to Brazil’s unexpected quarter-final defeat

by the Netherlands.

This time, his intervention averted a national disaster.

Jose Maria Marin, head of the Brazilian Football Confederation, has compared winning or losing this title to “heaven or hell”, while the squad and coaching staff have repeatedly promised to triumph in the Maracana on 13 July. An alternative outcome is not even being contemplated.

Cesar had already rescued his team in normal time, a magnificent reaction stop preventing Charles Aranguiz from putting Chile 2-1 ahead with only 15 minutes remaining.

But a bigger role was still to be played. Television cameras followed his every move as the teams prepared for their decisive exchange. His shot at redemption had arrived – and he delivered.

Following QPR’s relegation from the Premier League in May 2013, Cesar slipped down the pecking order to become manager Harry Redknapp’s third choice between the posts.

He helped Brazil win the Confederations Cup but went nine months without a club game until he started Rangers’ 4-0 FA Cup defeat by Everton in January.

After buying new gloves and training alone in a local park, the former Inter Milan number one eventually left on loan,

joining Toronto FC in Major League Soccer,

but made just seven appearances.

Not ideal preparation for the biggest competition of your career, then, but it did not show as Brazil qualified for the last 16 as Group A winners, nor as he excelled once more in Belo Horizonte.

“This shows I was well trained for the World Cup,” said the man of the match. “The staff created a calm and secure environment for me and I felt great joy, strength and affection.

“Being labelled a villain after South Africa was very hard, but this proves that if you have a dream you go after it and never give up. What will crown this will be to kiss and lift the trophy.”

Cesar even managed to overshadow poster-boy Neymar, whose contribution was also significant. He supplied the corner for David Luiz to open the scoring and slotted the winning penalty.

Analysis

“There’s no job in sport with the pressure of being a goalkeeper for Brazil during a World Cup. Often you don’t have much to do for long periods but then you have to come up good.

“Julio Cesar made a vital mistake in 2010 when Brazil were knocked out by the Netherlands but he came up trumps.”

“Neymar needs to be valued for what his did,” said coach Luiz Felipe Scolari, referencing the forward’s high-quality display produced despite being on the receiving end of some heavy challenges.

“He may only be 22 but he is experienced and mature. He is very good psychologically, mentally, and the details in his life show he has been ready since he was 17 or 18.

“He went to take that penalty as if he was playing with his friends at Santos.”

Despite Brazil’s inconsistent level of performance against Croatia, Mexico and Cameroon, their supporters arrived in confident mood. The Selecao had never lost Chile on home soil and beat them by three-goal margins at the same stage of the 1998 and 2010 World Cups.

Such was the confidence – or refusal to countenance defeat – the front page of one Brazilian newspaper even listed flight times back to a Chile. La Roja were referred to as “fregues”, meaning client or regular customer. In other words, they always give Brazil what they want.

But on this occasion the effervescent Jorge Sampaoli and his richly talented, meticulously organised and ferociously competitive players had other ideas.

They accounted for reigning champions Spain in the group stage and the pockets of boisterous, red-clad fans were desperate to make history with another stunning upset.

Star man Alexis Sanchez drew them level, but their greatest opportunity came at the very last when substitute Mauricio Panilla saw a spectacular strike come back off the woodwork in the dying moments of extra time.

The whole of Brazil must have breathed one enormous sigh of relief.

Julio Cesar

Julio Cesar’s error of judgement in the quarter-finals of the 2010 World Cup gifted the Netherlands an equaliser, before they went on to win 2-1

“The atmosphere on the bench was very, very tense,” said Scolari. “For the nation, this was important. We were tense – it’s not easy to play in the World Cup, at home, with the pressure of needing to win. It would be easy to say: ‘Well, if we qualify from the first stage that’s fine.’

“But no, we took upon ourselves this mission that we must be champions. We passed it on to the players and the people embraced the idea and are now demanding it from us.

“If you make a promise, you must deliver it. You go until the end and do whatever is possible to deliver what you promised and this is what the players are doing.

“This is the fourth step – there are three more to reach heaven.”

The effects of this match were felt far and wide; social media site Twitter has never tracked more posts per minute than the 389,000 that were sent when Gonzalo Jara missed the decisive penalty. That eclipsed the 382,000 peak during Superbowl 48. It was also the most discussed match of the World Cup so far, attracting 16.4 million tweets.

But few in Brazil will care about statistics; all that matters is that they are getting closer to an achievement they view as their birth right.

Next up. Columbia in Fortaleza on Friday.

Brazil fans

It was a nervy 120 minutes of football for Brazil fans in Belo Horizonte

Alexis Sanchez celebrates his goal for Chile

Alexis Sanchez cancelled out David Luiz’s opener in the first half after capitalising on defensive errors

Hulk's effort was ruled out for handball

A country’s joy quickly turned to despair when Hulk’s goal was disallowed for handball

Fans in the streets in Brazil

Away from the stadium, Brazil fans looked on nervously as the penalty shootout unfolded

Brazil and Chile players

Players from both sides watched on as Chile’s Gonzalo Jara stepped up, needing to convert his penalty to keep the contest going

Brazil players celebrate

Jara’s penalty hit the post, confirming Brazil’s passage into the quarter-finals, and home players danced with delight

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