Neymar then set alarm bells ringing when he hobbled out of training on Tuesday. But he returned to training on Wednesday and Tite insisted he is not running a risk by throwing Neymar straight back into the action. "It's the same team that is going to start that stated against Switzerland," said Tite.
"We want to win, it's a World Cup, but the coach is not going to play with the players' health. It's too big a risk." Even before his latest injury scare, there were doubts over Neymar's match fitness after a broken bone in his foot ended his club season with Paris Saint-Germain in February.
Neymar returned and scored in World Cup warm-up friendly wins against Croatia and Austria, but Tite admitted it could take up to five games for his star forward to be back to his best. "He had a knock, but I think it was the first time in three and a half months he played 90 minutes," said Tite. "We are calm. Five matches is the minimum you need to be fully fit and he has already sped up the process."
In their desperation for a breakthrough in the final stages against the Swiss, Brazil consistently looked to Neymar to provide the final finish or pass without success. Neymar was criticised for being self-indulgent, often taking too many touches to try and beat Swiss right-back Stephan Lichtsteiner instead of moving the ball on quickly to teammates. But Tite strongly refuted reports he has asked Neymar to play more in the team's best interests.
"Absolutely not. The information you got is not true," Tite responded to a Brazilian journalist. "All of the players have this responsibility of playing for the collective (good) and being individuals.