The following photos were taken in Rio de Janeiro in May and June 2014.
Carlos Henrique do Nascimento, 46, is known as Caíque. He is a bricklayer and goes to all the soccer games played by Rio de Janeiro's Club de Regatas Vasco da Gama. Caíque is said to bring luck to the team. He goes to all the games with a banner that reads "faith" and also brings the leaves of a rue plant, which many people in Brazil believe brings luck.Sebastian Liste—Reportage by Getty Images
My friend Anirban Blah, a bollywood superagent, has a tattoo on his arm with the logo of Spain’s Real Madrid. (As a partisan of FC Barcelona, Madrid’s great rival, I’m a little ashamed that my own devotion doesn’t run quite that deep.) This makes Blah the craziest football fan in Mumbai. In Rio de Janeiro, that would mark him as someone with a mild interest in the sport. Rio is, after all, home to Delneri Martins Viana, a man so besotted with his favorite team, Botafogo, that he goes down to the tattoo parlor every Thursday to have his loyalty inked on his skin. At last count, Viana had 83 Botafogo tattoos.
Does that make him the craziest fan in Rio? Not if Desirée Rogério de Carvalho has anything to say about it. A partisan of Fluminense FC, de Carvalho has that club’s maroon and green colors painted on his teeth. (Happily for Blah, Madrid’s color is white.) Yet another contender is Carlos Eduardo Araujo, who has had his house and car painted in the red and black of CR Flamengo.
If Brazil is football’s spiritual home, then these men are its high priests. (Carlos Henrique do Nascimento takes his unofficial role as vicar of Vasco da Gama very seriously. The team believes his presence at games helps them win.) But they are only the more extreme examples of the deep passion for the sport that runs through the country’s 200 million people.
And the organizers of the World Cup—the Brazilian government as well as FIFA, football’s scandal-plagued governing body—are counting on that passion to make a success of the tournament, which kicks off on June 12. But there is another passion at play: a growing rage at economic inequality and corruption that has repeatedly exploded onto the streets of Brazil’s biggest cities over the past year. Polls show that many
Brazilians—perhaps even a majority—feel that hosting a World Cup is a bad idea, both in terms of economics and optics. Protest rallies are being planned during the tournament, and over the next few days, the news from Brazil could be as much about the action on the streets as on the pitch.
So this is a good moment to remind ourselves that whatever Brazilians feel about the World Cup, their love for the sport remains undiminished. Superfans like de Carvalho and Viana tend to the flames of footballing passion with great devotion. Long may the fire burn.
Bobby Ghoshis the editor of TIME International. Follow him on Twitter @ghoshworld.
The following photos were taken in Rio de Janeiro in May and June 2014.
Carlos Henrique do Nascimento, 46, is known as Caíque. He is a bricklayer and goes to all the soccer games played by Rio de Janeiro's Club de Regatas Vasco da Gama. Caíque is said to bring luck to the team. He goes to all the games with a banner that reads "faith" and also brings the leaves of a rue plant, which many people in Brazil believe brings luck. Sebastian Liste—Reportage by Getty ImagesA model of Christ the Redeemer, Rio de Janeiro's most famous monument, dressed in the Brazilian soccer shirt during a night party.Sebastian Liste—Reportage by Getty ImagesDelneri Martins Viana, 69, has 82 tattoos that pay homage to his team, Botafogo de Futebol e Regatas. He has had the tattoos done over the course of 15 years, since he retired from the army. He goes to his tattoo artist every Thursday to have a new tattoo done, or to improve an old one. The tattoos include the team’s shield, names of players, results of matches and even part of the club’s anthem. He only owns clothes that have the Botafogo crest. Once a week he paints his finger and toe nails with the stars of the club’s logo. Sebastian Liste—Reportage by Getty ImagesDelneri Martins Viana.Sebastian Liste—Reportage by Getty ImagesDesiree Rogério de Carvalho, 63, is a car mechanic. His workshop is filled with paintings and banners of Fluminense FC. He has his teeth painted in the team’s colors. He is such a fan, he did not go to his own wedding because it clashed with a match. Sebastian Liste—Reportage by Getty ImagesCarlos Eduardo Araújo, known as Eduardo Tokitô, is 40. His house and car are painted in the colours of Clube de Regatas do Flamengo, the team he supports. He lives in Nilópolis, a distant suburb of Rio de Janeiro and attends all the club’s matches. Pictured are his wife Cintia de Oliveira, 35, and his daughter Brenda Araújo, 13. Sebastian Liste—Reportage by Getty ImagesCarlos Eduardo Araújo, known as Eduardo Tokitô is seen by his car in Nilópolis, a distant suburb of Rio de Janeiro.Sebastian Liste—Reportage by Getty ImagesA World Cup sculpture at Copacabana Beach, Rio de Janeiro.Sebastian Liste—Reportage by Getty ImagesA father and his daughter are seen after a soccer game in the favela of Santa Marta near Rio de Janeiro's downtown.Sebastian Liste—Reportage by Getty ImagesGraffiti of some of the world most famous soccer players including Lionel Messi, Wayne Rooney and Cristiano Ronaldo is seen in the favela of Tavarez Bastos near Rio de Janeiro's downtown.Sebastian Liste—Reportage by Getty ImagesChildren play soccer in the favela of Santa Marta near near Rio de Janeiro's downtown. Sebastian Liste—Reportage by Getty ImagesChildren training in the soccer school for favela kids in Tavares Bastos favela near Rio de Janeiro's downtown. Sebastian Liste—Reportage by Getty ImagesA player from the Sao Cristovao soccer team is seen in Rio de Janeiro. The team is an important school for young footballers. Sebastian Liste—Reportage by Getty ImagesChildren resting after soccer training in the soccer school for favela kids in Tavares Bastos favela near Rio de Janeiro's downtown. Sebastian Liste—Reportage by Getty ImagesChildren resting after soccer training in Tavares Bastos favela near Rio de Janeiro's downtown.Sebastian Liste—Reportage by Getty ImagesSoccer players of the Sao Cristovao soccer team are seen training in Rio de Janeiro.Sebastian Liste—Reportage by Getty ImagesA view of the Sao Cristovao soccer team stadium view from the club president's office. Sebastian Liste—Reportage by Getty ImagesSao Cristovao soccer players are seen after training.Sebastian Liste—Reportage by Getty ImagesCommunal rooms where Sao Cristovao soccer players sleep after training. Sebastian Liste—Reportage by Getty ImagesSoccer players of the Sao Cristovao soccer team are seen in Rio de Janeiro.Sebastian Liste—Reportage by Getty ImagesFootballs are seen during Sao Cristovao soccer training.Sebastian Liste—Reportage by Getty ImagesA young goalkeeper training in the soccer school for favela kids in Tavares Bastos favela near Rio de Janeiro's downtown.Sebastian Liste—Reportage by Getty ImagesFans of Fluminense FC at Maracana Stadium celebrating after a team win against Clube de Regatas do Flamengo. The teams are two of the most important in Rio de Janeiro.Sebastian Liste—Reportage by Getty ImageFans during a soccer game between the Fluminense FC and Clube de Regatas do Flamengo.Sebastian Liste—Reportage by Getty ImageFans during a soccer game between the Fluminense FC and Clube de Regatas do Flamengo.Sebastian Liste—Reportage by Getty Images