Andy Cryer, BBC Sport senior journalist and Emlyn Begley, BBC Sport journalist
Pele. Ronaldo. Romario. Jairzinho. The list could go on.
Brazil has been blessed with great goalscorers throughout their footballing history, players who have fired them to a record five World Cup wins.
Now the race is on for the striker to lead their line at this summer’s tournament in the United States, Canada and Mexico.
While the likes of Vinicius Jr, Rodrygo, Raphinha and Willian Estevao – even potentially the return of Neymar – provide exciting attacking options, the battle for the number nine shirt appears very much open.
And – with eight contenders playing in the Premier League – what happens in England over the coming months is likely to have a huge impact as Brazil bid to end their 24-year wait for the trophy.
Brentford’s Igor Thiago is the joint second top scorer in the Premier League with four goals, while Tottenham’s Richarlison has three and Chelsea’s Joao Pedro has netted twice.
Igor Jesus, meanwhile, has netted four times for Nottingham Forest in cup matches.
Richarlison and Pedro are the two most likely to be named in Brazil boss Carlo Ancelotti’s squad on Wednesday for their latest World Cup qualifiers on Wednesday.
Richarlison
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Tottenham forward Richarlison, 28, has scored 20 goals in 52 caps for Brazil – only behind Neymar (79) among World Cup candidates.
He started their recent World Cup qualifier defeat by Bolivia – but was a substitute against Chile.
Joao Pedro
Joao Pedro, 24, will hope his summer move to Chelsea can launch his Brazil career.
This is his debut campaign in the Champions League after spells at Fluminense, Watford and Brighton.
Matheus Cunha
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Matheus Cunha, 26, will need a good season at Manchester United to seal a regular spot starting for Brazil.
Last season’s 17-goal haul for Wolves was the best of his career.
Evanilson
Bournemouth striker Evanilson, 25, has played just twice for Brazil so far – and is yet to score.
Igor Jesus
Getty Images
Nottingham Forest frontman Igor Jesus, 24, is another who is relying on taking the Premier League by storm to earn a Brazil spot.
He moved to England this summer from Botafogo in his homeland, having previously played in the United Arab Emirates.
He has netted four goals in his first two starts for Forest, against Swansea and Real Betis.
Gabriel Jesus
Can Gabriel Jesus get fit and stay fit?
The 28-year-old Arsenal forward has not played since January because of an anterior cruciate ligament injury.
He has scored 19 goals in 64 caps for Brazil and would certainly be on the plane if he can recover from injury and rediscover his form.
Rodrigo Muniz
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Fulham striker Rodrigo Muniz, 24, is yet to feature in a senior Brazil squad and is uncapped at any youth level.
Igor Thiago
Like Muniz, Brentford’s Igor Thiago is a London-based uncapped 24-year-old.
Thiago missed the majority of last season through injury – but has already scored five goals this season, including a double against Manchester United on Saturday.
Vitor Roque
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Vitor Roque, 20, won his one and only Brazil cap back in 2023.
That was the summer he signed an eight-year deal with Barcelona.
Marcos Leonardo
Marcos Leonardo, 22, has made a big impact at Saudi club Al-Hilal.
He was the joint top scorer at the Fifa Club World Cup with four goals, including two in their win over Manchester City.
Endrick
Getty Images
Real Madrid wonderkid Endrick, 19, will hope to be a big part of the Brazilian squad next summer.
He has scored three goals in 14 games for Brazil – including one against England when he became the youngest goalscorer at Wembley ever, aged 17.
Relive the 2004 press conference that introduced him to English football as the “Special One,” before Jose Mourinho’s Champions League return to Stamford Bridge with Benfica.
36 teams vie for the title in a match to be awarded at the Budapest, Hungary, final on May 30th, 2026.
If you add the competition’s previous name to the European Cup, the competition will be staged in its 71st year, and for this week’s big Tuesday quiz, we want you to name the winners of the remaining 70.
What data are gathered from this quiz?
Do you like to test your memory? Play the most recent quiz or sign up for notifications at our dedicated football quiz page to receive the most recent ones straight to your device.
After YouTube suspended its account in response to the riot at the US Capitol on January 6, 2021, the platform agreed to pay $ 24.5% to settle the lawsuit brought by US President Donald Trump.
According to a court filing on Monday, YouTube,  , which is owned by Google parent company Alphabet, will donate $ 22 million to the Trust for the National Mall, a nonprofit that is overseeing a $ 200 million project to build a ballroom at the White House.
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According to the US District Court for the Northern District of California filing, the remaining $2.5 million will be distributed to other plaintiffs in the case, including Naomi Wolf, an author and the American Conservative Union.
According to the filing, the settlement was reached with the sole intention of compromising disputed claims and avoiding the costs and risks of additional litigation because it does not contain any allegations of YouTube’s misconduct.
YouTube, whose advertising revenues totaled nearly $9.8 billion in the second quarter of 2025, is receiving a relatively small sum of money.
Following the January 6 attack, which was carried out by Trump supporters who falsely claimed the 2020 election had been “stolen,” Meta Platforms and X earlier this year agreed to multimillion dollar payouts to settle his accusations that he was unfairly censored.
The three cases were brought before John P. Coale, a Trump ally and lawyer, who expressed his satisfaction with the outcome.
Coale responded to Al Jazeera, “Very much so.” “As are the other plaintiffs and the president,” the statement reads.
Coale claimed that the three cases totaled $60 million.
He said, “We think the behavior has changed.”
Big Tech has resurrected his administration after de-platforming Trump over fears that his false claims about the 2020 presidential election were causing violence.
At a White House dinner earlier this month, tech CEOs including Sundar Pichai of Google, Mark Zuckerberg of Meta, and Tim Cook of Apple praised Trump and praised his administration’s efforts to develop artificial intelligence.
Additionally, media outlets have already paid out substantial sums to resolve Trump’s legal claims.
According to Trump, Paramount Global announced in July that it had agreed to pay $ 16 million to disprove its claim that CBS News’ 60 Minutes program had fabricated interviews with Vice President Kamala Harris.
In response to accusations that its anchor, George Stephanopoulos, had defame Trump, ABC News agreed to donate $ 15 million to his library in December.
According to Timothy Koskie, a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Sydney’s School of Media and Communications, YouTube’s settlement set off efforts to regulate content on social media platforms.
We simply can’t expect consistent treatment from anyone who seeks to benefit from this administration, Koskie said, “Unfortunately, with the eroding of a rules-based order.”
“That will include a sizable number of businesses that we interact with daily, particularly, but not exclusively, the platforms,” the company said. This vigorously empowers it in a particularly secluded manner rather than removing censorship.
US President Donald Trump said the leaders were “close” to achieving peace in the Middle East after meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Monday.
“At the very least, at a minimum very, very close”, Trump said during a joint news conference at the White House.
He laid out his new 20-point strategy to put an end to Israel’s occupation of Gaza and force Israeli prisoners to leave Israeli holds. According to diplomatic sources, the negotiations team for Trump are examining the war plan.
Here are the key takeaways:
Trump applauds Netanyahu’s willingness to follow through on the agreement.
“Thank you very much, everyone. This is a big, big day, a beautiful day, potentially one of the great days ever in civilisation”, Trump said as the news conference started.
“And I’m not just talking about Gaza,” I said. We’re talking about Gaza one thing, but it extends far beyond that. The whole deal, everything getting solved. He continued, “Peace in the Middle East is what it is.”
Trump stated that “Prime Minister Netanyahu and I recently wrapped up a significant meeting on a number of crucial issues, including Iran, trade, the expansion of the Abraham Accords, and, most importantly, we discussed ending the conflict in Gaza. However, this is only one component of the larger picture, which is peace in the Middle East, and let’s call it Middle Eastern eternal peace,”
He thanked Netanyahu and leaders from the Middle East, as well as Turkiye, Indonesia, Pakistan and Europe.
Donald Trump, the US president, Jonathan Ernst/Reuters.
Trump makes his strategy public.
Trump introduced his plan to end the war, noting that many countries had contributed to its development.
Trump stated that “I’m formally releasing our principles for peace, which people have really liked, I must say, this afternoon after extensive consultation with our friends and partners throughout the region.”
He then went on to list some of the plan’s key commitments:
“Under the plan, Arab and Muslim countries have committed, and in writing, in many cases … to demilitarise Gaza, and that’s quickly. Eliminate Hamas and all other terrorist organizations’ military prowess. “Do that right away,” he said.
“We’re relying on the countries… , to deal with Hamas. And Hamas seems to want to accomplish this as well. That is beneficial, he continued.
“The United States will establish a dialogue between Israel and the Palestinians to agree on a political horizon for PEACEFUL and prosperous co-existence”. https://t.co/Vk7K5YNIhj
He then expanded on dismantling Hamas’s operational capacity.
“And destroy all terrorist infrastructure, including production facilities, weapons, and tunnels.” Numerous production facilities are being destroyed by us. It’ll also help train local police forces in the areas that we’re discussing, right now, in particular in and around Gaza, working with the new transitional authority in Gaza”.
Trump emphasized the need for collaboration when he referred to the roles of Arab and Muslim countries.
“Arab and Muslim countries must have the opportunity to fulfill these commitments in terms of dealing with Hamas. They have to deal with them because they were the one group that we have not dealt with. I’ve never dealt with them.
However, Hamas will be dealt with by Muslim and Arab countries. And I believe they’ve already been there. They probably understand each other, in my opinion. They may not have mentioned that, but I would assume they do. Otherwise, they wouldn’t have gone as far as they’ve gone”.
Governing Gaza
After the end of the war, a “technocratic” leadership of Palestinians, unaffiliated with any political party, will rule Gaza on a daily basis in accordance with Trump’s plan.
But that Palestinian leadership will be selected not by the Palestinian people, but by a new international body that would oversee the implementation of the peace plan. Trump claimed that the “board of peace” would be responsible for bringing together key regional and international leaders in order to ensure the success of the deal.
He claimed that he would personally lead the oversight body.
“It would be headed by a gentleman known as President Donald J Trump of the United States. Trump said, “I want that, there is some more work to do, but it’s so important that I’m willing to do it.”
Trump stated that there would also be other leaders in the body.
“We’ll do it right … We’ll have a board. Former UK Prime Minister Tony Blair is one of the candidates to join the board. A good, excellent man. And some others”.
Trump continued, “Hamas and other terrorist groups will not play a role in the board.”
security and long-term rule in Gaza
Trump’s plan speaks of an international stabilisation force (ISF) that the US and its Arab and other partners will set up to oversee the security of Gaza after Hamas is demilitarised.
The long-term internal security solution will be this force, according to the statement. Along with newly trained Palestinian police forces, the ISF will collaborate with Israel and Egypt to secure border areas, according to the plan.
But Netanyahu, standing next to Trump at the news conference, suggested that Israel has other ideas.
Netanyahu stated that “Israel will bear security responsibility, including a security perimeter, for the foreseeable future”. Gaza will have a peaceful civilian administration led by those who are “sincerely committed to peace with Israel” rather than by Hamas or the Palestinian Authority.
Netanyahu’s comments are also at odds with Trump’s plan on Gaza’s long-term governance. According to the plan, if Gaza’s government implements a number of reforms, the Palestinian Authority can eventually take control of it.
Hamas must still intervene.
“So now, it’s time for Hamas to accept the terms of the plan that we’ve put forward today. I’d like to add that over 20 000 people have been killed in Hamas, which is a different Hamas than what we were dealing with, Trump said.
“Their leadership has been murdered three times.” So, you’re really dealing with different people than we’ve been dealing with over the last four years, five years”, he added.
This proposal involves “the surrender for Hamas,” according to Marwan Bishara of Al Jazeera.
Hamas will interpret Trump’s plan as an ultimatum to surrender, he said, “or else the US will back its best friend, Israel.”
Now, they could be convinced that maybe they should surrender for the better, that maybe at least after three years of genocide and of incessant bombardment … that maybe that bloodbath will stop, “Bishara explained.
This is no less than a surrender, Bishara said, “but when the entire thing is based on the idea that there are terrorist networks in Gaza, that there are terrorists there, and that this deal will ensure that they disarm and that the territory they once sort of governed under occupation will be disarmed.”
Trump lays out his new strategy [Alex Brandon/AP]
Trump’s message to Palestinians
Trump stated that the plan was intended to give Palestinians the opportunity to assume responsibility for their future.
There are also many Palestinians who want to live in peace, they say. I’ve seen so many of them, and they have support, “he said.
We’re giving them responsibility for their destiny, so I urge the Palestinians to do that. We’re enforcing our responsibility for their destiny, [to] fully condemn and demonize terrorism and help them find a brighter future. They don’t want the life that they’ve had. They have lived in harsh conditions with Hamas, he continued.
They will only be held accountable if the Palestinian Authority doesn’t carry out the reforms I promised in my peace plan for 2020.
Tareq Abu Azzoum, reporting from Gaza, said that people remained sceptical about the success of this plan.
Many Palestinians think that Hamas’ current demands for demilitarization and retribution could be rejected, he said.
People are anticipating a cessation of hostilities that would lead to the Israeli military leaving Gaza, the release of Palestinian prisoners, and a guarantee that hostilities would not resume, he continued.
Donald Trump with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu]Evan Vucci/AP]
If Hamas rejects the deal, the US will support Israel by saying, “Do what you have to do.”
Trump also stressed the need to confront Hamas directly and the possibility that Hamas might reject the proposal.
” And, if Hamas rejects the deal, which is always possible… as you know, Bibi, you’d have our full backing to do what you would have to do, “Trump said, using Netanyahu’s nickname.
According to Al Jazeera’s Mike Hanna, who is based in New York, “Hamas has not yet agreed to this plan.”
If Hamas rejects this 20-point plan, he continued, “This basically gives me the green light to intensify Israeli action in Gaza.”
‘ I support your plan, ‘ Netanyahu said
I back your strategy, which accomplishes our war objectives, to end the conflict in Gaza. According to Netanyahu, it will free all of Israel’s hostages, end Hamas’s military might and political dominance, and prevent Gaza from ever becoming a threat to Israel.
Al Jazeera’s James Bays, reporting from the United Nations, questioned Netanyahu’s intentions.
Netanyahu has welcomed this, but does he really believe it? He has been “for some time” not being ready to put an end to the war or allow aid to enter, Bags said.
” The plan says there should be a credible pathway to Palestinian statehood, but that’s something Netanyahu has fought against his entire political career. “
So, I believe it will benefit the people of Gaza in the short run, but there are many questions about how all of this will turn out and potential obstacles, Bags continued.
Israel will “finish the job,” according to the statement.
Speaking about the sequence of actions that would follow agreement on the plan, Netanyahu outlined a phased approach, linking withdrawals, captives ‘ releases and the role of an international oversight body.
The first step will be a modest withdrawal, followed by the release of all our hostages within 72 hours, Mr. President, if Hamas accepts your plan. An international body established to fully demilitarize Hamas and demilitize Gaza will be the next step.
” Now, if this international body succeeds, we will have permanently ended the war. Israel will continue to withdraw in response to the extent of demilitarization and disarmament, but it will remain within the security perimeter.
If the plan was rejected or undermined, Netanyahu warned of the possibility.
” But if Hamas rejects your plan, Mr President, or if they supposedly accept it and then basically do everything to counter it, then Israel will finish the job by itself. “
It can be done the easy way or the difficult way, but it will be done. The simple method is what we like, but it must be carried out.
” There are no guarantees here to protect Palestinian interests, “Phyllis Bennis, a fellow at the Washington, DC-based Institute for Policy Studies, told Al Jazeera.
There is every indication that if Israel decides to return to the war once its hostages are freed, they will say, “We are just not getting the kind of cooperation that we expected, so we gotta go back to war, Mr. President,” she continued.
Benjamin Netanyahu, the prime minister of Israel, [Alex Brandon/AP]