I'm obviously not saying he had a good game, the whole team was atrocious. How he somehow came out as the main scapegoat is utterly bizarre to me though when it should be obvious to anyone who watched the match that Fernandinho and Marcelo were far far worse. Fernandinho in particular-the reason Luiz is having to hit most of those aimless balls over the top is because no one from the midfield is making themselves available. Why this is Luiz's fault is beyond me.
Agree with the bolded for sure. Re: the 3-5-2, I could see it working with Hazard as one of the two or playing behind the two, although in the latter scenario distribution from midfield might be somewhat limited. In theory though, this would be mitigated by more crossing. Who knows, I'm excited to have a more versatile squad; I think Conte has shown that he doesn't lack for tactical flexibility and willingness to make adjustments.
Luiz was the SOLE culprit for that loss. Giving the ball away for goals opened the flood gates for Germany. His positioning was nonexistent and he was an abomination to the flag and nation. Worst performance from a Brazilian, ever. After half an hour, the game was over because Luiz had already been at fault for more than one goal, and his allround performance over what was left of the game deteriorated to nothing short of an embarrassment to his shirt, the fans who watched on and the manager who made him captain.
Luiz lost his marker for the first goal, a volleyed finish by Muller from a corner kick, but there was an element of good positional play by Mueller's team-mates, which prevented Luiz from following the forwardard, so not completely his fault.
By the time Brazil were pulled all over the show for 2-0, Luiz and his team visibly wilted in their desire to match the Germans' running, and then the collapse began.
For goals four and five-and it's a mark of Luiz, Marcelo and the others' shambolic display that "goals four and five" weren't even the end of the trampling—though, the part that David Luiz played was unforgivable, unforgettable, inexplicable. With the centre-backs split, Luiz was stationed down the right channel when his team-mate lost the ball. Did he charge back, aggressively looking to stop another goal going in? No. A half-hearted jog, a wave of the arm like he could care less at what was happening. Moments later, Brazil's
CAPTAIN and first-choice central defender opted to back out of a tackle as Sami Khedira ended up making it 5-0.
A second-half challenge by Mueller on Luiz caused a moment of outrage by the defender; in truth there was nothing much in the tackle, and Mueller won the ball. A moment later, though, Luiz purposely turned in possession toward Mueller, kneeling on the ground, and tried to absolutely hammer the ball at him from about five yards. Luiz should have been sent off for a clear case of intent to hurt his opponent.
Continuing Luiz's Sideshow Bob antics of the match, he rather predictably missed the ball entirely. Perhaps that alone saved him from an early exit as the boos and insults rained down on those in yellow from the stands.
His mind was completely gone from the game by that point, but it is a 90 minutes he will hellishly relive time and time again over the remainder of his life. 2014 was supposed to be redemption for Brazil for their 1950 defeat, and Luiz had the opportunity to lead the side through to the final. What Brazil got from him instead was a diabolical individual performance in a hugely inept team display and a result to haunt everybody involved with the side for the rest of their careers and lives.