Football Exchange Brazil Intercambio de Atletas no Brasil

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.You have the dream of being a footballer? Do you dream of learning to play football in the country of football or Europe? With professional coaches? We can help you realize your dream!
Let us invite you to come to Brazil and to provide opportunities for exchange in Brazil and Europe for athletes from around the world, we are committed to work for you with excellence, competence and integrity. So come to Brazil or Europe, and let us help you make your dream a reality

Whether you are a preteen or already compete professionally, Football/Soccer X-change, Brazil (Brazuca Soccer) is your portal to the best Brazilian soccer schools that accept foreign students.

Тhe information on this website is free. At the end of each Brazilian football school section you will be provided with a way to contact the school directly.

Have you ever considered taking your football/soccer training abroad to Brazil? If not, maybe you should. Brazil’s futebol schools are inexpensive and safe, and they provide the highest quality soccer training, in addition to serving a unique educational purpose by enabling international travel to take place in a friendly, safe and controlled environment. They are also world famous. Those who have done their summer soccer camps in Brazil find it is much easier afterwards to receive soccer scholarships from US colleges or even to sign contracts with professional soccer teams.

It is hard to call Brazilian futebol schools soccer "camps" because all but one listed here provide soccer training throughout the entire year. The one exception is, Granja Comary, the main training facility of Brazilian National football team, which offers two or three-week long camps but where you could also end up training next to Pato, Kaka, Ronaldinho, and the rest of the Team Brazil. Other Brazilian football schools listed on www.brazucasoccer.com  one could attend all year around. They also all are boarding schools where one could go through regular training schedule or arrive for the group or even personalized soccer clinic. Many foreign students attend "Brazilian soccer camps" for many months, even years

.We encourage you to visit Brazil not only as a tourist, but primarily as a soccer trainee. Since by now you are probably familiar with the gist of what www.brazucasoccer.com has to offer, we encourage you to scroll down and examine in details the advantages of learning soccer in Brazil.

By the way, remember - we need you, we really do. We need you to visit this website and we need you to help us keep it going. Not only do we need you to help us stay current and to bring you information on top Brazilian soccer schools, but we also need you to help us expand this website to other premier soccer nations and on to premier countries in other sports.

                                                    Why Brazil ?

 

Kaká* Ronaldinho* Marta* Rivaldo* Ronaldo* Romário* Zico*

Look at these faces. All of these people were recognized as the best footballers of their respective times. The Brazilian tradition of excellence in soccer spans nearly a century. No other country has come close.

Soccer, which throughout the world is better known as football is like a religion in Brazil. The country won more FIFA World Cups then any other country on earth and is always closely competing for another.

 

Pelé Carlos Alberto Torres Garrincha Nilton Santos Didi Zizinho Leônidas

Brazil also is the greatest supplier of football talent in the world. Brazilians players are everywhere: on the rosters of top European clubs and in the most obscure soccer leagues. Currently, there are over 400 Brazilians playing in top 15 European leagues, over 120 of which are in the top five: England’s, Spain’s, Italy’s, Germany’s and France’s. In 2011, the top 10 European teams combined had 27 Brazilians on their team rosters, more than two teams worth!

The high quality of Brazil’s soccer training is reflected not only in the country’s having won the highest number of Soccer World Championships in the world, but also in the number of the "former" Brazilians currently playing for other national teams.

"In Europe, there seems to be a trend now," a football announcer once observed. "Find a Brazilian that you can swiftly naturalize and put him onto your national team." Indeed, in Euro2008, 25% of all participating national teams, including the champion Spain, had naturalized Brazilians on their rosters, some apparently naturalized by a special presidential decree.Among all of them, perhaps only one had a chance of making the actual Team Brazil.

Brazil’s reputation in the world of football/soccer is second to none. If you want to be the best, not only should you learn from the best – you should learn with them! That is why you should take your soccer training in Brazil.

 Why train abroad? Why should you actually go to Brazil?

What’s the difference between going to Brazil and joining one of the numerous local soccer camps with native Brazilian coaches on staff? Mainly for the same reason that you would choose to go to Brazil in the first place: besides the educational and adventurous aspect of the trip, and the joy of experience one is sure to have there, the main reason to go to a soccer academy in Brazil is for the immersion. Chances are that Brazilian coaches who teach in foreign countries would be more likely to adapt to the local style of training than to teach Brazilian style to their foreign pupils. Important secrets behind Brazil’s success in soccer can hardly be taught outside of Brazil since they involve pre-game preparations, post-game experiences, and the actual attitude of your Brazilian teammates before, during and after the game; the way football coaches relate to their students, the way students take in their soccer training, the way your Brazilian teammates relate to each other, and the way they would relate to you. Not only will you learn from your coaches, you will also learn from your teammates. Not only will you learn how to play better in respect to your technical and tactical training, you will learn how to rest, how to think, how to mentally approach your training in order to play better as well. Immerse yourself in the right environment and you'll "get" the game!

Brazilian methods of soccer training are also unique. A student from one of the world's premier soccer nations once told Brazuca Soccer representative, "In three weeks of training here I progressed more than in a whole year back in the UK! The teaching here is so much different, so less complicated and easier to follow, and so much more fun than back home." She planned on staying an additional three months, but given how many foreigners stay in Brazilian soccer schools for years on end, or keep coming back over and over again, I would not be surprised if those three months did not satisfy her desire.

There is a soccer school on almost every corner of every Brazilian village. Brazuca Soccer has sifted through all of these schools and camps for you, leaving you with only the few that have the facilities and commitment to serve both Brazilian and foreign students.

While the best place to learn baseball is probably in the United States, the best place to study ballet is most likely in Russia, and the best place to absorb Yoga is undeniably in India, the best place to greatly improve on your football/soccer skills is definitely in Brazil. Go to the country of joy, boundless optimism and Carnival to learn the world's most beautiful game and you're guaranteed an experience of a lifetime.

General expectations when attending a Brazilian football school

While it is not possible to get into great specifics here since all football training facilities in Brazil are quite distinct, some general traits can be observed.

First and foremost all schools employ at least some English-speaking staff. More detailed discussion of the language barrier is in the next section.

Second, the visitors’ training schedule usually includes 5 days a week of training (unless one of the weekdays is a holiday), in which each day of training is broken up into technical & tactical sessions, friendlies and pre/post-training and analysis. Groups can also arrange for soccer clinics or students could request personal training. Inquire directly.

Each school has a well-stocked gym, as well as its own small medical staff focused particularly on treating soccer related traumas, as well as its own psychiatrist whose prime specialty is in working with children who are far away from home.

Around each school, there are ample opportunities for extra-curricular activities. For additional cost, all Brazilian soccer schools could organize tours to various tourist destinations in the vicinity, or organize other activities. Besides that, however, three football academies are located within striking distance from Rio de Janeiro, one of which is also within 10 minute drive to a beautiful beach. Two soccer schools are located on the outskirts of huge urban areas saturated with unique architecture, parks, museums, clubs, and restaurants - everything onе would expect to find in the big city and more! Then there is another soccer academy which is located between a mountain-resort paradise and а typical sleepy Brazilian village, in pristine hilly countryside full of trails, horses, white-water rafting, etc. Take your pick. 

         Quality of training

Do we even have to discuss this? Do the names of Romario, Ronaldo, Ronaldinho, Kaka, Marta, Cristiane, and the great Pele – in every corner of the globe a.k.a The King of Soccer – speak for themselves? Brazilian kids in the center are being trained in the same football environment that produced a superstar on either side of their pictures. How good of a soccer training do you think they are getting in such an environment?

Brazilian football schools listed on www.brazucasoccer.com  are all top rate training fascilities. Each one is highly equipped and has countless choice quality grass’ soccer fields that are used exclusively for soccer. Then there are Brazilian soccer coaches.

As one can imagine, Brazil is saturated with soccer coaches. Thus the competition is fierce. On this website, www.brazucasoccer.com  lists only top Brazilian football schools, the so called ‘cream of the crop’, so the coaching staff reflects that as well. The standard coaching team in a Brazilian football school gets attached to a team or a group of about 15 students. The breakdown of such a team is as follows: the head coach, with at least 15 years experience of coaching students of the target age, one or two assistant coaches, a physical therapist and a massage therapist. In the past, many coaches in Brazilian soccer schools coached professional teams; many have experience of being on the staff of the Brazilian National Team as well. If your soccer club is in a search of where to conduct its pre-season or pre-tournament training, it may wish to consider some of the training facilities listed here. If you wish to familiarize yourself with Brazilian coaching methodology, some soccer schools offer soccer coaching clinics and seminars too.

Language barrier

The language barrier in Brazilian soccer schools is not much of an issue. While Brazil’s language is Portuguese, it can be taken for granted that much of the staff in all the Brazilian soccer camps listed here is to a varied degree English & Spanish-speaking. Some speak better than others but most possess command of at least basic English/Spanish. Practically all coaching staff members are well versed in professional sport-related English/Spanish as well. Many Brazilian football schools also have French speaking staff, while some even have Japanese speakers & Russian-speakers. If, for whatever reason, visitors still feel that they would like to hire their own Portuguese interpreter, all schools have access to the vast list of foreign language interpreters or translators that visitors could then hire on their own.

 

The educational aspect of the experience

 The educational experience of your stint in a Brazilian futbol school is not to be underestimated. There are hardly better places to get exposure to life in international settings than taking a week or two in a soccer school in Brazil. You are in a foreign country. You live with your foreign peers of more or less the same age. Some of your co-students and roommates will probably speak your language, some won’t. You live with them, train with them, play with them, and party with them. You adjust to them, they adjust to you. You learn from them, they learn from you. Chances are you will make friends for life.

Brazilians are probably the friendliest people on earth. There is even a study to at least somewhat validate this. Moreover, at times Brazilians can be almost obsessively polite. Many foreigners say that the difference with many other cultures here is that Brazilians actually mean it when trying to make those around them feel good. Brazilian kids are usually kind, rambunctious, fun-loving and very much into sharing things. Also, there is probably no place on earth where people posses such a superior ability to handle stress. All this inevitably and very quickly rubs off on visitors, especially on those who have a chance to live with Brazilians in close quarters. Even a short stay in Brazil is likely to change one’s outlook on life. People usually don’t come back from Brazil the same as they as they as they were when they just arrived. They come back better.

A tourist from North-East of the United States once noted at the end of her one-week visit to Brazil: "No, I wouldn’t live here. It’s too hot, and there is way too much poverty. But people here are just unnaturally kind." Unnaturally kind… there are worse things to learn from, aren’t there?

         Future rewards

Besides educational rewards from spending time in a Brazilian football school, and consequently learning how to better appreciate yourself and the world around you, there are other more tangible rewards.

Your chances of acquiring soccer or general sports scholarships in a US college would increase dramatically. Obviously the chances would go even higher if you pick a Brazilian soccer school with great reputation and high name recognition.

Your chances for a professional career in soccer would also increase dramatically. Additionally, your confidence and your skill level in soccer would inevitably better itself, and that too would increase your chances for a professional career.

Even if your soccer/football career does not develop, the unforgettable experience of going to Brazilian soccer school, the memories, the friends and the ‘bragging rights’ will stay with you for life and will surely help you somewhere along the way. And, last but not least, that diploma certifying that you spent a week or two learning futebol in Brazil, the one that would one day hang in your or your child’s office, would inevitably attract positive attention and would surely help in your or your child’s chosen career

 

Visa

Some countries’ nationals need a visa to enter Brazil, while others don’t. If  you will need a visa to enter Brazil. As of 2010, no foreigner arriving to Brazil whether without a visa or on a tourist visa could stay in the country for more then 90 days cumulatively* per year, with a “year” period starting on the date of your initial arrival to Brazil. If you wished to stay longer you’d have to ask for an extension. After 90 days one could get a “tourist” extension for 90 more days. You must apply for extension of your visa before your initial cumulative 90 days in Brazil expire. The extensions are handled by Brazil’s Policia Federal, which has offices in state capitals and border towns. You can ask at your soccer school or in any tourist office where the nearest Policia Federal office is. Now, a note for superbrains: if you wear too sexy of the outfit or wear shirts when going to Policia Federal, your chances for extending your visa may decrease dramatically. Also, as we are writing this, everything that we wrote in this section might’ve already changed, so whether you need a visa to enter Brazil or not, check with your country’s Brazilian embassy or consulate (or with nearest Brazilian embassy or consulate) about the most recent governmental policies which regulate presence of foreigners in Brazil. If you wish to stay in Brazil longer then 180 days – you’d have to apply for different type of visa. Check with your Brazilian football school. You can check for the contact information and location of a Brazilian embassy or consulate nearest to you here. Please be aware that this is not an official site of the Brazilian government and as such may be incomplete and is subject to inaccuracies.

 

Ler mais: https://www.brazucasoccer.com/
 

 

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