Brazil got the better of England at Wembley as Endrick's late goal ensured a 1-0 win for the Selecao.
In a week of discourse dominated by kits, flags and Ben White, fans could be forgiven for forgetting an actual game of football was being played. Brazil were in town for a friendly fixture and they named stars like Vinicius Jr, Rodrygo and Bruno Guimaraes in their starting line-up.
England's Kyle Walker lasted less than 20 minute before having to be withdrawn due to a hamstring injury. It remains to be seen just how severe the strain is and whether he'll miss any crucial fixtures for Manchester City, but Pep Guardiola will be concerned.
Lucas Paqueta struck the upright just after the half hour mark, before Harry Maguire's dodgy backpass nearly gifted Raphinha a goal. However, England went in at the break level, with the scoreline still 0-0 at the interval.
Much of the second-half passed by with precious little to note, but the last knockings did see two teenagers that are much talked about enter the fray in England's Kobbie Mainoo and Brazil's Endrick. It was the latter who delivered the killer blow, tapping home after Vinicius Jr's effort was saved by Pickford.
Mirror Football's Premier League team of 2022 as champions dominateEndrick became the youngest male player to ever score an international goal at Wembley in the process, at just 17 years and 246 days.
Mirror Football has analysed five talking points from Brazil's first Wembley win since 1955.
1. Teenage talents take the tie
Still at Palmeiras, as soon as 17-year-old Endrick turns 18 he will become a Real Madrid player. The teenage sensation has been talked about for quite some time, but this was the first time English fans had the chance to witness his talent up close.
Chelsea were desperate to land his signature, but Endrick couldn't resist the bright lights of the Santiago Bernabeu. The teen star was given 20 minutes to strut his stuff at the end of the second-half, but the fact someone so young was even holding his own on such a stage is impressive - let alone scoring winners.
However, Endrick wasn't the only teenager to get some minutes under his belt. Manchester United and England's Kobbie Mainoo was introduced with 15 minutes to play off the back of some stellar displays for the Red Devil in recent weeks.
The 18-year-old got one of the loudest cheers of the night when he replaced Conor Gallagher and didn't look at all overawed by the situation, which is saying something considering he was getting his senior England debut in front of a packed Wembley against Brazil.
One delightful turn from Mainoo left Gomes beaten all ends up and left the home fans purring, but Endrick stole the headlines when he bagged his first Brazil goal 10 minutes from time to end England's 20-game unbeaten run at home.
2. Friendly by name, not by nature
Though this was a friendly fixture between the two great footballing nations, the behaviour of both players and staff was anything but. Jude Bellingham in particular was kicked from pillar to post in the first half, with Paqueta and Joao Gomes making it their mission to stop the midfielder by any means necessary.
Potter may have reached defining moment in Chelsea tenure during Man City lossBy the 50th minute, Brazil had been guilty of 15 fouls, with Paqueta behind six of them. Minutes prior, England coach Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink is believed to have made his frustrations with the fourth official clear down the tunnel, which inspired Danilo to get involved to fight the Selacao's corner.
Hasselbaink's face was quite the picture, five minutes into the second half when Gomes cynically tripped Bellingham yet again. How the Wolves ace didn't pick up a yellow card despite numerous fouls on the England and Real Madrid maestro was frankly quite remarkable.
3. Watkins struggles amid Kane injury
Aston Villa ace Ollie Watkins was given an opportunity to stake his claim as Harry Kane's main deputy in the absence of the England captain. Watkins has been in sensational form at club level, with 16 goals and 10 assists in the Premier League alone.
He had a big chance to bag his fourth goal in an England shirt after Conor Gallagher lofted the ball into his path, but Watkins couldn't quite get a clean shot away and fired high over Brazil's crossbar. That was his only chance of the half, but service was undeniably limited for the former Brentford striker.
With current Brentford talisman Ivan Toney sat watching on the bench and likely to feature against Belgium on Tuesday, Watkins would have been desperate to show Southgate that he is the man the manager can turn to if Kane is ever injured again.
Unfortunately, there was no such joy for Watkins, who couldn't get the better of a resilient Brazil defence.
4. Gordon's promising debut
Southgate has handed out more than 60 debuts during his reign as England manager and there was another one against Brazil as Anthony Gordon made his first appearance for his country.
The Newcastle star can be proud of the account he gave of himself, with Gordon constantly looking to get on the ball and put the Brazil backline under pressure. It was the former Everton talent who forced Selecao goalkeeper Bento into his first real save of the game 40 minutes in.
It may have been his first outing for England, but Gordon was not at all scared to demand the ball from his more experienced team-mates, or indeed bark at them when they had ignored him being in a good position. Expect to see more of him against Belgium on Tuesday.
5. Walker vs Vinicius cut short after injury blow
The first flashpoint of the evening involved these two. One of the best right-backs on the planet tasked with silencing one of the world's best wingers, the stage was set for quite the duel.
10 minutes in, Vinicius Jr was set free by a delightful pass from Lucas Paqueta that meant the Brazilian was baring down on Jordan Pickford's goal at full speed. It's a position the Real Madrid star has found himself in so many times before and he managed to guide his strike beyond Pickford - but not Kyle Walker.
The Manchester City defender is just as if not quicker than Vinicius Jr and managed to get himself beyond Pickford to ensure a rather tame effort was stopped from crawling over the goal-line. And then that was that, injury robbed fans of what promised a fantastic battle.
Walker limped out of action with less than 20 minutes on the clock in scenes that will worry City boss Guardiola ahead of next Sunday's title showdown with Arsenal at the Etihad. It looked like the 33-year-old had sustained some sort of issue with his hamstring, with the right-back clutching it as he was replaced by Ezri Konsa.
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