Recovery question worries Norway fans before Brazil clash

Published July 3, 2026 Updated July 3, 2026 07:01am

MORRISTOWN (New Jersey): As Norway prepare to face Brazil in the last 16 of the World Cup this Sunday — an opponent they have never lost to — managing player fatigue has become a central focus.

Star striker Erling Haaland scored Norway’s 86th-minute winner in the 2-1 win against Ivory Coast on Tuesday, but said afterward that he was “dead tired” and could not have faced extra time. Both Haaland and captain Martin Odegaard, who like many players have long and intense domestic seasons behind, them had been rested for Norway’s final group match against France earlier, which ended in a 4-1 defeat.

But head coach Stale Solbakken said Haaland was “on his last legs” early in the second half, giving Norway supporters cause for concern ahead of their clash with Brazil.

“Can you undo the chronic stress that has accumulated over the course of the tournament, or the last season or two? No,” said Dom Rae, a graduate in sports and exercise medicine who is working with Al Nasr in the UAE Pro League.

“These guys, especially the key players, have played a lot of matches,” Rae said. “They are chronically fatigued. You’re not going to undo that in five days. But you can certainly freshen up to a significant level by kick-off.” Brazil and Norway have at least faced similar challenges from their travel schedule and the climate in the host cities. Brazil have a six-day turnaround before their next match, and Norway five.

“What we generally see in sports performance is that the peak fatigue marker is around 48 hours,” Rae said. “For some, it can trickle into 72 hours. But by 96 hours, into day five, everyone is pretty much back to normal.

“I’d actually rather have Norway’s turnaround here than Brazil’s,” he said.

“When you only have three or four days, it’s simple: rest, recover, prepare, play. But when you have five or six days, it gets tricky. You can’t train too hard because you’re too close to the game, but it’s too long to do nothing.” After their group match against Iraq, Norway let their squad sightsee and travel around New York during their days off.

Rae said that has its benefits.

“Walking around New York is tiring, but the brain controls stress, hormones, and sleep. If you are psychologically happy, that emotional lift is just as important as pure physical rest. It was a calculated, necessary trade-off by the coach.” He has no time for those who grumble about the hydration breaks taking place in each half, even where the temperature hardly requires it.

“Players are losing fluids, electrolytes, and sugars, and glycogen utilisation is going up because temperatures are higher and the games are getting harder,” Rae said.

“The teams that look at hydration breaks and say ‘They’re not going anywhere, so we need to use them as a performance answer’ put themselves in a better position.”

PAQUETA RULED OUT

Meanwhile, Brazil midfielder Lucas Paqueta on Thursday was ruled out of the game against Norway with a hamstring injury according to a source at the Brazilian Football Confederation (CBF).

He is not expected to play again in the tournament, unless Brazil reach the final on July 19 at Met­Life Stadium in East Rutherford, the source added.

Paqueta suffered the injury during Brazil’s dramatic 2-1 win over Japan in Houston on Monday. He has been undergoing intensive treatment and is the only confirmed absentee for coach Carlo Ancelotti ahead of the meeting with Haaland’s Norway this weekend.

Ancelotti could opt for a like-for-like replacement in Danilo Santos, or alter his set-up to accommodate a more attacking player, such as Endrick or Gabriel Martinelli.

Barcelona forward Raphinha, sidelined since suffering a thigh injury in Brazil’s second group-stage match against Haiti, has resumed individual training away from the main squad.

Depending on his progress between now and Sunday, he could be included among the substitutes if required, the source said.

Published in Dawn, July 3rd, 2026