The 28-year-old has been ruled out of the glamour
friendly but the PSG defender would have liked to have tested himself against
the in-form Real Madrid forward.
Brazil defender Thiago Silva admits he is disappointed
that Portugal's Cristiano Ronaldo will not be available to face his side on
Tuesday,
The Paris Saint-Germain stopper, fresh from the Selecao's
6-0 friendly win against Australia on Saturday, had hoped to come up against
the 28-year-old following his devastating hat-trick against Northern Ireland on
Friday but has been ruled out because of tendinitis.
"Portugal are a very strong team, they've been
playing tough international challenges for some time now. I watched the goals
yesterday, the three from Cristiano," Silva told reporters.
"Someone said he's not playing, that he felt
something, but who knows? It could be one of those little lies. But regardless
of that, their team is really strong. We need to be ready to face them.
"I'm not happy that he [Cristiano] is out. It's
always a sad thing to see a fellow footballer getting injured. We had that
today with Marcelo. A player of Cristiano's calibre should always be fit to
play, because that makes any match automatically better."
David Luiz, who partnered Silva at the back on Saturday
believes Ronaldo's absence gives Brazil impetus.
He told reporters: "When one of the best players in
the world isn't fit to play, it's always better for who's playing against his
team."
Brazil bounced back from the Switzerland defeat with an
emphatic victory over the Socceroos, with goals coming from Jo, Neymar,
Ramires, Alexandre Pato and Luiz Gustavo.
Silva will expect to be tested much more in Tuesday's
friendly than he was on Saturday but insisted that credit must be given to the
way Luiz Felipe Scolari's men defended as well as attacked.
"We didn't have a difficult life today because of
how well our defence worked, it's important to highlight that," he
continued.
"Let's not say that they didn't make it past our
back line because of their lack of quality, but because we did a very good job
at keeping them from it. We had a really strong man-marking [system]."
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