Neymar Jr is back, and he’s bringing the big brands with him.
Puma officially announced a new partnership with the Brazilian football star on Instagram this week. The timing is about as deliberate as it gets. FIFA World Cup preparations are in full swing, and Puma dropped the reveal right in the middle of it all. Their caption kept it short: “The call we’ve all been waiting for… Wouldn’t be the world stage without @neymarjr.” Globe emoji, trophy emoji, and nothing else needed.
The post crossed 4.2 million likes. To put that in perspective, most major brand deals from elite athletes top out well below that figure. Crossing four million is the kind of engagement you’d expect from a Marvel casting announcement, not a sponsorship reveal. It signals exactly how much appetite there still is for Neymar on the global stage.
That appetite makes a lot more sense when you look at the full picture. Neymar, 34, has spent much of the past couple of years fighting through injury. An ACL tear on international duty with Brazil in late 2023 kept him out for extended stretches and had people genuinely wondering what the next chapter of his career would look like. He moved to Saudi Pro League side Al-Hilal in 2023, but injuries severely limited his time on the pitch there too. For a stretch, the conversations around him shifted from “how good can he be” to “will we see him play at this level again.”
This Puma deal is a loud answer to that question. Brands at this scale don’t build world stage campaigns around players they see as a question mark. They sign who they believe is coming back strong.
The hashtag #jogabonito adds another layer. Translated, it means “play beautifully,” and it’s essentially the founding philosophy of Brazilian football. Think Ronaldinho at his peak, all elasticos and grinning genius and plays that make you replay the clip four times. Puma didn’t just attach Neymar’s name to a logo. They tied him to a whole identity, the expressive, attack-first style that Brazil has always been celebrated for.
The stage for all of this is the 2026 World Cup. It’s being hosted across the United States, Canada, and Mexico. Brazil goes in as one of the favorites. A fit, firing Neymar could be a central figure for the Selecao. He’s never won the trophy. At 34, this is realistically his last real shot at one. That storyline alone is the kind of thing sports fans lock onto the same way they follow a hero’s arc through a film franchise.
Puma already has a strong global football roster, with players like Antoine Griezmann among their stable. Adding Neymar right now, with the biggest tournament in football approaching, is a very smart play.
Puma put out one line of copy and the football world responded hard. The call, as they said, was definitely worth the wait.
