Tarólogos preveem Espanha na Copa e reeleição de Lula em 2026

The weight of the shirt alone will not be enough
A tarot reader's warning to Flamengo about the club's prospects in the second half of 2026.

Em maio de 2026, três praticantes brasileiros de tarô e astrologia debruçaram-se sobre o futuro coletivo do país — o futebol, a política e o espírito nacional — e encontraram um horizonte de transformação forçada. Suas leituras não prometem glória fácil: apontam para uma Europa favorecida nas quatro linhas, um Brasil em ruptura tática, e um presidente reeleito sob sombra de perigo. O que une essas previsões é menos a certeza do destino do que o diagnóstico de uma nação que busca se reinventar sem ainda saber quem quer ser.

  • A Espanha surge como favorita ao título mundial, com os astros e as cartas apontando para uma segunda conquista histórica — enquanto o Brasil enfrenta não uma queda, mas uma reinvenção dolorosa e necessária.
  • Neymar aparece psicologicamente abalado nas leituras, com foco disperso e vulnerabilidade emocional que podem comprometer sua Copa; Vinícius Júnior tem potencial, mas ainda precisa afinar o jogo coletivo.
  • Os grandes clubes cariocas navegam em águas turbulentas: Flamengo e Botafogo enfrentam crises institucionais e pressão extrema, enquanto Vasco e Fluminense oscilam entre lampejos e instabilidade emocional.
  • Lula larga na frente nas eleições de 2026, mas os astrólogos alertam para ameaças à sua segurança e para um eleitorado tomado por descrença — a sensação de que, independentemente de quem vença, pouco mudará.
  • Um aviso mais sombrio paira sobre tudo: o arcano da Força sugere a morte de um líder mundial de peso, um evento capaz de redesenhar o tabuleiro geopolítico global de maneiras ainda imprevisíveis.

Em maio de 2026, três especialistas em tarô e astrologia abriram as cartas para um jornal brasileiro e traçaram um panorama inquieto para os meses seguintes — da Copa do Mundo às eleições presidenciais, passando pelos clubes cariocas e pelo estado d'alma da nação.

No campo esportivo, o astrólogo Bruno Cassaro foi direto: a Espanha tem o céu a seu favor e caminha para repetir o feito de 2010. Giatho Profeta, sem nomear um campeão, enxergou a mesma vantagem europeia — especialmente de uma nação de bandeira vermelha — e previu uma surpresa vinda do norte da África. Ambos destacaram o jovem Lamine Yamal como figura a ser observada. Para o Brasil, a leitura foi de ruptura total: um novo estilo de jogo, transições rápidas, uma reinvenção que abandona o passado. Mas Neymar preocupa — disperso, instável emocionalmente. Cristiano Ronaldo, ao contrário, foi retratado como disciplinado e inspirado; Messi carrega o peso dos anos e uma fragilidade física que pode ser explorada.

Nos clubes do Rio, o cenário é de turbulência. Flamengo precisará trocar vaidade por suor; Botafogo enfrenta pressão extrema sobre sua estrutura mental, embora com capacidade de acender nas competições. Vasco e Fluminense alternam brilhos e oscilações, sem grandes surpresas.

Na política, Gloria Britho e Giatho convergem: Lula tem vantagem sobre Flávio Bolsonaro, ainda desconhecido e sem carisma suficiente para virar o jogo. Mas o alerta é sério — há risco à segurança do presidente e um povo tomado por desânimo, convicto de que a mudança de governo muda pouco. E sobre tudo isso paira uma sombra maior: o arcano da Força aponta para a morte de um líder mundial, um evento que pode reconfigurar a geopolítica global de forma imprevisível.

Three practitioners of tarot and astrology sat down with a Brazilian newspaper in May 2026 to read the cards for the months ahead. What they saw was a World Cup tilted toward Europe, a Brazilian national team in radical transformation, and a presidential race that favored the incumbent—though not without peril.

Bruno Cassaro, an astrologer and tarot reader, was most direct about the tournament. Spain, he said, had the heavens working in its favor. The country had won only once before, in South Africa in 2010, but the planetary alignments of 2026 pointed to a Spanish victory. Giatho Profeta, another astrologer and tarot practitioner, stopped short of naming a champion but saw the same European advantage—specifically a nation flying a red flag. He also sensed an upset brewing from North Africa, a team that would catch the world off guard. Both men saw promise in the young Spanish winger Lamine Yamal, predicting he would draw praise for his speed and agility.

For Brazil, the reading was more complex. Cassaro saw not decline but rupture—a complete break with the past, a reinvention so thorough it would reshape how the team played. He expected a squad forced into a new tactical mold: rapid transitions, defenses dismantled in seconds, a lethal speed of thought. But the human element troubled Giatho. Neymar, he said, appeared psychologically shaken, prone to distraction and a lack of focus that would undermine his performance. Vinícius Júnior showed more promise but still needed to sharpen his team play. As for the aging giants of the sport—Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi—Giatho saw different fates. Messi carried the weight of years, a muscular tension in his shoulder and forearm that could be exploited. Ronaldo, by contrast, would inspire: disciplined, hungry, a genius of the game playing with genuine desire to honor his country.

Argentina, the defending champion, faced what Cassaro called forced renewal. Uranus in Gemini would square the team's Piscean sun, bringing unpredictability and instability. The tournament would be one of survival, though Messi might serve as a beacon of clarity amid the chaos.

In Rio de Janeiro, the four major clubs faced turbulent seasons. Flamengo, Cassaro warned, would struggle under a sky of strong turbulence. Player injuries and penalties would frustrate the fans. The weight of the shirt alone would not be enough; the team needed to abandon old habits, trading vanity for sweat and emotional resilience. Botafogo, already in institutional crisis, would face extreme pressure. Pluto in Aquarius opposed the club's Leo sun, testing the squad's mental structure to its limits. Yet Giatho saw capacity there too—the club would catch fire in the media and competitions. Vasco and Fluminense would deliver mixed results: moments of brilliance and emotional swings, with one particular Vasco match standing out as surprisingly strong. Neither would surprise dramatically.

As for the presidential election, Gloria Britho, a tarot columnist, believed Lula would win again, but she issued a warning about security. Giatho agreed that Lula held the advantage over Flávio Bolsonaro, the pre-candidate challenging him. Bolsonaro, he said, remained unknown to the public, lacking the charisma needed to shift the race in his favor.

But the broader picture troubled the astrologers. Giatho saw no great pride in Brazil's future. The people lacked spirit, a sense of devaluation hanging over the nation. Even among supporters of particular parties, he detected a pervasive belief that little would change. And there was one more warning: the Strength card, the eleventh arcanum, suggested an astrological event of catastrophic weight—the death of an important world leader—that could reshape the global political chessboard in ways no one could yet predict.

The sky of 2026 draws a scenario of immense potential for the Spanish national team; we can say it is among the top favorites to win the championship.
— Bruno Cassaro, astrologer and tarot reader
I see moments of distraction and lack of focus; he does not appear to be in psychological conditions to deliver his best performance.
— Giatho Profeta, astrologer and tarot practitioner, on Neymar
A Conversa do Hearth Outra perspectiva sobre a história
Inventor

Why would astrologers be consulted about something as concrete as a World Cup or an election?

Model

Because in Brazil, these practices sit alongside conventional analysis. People want multiple lenses on the future. It's not that they disbelieve in statistics—they want intuition too.

Inventor

But what does it mean when a tarot reader says a player is "psychologically shaken"? How would they know that?

Model

They're reading patterns they believe exist in the cards and the stars. Whether you accept that method or not, the claim itself—that Neymar might be struggling mentally—is something a careful observer could notice from interviews, body language, performance.

Inventor

The predictions about Rio's clubs seem vague. "Turbulence," "emotional swings." Couldn't that apply to any team in any season?

Model

True. But notice they're specific about Botafogo's institutional crisis being real and visible. They're not inventing the club's problems—they're reading what's already there and projecting it forward.

Inventor

What strikes you most about these predictions?

Model

The warning about security around Lula's re-election. That's not mystical—that's a reader sensing real political tension in the country and flagging it as a risk.

Inventor

And the death of a world leader?

Model

That's the one prediction that feels most like a hedge. It's vague enough to apply to almost any year, but it also suggests the astrologers sense genuine instability in global politics.

Inventor

Do you think any of these predictions will come true?

Model

Some will, some won't. The interesting question isn't whether tarot works—it's why people turn to it when they're uncertain about the future.

Quer a matéria completa? Leia o original em EXTRA ↗
Fale Conosco FAQ