A Maverick leader
Frizzy locks flailing and eyes bulging, David Luiz charged towards the corner flag and karate-kicked it out of the way after sending Brazil into the World Cup semifinals with a stunning free-kick against Colombia.
His celebration is a caricature of his playing style, Luiz rarely does things the conventional way.
The most expensive defender ever having sealed an 85-million-dollar move from Chelsea to Paris Saint-Germain last month, he played the majority of his final season in the Premier League in midfield as Jose Mourinho didn't trust him to defend and is his country's second top scorer at the World Cup.
Now in the absence of injured star Neymar and suspended captain Thiago Silva, Luiz the maverick must become a leader against Germany in Belo Horizonte on Tuesday.
On his 42nd cap Luiz will captain his country, a role many believe he is naturally more suited to than the subdued Silva.
Amongst the tears and crashing of Brazilian nerve against Chile in the last 16, Luiz was a shining light.
His first international goal had put his country in front and whilst others, including Silva and centre-forward Jo shied away when a penalty shootout was needed to decide Brazil's fate, Luiz stepped up to hammer home the opening spot-kick.
"I'm ready, I'm vice-captain. This group is very easy to handle because everyone is humble and fun. We act as a family, a unit," he said when pressed on how his role will change without Neymar and Silva.
With Neymar out of the tournament, Luiz has become Brazil's face of the World Cup. He already rivalled his poster boy teammate for commercial endorsements and his impassioned blaring of the national anthem has become legendary as a 200 million strong nation shuts down for every Brazil match.
More importantly, though, he is not the figure of fun he was often unfairly tarnished as in England. Since Luiz Felipe Scolari returned to take the Brazil job 20 months ago they have not lost a game in which Luiz has played the full 90 minutes.
Brazil will face the biggest test of that record yet, though, in the form of a German team sick of being nearly men at international tournaments.
"They are a great team with a great philosophy of how to play football," Luiz said of Joachim Loew's men.
"They have a lot of great players, a great coach and it will be a great game. It is a World Cup semifinal."
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