The Brazilian Football Confederation (CBF) announced on Wednesday that football sensation Neymar, who tore a ligament and meniscus in his left knee during a national team game last month, will have surgery on Thursday in his home country.

Doctor Rodrigo Lasmar of the national team will perform surgery on the 31-year-old, who signed with Saudi Arabian club Al Hilal from Paris Saint-Germain in August, at Mater Dei hospital in the southeast city of Belo Horizonte, the CBF said in a statement.

Neymar had surgery from Lasmar in 2018 for a foot fracture.

After colliding with rival midfielder Nicolas de la Cruz on October 17, during Brazil's 2-0 loss to Uruguay in a World Cup qualifying match, Neymar was carried off in tears.


Exams revealed that the football player's most serious knee injury was a torn left anterior cruciate ligament.

He is anticipated to miss several months due to the injury, including Brazil's upcoming qualifiers for the 2026 World Cup against Colombia and bitter rival Argentina.

Neymar has had several injuries recently; he had surgery in March to treat an ankle issue that kept him out of action for six months.

His six seasons at PSG, where he was signed for a record $234 million (222 million euros) in 2017, were primarily marred by fitness issues.


In August, he reportedly paid $95 million to sign Al Hilal.

Notwithstanding his struggles with injuries, Neymar made history in September when he overtook the great Pele to become Brazil's all-time top goal scorer with 79 goals.