By MalayMail
SAO PAULO, June 2 β Brazilian teenager Leo Veiga had almost given up on his dream of becoming a professional footballer when artificial intelligence helped him secure a spot in the youth ranks of an Italian club.
Tech companies promising to βdemocratiseβ football are launching apps that allow young players to upload videos recorded on their phone of them showcasing their ball skills.
AI is then used to analyse and score their performance, which is sent to scouts and clubs.
The 18-year-old Veiga was stuck playing for a small club in his home state of Santa Catarina in southern Brazil when he discovered one of these apps, from Swiss company Footbao.
A YouTube video offered the highest-scoring users to train for a few days with the Italian club Lecce. Veiga was selected and caught the eye of a scout, who decided to take a chance on him.
βAI opened a new door,β he told AFP from Italy, where he is now under contract with the youth academy of the club Spezia, which plays in Italyβs second division.
βI thought, βIβm going to download the app and give it a try. If nothing happens, it doesnβt matter because nothing else is working out for me. But what if something does happen?ββ he said.
Footbao works with videos from matches and training sessions, while another tech company in the field, German firm CUJU, uses videos of drills suggested to users through the app.

Brazilian football player Gloria Gasparini is seen on screen of the Foot Bao app, in Sao Paulo, Brazil, on May 5, 2026. β AFP pic
βUntapped potentialβ
Around 120,000 players have used the Footbao app, most of them in Brazil, the worldβs largest exporter of football talent.
βThere are probably between 14,000 and 15,000 players with the potential to join clubs or academies,β chief executive Nick Rappolt told AFP.
The company, founded in 2023, also operates in Colombia and Argentina and plans to expand into other South American countries.
According to Rappolt, AI can βdemocratiseβ football by helping identify talent that lies outside the radar of major development centres.
CUJUβs app, meanwhile, was launched last year and has been downloaded around 160,000 times.
βProfessional clubs have huge databases, but they mostly contain players who have already been scouted. There is no reliable data on talent at the earliest stages,β Sven Muller, CUJUβs marketing director, told AFP.
The goal, he said, is to turn βsimple videos recorded on a phoneβ into βreliable performance data.β
βBoost to womenβs footballβ
In Sao Paulo, Marcela Geremias de Lima repeatedly kicks a ball against a wall, one of the exercises proposed by CUJU, which focuses on technical skills such as ball control and speed.
After using the app, Marcela was invited to youth tournaments organised by the company in front of scouts.

Nick Rappolt, CEO of Foot Bao, poses after an interview with AFP, in Sao Paulo, Brazil, on April 22, 2026. β AFP pic
She eventually earned a place in the Under-15 side of Corinthians, a powerhouse of South American womenβs football with six Copa Libertadores titles.
The exercises βhelp you improveβ and mean βyou can be seen from anywhere in the world,β she said.
Brazil will host the 2027 Womenβs World Cup, an event that could help drive the recruitment of young female players.
The Brazilian club Santos, associated with star players like Pele and Neymar, in December announced a deal with Footbao to help identify young prospects.
It is a way to βexpand our search for athletes,β club president Marcelo Teixeira said.
Top prospects are usually recruited from a very young age, but AI can give a boost to players who might otherwise go unnoticed, according to Joao Paulo Sampaio, head of youth development at Palmeiras, where international talents such as Endrick and Estevao came through the ranks.
βI receive between 30 and 40 videos every day,β Sampaio told AFP, adding that tech companies that carry out βa first round of pre-selectionβ represent βa new tool,β although the Sao Paulo club does not currently work with these firms. β AFP
Source: ai-football-apps-help-undiscovered-brazilian-teenagers-chase-professional-dreams
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