A fine finish from captain Neymar helped secure a come-from-behind 3-1 win for Brazil over France in a friendly in Paris as they maintained their perfect record since the return as coach of Dunga.
Real Madrid defender Raphael Varane had headed the hosts in front on a cold night at a packed Stade de France, only for Oscar to equalise late in the first half yesterday.
Barcelona forward Neymar then controlled a Willian pass and lashed the ball high into the roof of the net from the left edge of the six-yard box in the 57th minute to put the visitors in front, and a Luiz Gustavo header secured the victory midway through the second period.
More From This Section
And this latest success against an accomplished France side will have been particularly pleasing to Dunga, back where he captained the Selecao in a painful 3-0 World Cup final defeat to the French in 1998.
"In football you win and lose, but it's always good to beat a team as strong as France," he said. "The team played well, but nothing was perfect. We still made mistakes that could have been avoided."
In the opposite dugout this time was Didier Deschamps, the current France coach who skippered Les Bleus on that glorious night 17 years ago.
"We were punished for our mistakes," Deschamps told TF1 television after the game. "Even if the World Cup was a trauma for them, they still have very, very good players and they did reach the semi-finals.
"It was good for us tonight to have to face up to a difficult situation. We will learn from this."
Seeing Deschamps and Dunga lock horns once again added extra intrigue to an occasion which was also notable for the French Football Federation's decision to honour those who have won more than 100 caps for France.
World Cup winners Marcel Desailly, Patrick Vieira, Thierry Henry and Zinedine Zidane were all received by President Francois Hollande inside the stadium and then presented to the crowd before the game.