Luis Suarez scored on his return from a worldwide ban for biting as Uruguay fought back from 2-0 down to grab a 2-2 draw with Brazil in a pulsating World Cup qualifying battle on Friday.
Barcelona star Suarez—playing his first international since infamously chomping on Italy’s Giorgio Chiellini at the 2014 World Cup—struck in the 48th minute to complete a remarkable Uruguayan fightback.
Uruguay had looked to be sliding to a heavy defeat after Brazil went 2-0 up inside the first half an hour thanks to goals from Bayern Munich striker Douglas Costa and Renato Augusto.
But Edinson Cavani pulled a goal back for Uruguay to allow Suarez—installed as captain by coach Oscar Tabarez—his moment of glory at the Arena Pernambuco.
The draw left Uruguay in second place in the South American standings, three points behind leaders Ecuador with 10 points from five games. Brazil moved up to third, level on eight points with Argentina and Paraguay but ahead on goal difference.  
Brazil took the lead in the opening minute with a well worked goal created by Chelsea winger Willian. The 27-year-old teased and tormented Sebastian Coates on the right flank before floating a cross to Costa who delicately steered home the finish.
Brazil’s dream start set the tone for the rest of the half, with the hosts rampant against a feeble Uruguay who offered only token opposition for long periods. However, Brazil had to wait until the 26th minute to grab their second, which arrived after more sorcery from Neymar. The Brazilian captain split Uruguay’s defence with a wonderful pass that Alvaro Pereira could only deflect into the path of Renato Augusto.
Augusto then pulled off a magical dummy to wrong-foot the advancing Fernando Muslera before firing high into the net for 2-0.
Yet, Uruguay came roaring back to score with their first attack of the game and what turned out to be their only attack of the half.
Pereira advanced down the left flank and crossed to Carlos Sanchez at the far post, who knocked down into the path of Paris Saint-Germain star Cavani who lashed in a perfectly timed volley to make it 2-1.
Thereafter however it was all Brazil, with Neymar shooting just wide on 34 minutes as Brazil laid siege to the Uruguayan goal.
But in the opening minutes of the second half Uruguay drew level with another goal against the run of play.
Pereira released Suarez, and the striker drilled a low shot that the advancing Brazil goalkeeper Alisson couldn’t grasp.
The goal galvanised Uruguay who showed far greater resilience thereafter. Although Brazil dominated they were kept at bay, and Neymar’s frustration boiled over on 63 minutes when he was booked for a peutlant kick on substitute Alvaro Gonzalez. Dani Alves also earned a caution in the 75th minute for a wild tackle on Pereira.
Brazil’s Liverpool midfielder Philippe Coutinho tested Muslera with a late long-range strike but Uruguay’s defence held firm.

Ronaldo misses penalty as Bulgaria shock Portugal 1-0
In Leiria (Portugal,  Brazilian-born Marcelinho scored on his Bulgaria debut while Cristiano Ronaldo missed a penalty for Portugal as the visitors pulled off a shock 1-0 friendly win over the Euro 2016 finalists on Friday.
Marcelinho, born in a small town in the Amazon region of Brazil and making his first international appearance at the age of 31, struck in the 20th minute of a game almost totally dominated by Portugal.
The hosts were repeatedly foiled by Bulgaria goalkeeper Vladislav Stoyanov who capped an outstanding display by diving to his right to save Ronaldo’s penalty, awarded for handball, in the 69th minute.
Ronaldo, who has missed three penalties this season for Real Madrid, also turned the rebound wide. His unhappy night began when he fired over with the goal at his mercy from an unmarked position in the seventh minute.
The former FIFA World Player of the Year also had four attempts at goal from long-range free kicks, two hitting the wall and the others forcing saves from Stoyanov.
The visiting goalkeeper made six stops in the first 10 minutes alone, including one excellent effort denying Nani, as Portugal threatened a goal spree. Bulgaria then went in front when Marcelinho, who qualified for them after spending five years with Ludogorets Razgrad, forced his way past two defenders and poked the ball past Anthony Lopes.
After that the game became predictable as Portugal poured forward and played plenty of neat football around the Bulgaria area but either lacked the killer pass or were foiled by Stoyanov.
The goalkeeper completed his evening’s work by making a superb stop to turn away a close-range header by a frustrated Ronaldo with five minutes left. “We are not satisfied with the result. We started brilliantly, in the first 15 minutes, we were strong, consistent, the goalkeeper make some fantastic saves and then we lost some concentration,” said Portugal coach Fernando Santos.