Inarguably the most successful nation in the history of the men's World Cup, Brazil will be boosted by the return of their icon Neymar when the Selecao lock horns with South Korea in the last-16 in Doha Monday.
The five-time world champions never failed to go past this stage since 1990 when they lost against their great rivals Argentina in the round of 16 tie.
And with a win at Stadium 974, they will get Japan or Croatia in the quarters, with a last-four showdown against the neighboring country still a possibility.
Alongside Neymar, who underwent surgery four years ago for a fractured metatarsal, full-back Danilo was also cleared by the medical staff, while Alex Sandro is still not fit enough for the knockout game after injuring his hip against Switzerland.
"Neymar will train in the afternoon and if he trains well, he will play," Tite told a news conference.
"He (Sandro) still can't play. Still recovering. Danilo and Neymar are back," he said.
Meanwhile, Tite fumed at the accusations thrown at him for playing Arsenal forward Gabriel Jesus against Cameroon despite being qualified comfortably.
Jesus was later injured and will miss the rest of the World Cup.
Brazil eventually lost the game 1-0 to a Vincent Aboubakar goal.
"I don't like hearing lies, evil lies from people who want to do bad things to others," Tite responded.
"At no time do we play for victory at the risk of a player. The liars, the haters who keep giving hate should go and do something else and stop giving fake news.
"Arsenal have a great medical department, we have a great medical department. This never happened and I would never let it happen."
Brazil's best ever footballer, Pele, who is in hospital since last week taking treatment for colon cancer, inevitably got the attention in the press conference, and Tite put all his gratitude on him.
"He is possibly the only person with whom I was shaking when I met him," said Tite.
"I was shaking, my hands were sweating, my heart skipped a beat and I thought, 'Wow, I'm going to meet Pele!'"
Meanwhile, South Korea's Portuguese coach Paulo Bento acknowledged the threat of Neymar.
"We would be hypocrites if we said we prefer playing against Neymar," said Bento.
"That would be a lie, we prefer him not to play but honestly speaking, I always prefer the best players to play."
The Taeguk Warriors, the second lowest-ranked side to make the knockout stages, met Brazil in a friendly in Seoul in June where the South Americans cruised to a 5-1 victory with Neymar scoring twice from the spot.