REMEMBERING PELE: LONG LIVE THE KING
Sao Paulo, December 30
From spearheading the ‘beautiful game’ to helping Brazil win three World Cup titles, Pele embodied greatness in his sport.
- Editorial: Colossus of football
- Oped: An Embodiment of the game the world loves
The incarnation of the country’s style and elegance on the field, Pele began enchanting Brazilian fans as a teenager.
He helped the Selecao lift the World Cup trophy for the first time in 1958, when he was only 17. He excelled for years and years — and by the time Pele stopped playing in the late 1970s, he had become the standard against which every top Brazilian player has been measured.
No players have gotten close to replicating Pele’s success with the national team. There have been many great players wearing the yellow jersey over the years — from Garrincha to Didi to Zico to Romario to Ronaldo to Ronaldinho to Neymar — but none quite lived up to Pele.
He is the only player to have won three World Cups, and remains Brazil’s all-time top scorer with 95 goals, 77 if counting only official matches against other national teams. The feat was recently matched by Neymar at the Qatar World Cup.
Pele played 114 matches with the national team and 92 of them were full international matches. He played in 14 World Cup games, scoring 12 goals, including in the finals in 1958 and 1970.
Pele started as a reserve in 1958 but became a key part for the team that won the final against Sweden. His first goal in that game, in which he lobbed the ball over the head of a defender and then raced around him to volley it home, was voted as one of the best in World Cup history. He scored six goals overall in the tournament. In 1962, Pele scored in a 2-0 victory in the opening match against Mexico, but injured his left thigh in the second match against Czechoslovakia and missed the rest of the tournament that Brazil eventually won.
The 1966 World Cup in England — won by the hosts — was a bitter for Pele, who by then was already recognised as one of the world’s top players.
Pele scored in the first game, a 2-0 victory over Bulgaria, but missed the second match — a loss to Hungary — because of an injury. He returned for the third match but was slowed by fouling and hard tackles in a loss to Portugal. Brazil were knocked out in the group stage and Pele, angry at the rough treatment on the pitch, swore it would be his last World Cup. He changed his mind and was rejuvenated in the 1970 World Cup, scoring four times, including the opening goal in the final against Italy.
Pele’s last match in Brazil’s jersey was a friendly against the former Yugoslavia in 1971. He played the first half of the 2-2 draw at Maracana Stadium and couldn’t hold back tears as he went for a final victory lap with 140,000 fans pleading for him to keep playing. — AP
3 Won three World Cup titles with Brazil in 1958, 1962 and 1970 – the only player to have won the showpiece tournament three times.
17 Became the youngest-ever player to win the World Cup trophy at 17, a record that still stands.
6 Registered six assists at Mexico 1970 — a record for one World Cup
92 Scored 92 hat-tricks across official and unofficial games.
77 Goals in 92 official matches for Brazil
127 Scored 127 goals for Santos in 1959, thought to be the most goals scored by a club player in one calendar year.
643 Finished as Santos’ top scorer with 643 goals
Rest in peace, Pele. LIONEL MESSI, ARGENTINA CAPTAIN
Before Pele, football was just a sport. Pele changed everything. He turned football into art, into entertainment. He’s gone, but his magic will remain. NEYMAR, BRAZIL FORWARD
Unique. Genius. Technical. Creative. Perfect. Unequalled. The world mourns. The sadness of farewell mixed with the immense pride of history written. What a privilege to come after you, my friend. RONALDO, FORMER BRAZIL STRIKER
A great loss to not just football but to the whole world of sports. There will never be another! Your legacy will live on forever. Rest in Peace Pele! SACHIN TENDULKAR, FORMER INDIA CRICKETER