Wednesday, November 17, 2010

70 Facts About Pelé

1. Pelé scored a total of 1 283 first-class goals, including 77 for Brazil.



2. He won three World Cups, two World Club Championships and nine Sao Paulo State Championships.

3. Pelé was named after American inventor Thomas Edison, his real name being Edson Arantes do Nascimiento.

4. Pelé was signed by Santos when he was 15. He scored four goals on his league debut in a match against FC Corinthians on 7 September, 1956.

5. Waldemar de Brito, another great Brazilian forward, is credited with discovering Pelé, taking him to Santos and telling them then that he was going to be “the greatest football player in the world”.

6. At 17, Pelé became the youngest ever winner of a World Cup. He also scored twice in the Final against home side Sweden.



7. Pelé was appointed as Minister of Sport in Brazil in 1995, serving until 1998.

8. He was voted Athlete of the Century by the International Olympic Committee (IOC) in 1999.

9. In 1997, Pelé was given an honorary British Knighthood.

10. On the 19 November 1969, Pelé scored his 1 000th career goal. Hundreds raced onto the pitch to mob the Brazilian star and it took over 30 minutes for the game to resume.

11. At Santos, 19th November is known as ‘Pele Day’ to celebrate the anniversary of his 1 000th goal.

12. Pelé is 5th on the all-time World Cup goalscorers list with 12 - although only the second highest-placed Brazilian behind Ronaldo.

13. When Pelé retired, JB Pinheiro, the Brazilian ambassador to the United Nations, said: “Pelé played football for 22 years, and in that time he did more to promote world friendship and fraternity than any other ambassador anywhere.”

14. In 1967, a 48-hour ceasefire was declared in Nigeria so that Federal and Rebel troops could watch Pelé play on a visit to the war-torn nation.

15. Pelé said in 2006: “For 20 years they have asked me the same question, who is the greatest? Pele or Maradona? I reply that all you have to do is look at the facts – how many goals did he score with his right foot or with his head?”



16. When Pelé played for the New York Cosmos, so many of his opponents wanted to swap shirts with him that the club had to give each of their opponents a shirt after every match. “Pelé was the main attraction,” says Gordon Bradley, one of the club's coaches at the time. “Sometimes we had to take 25 or 30 shirts with us to a match, otherwise we'd never have got out of the stadium alive.”

17. Pelé made a cameo appearance in the film Mike Bassett: England manager, in which he was interviewed by the broadcaster Martin Bashir. He laughs off England's chances of winning the World Cup.

18. Pelé on the importance of football stars: “When football stars disappear, so do the teams, and that is a very curious phenomenon. It is like in the theatre, in a play, where there is a great star. If the star is not well, the whole cast suffers.”

19. Pelé has helped raise millions for charitable causes, including Great Ormond Street and Harlem Street Soccer.

20. Noted English football writer Geoffrey Green once declared: “Di Stefano was manufactured on earth, Pelé was made in heaven.”

21. On August 1 2010, Pelé was introduced as the Honorary President of a revived New York Cosmos.



22. Pelé once said: “A penalty is a cowardly way to score.”

23. In March 2003, Brazilian model Gisele Bundchen was offered special intensive training in flag-waving in advance of the 32nd Brazilian Grand Prix. Why? Organisers wanted her to do a better job than soccer star Pelé, the previous year's flag waver, who got ‘distracted’ and failed to notice Michael Schumacher crossing the finish line!

24. “How do you spell Pelé?” the Times of London once declared. “G-O-D”.

25. Pelé and Maradona are hardly friends. Earlier this year Pelé said of the Argentinian: “He is not a good example for the youth. He had the God-given gift of being able to play football, and that is why he is lucky.” Maradona's response: “Who cares what Pelé says? He belongs in a museum.”

26. England World Cup-winning captain Bobby Moore on Pelé: “The most complete player I've ever seen.”



27. His family gave him the nick-name ‘Dico’. He did not get the nickname Pelé until he started schooling. During his school days, he used to pronounce the name of the local Vasco da Gama goalkeeper Bile as Pile. Hence, a classmate of his gave him the nickname Pelé.

28. Pelé‘s father once scored five headed goals in one game, a feat that Pelé was never able to replicate. The most headers Pelé ever scored in a game was four.

29. Former Manchester City and England star Rodney Marsh once said of Pelé: “Comparing Gascoigne to Pelé is like comparing Rolf Harris to Rembrandt.”

30. Pelé’s header against Brazil in the 1970 World Cup Final was their 100th World Cup goal.

31. His first World Cup finals goal came against Wales in the 1958 quarter-final. Brazil won 1-0.

32. Since April 1994 Pelé has been married to psychologist and gospel singer Assíria Lemos Seixas.

33. Pelé on being a role-model: “Every kid around the world who plays soccer wants to be Pelé. I have a great responsibility to show them not just how to be like a soccer player, but how to be like a man.”

34. Pelé on achievement: “Success is no accident. It is hard work, perseverance, learning, studying, sacrifice and most of all, love of what you are doing or learning to do.”

35. Pelé is mentioned in the song ‘Ghetto Superstar’ by the rapper Pras.



36. In 2000, Pelé was named second in the BBC's Sportsman of the Century’ award. Boxing legend Muhammad Ali came first.

37. Tarcisio Burgnich, the Italian defender who marked Pelé in the 1970 World Cup finals, said afterwards: “I told myself before the game he's made of skin and bones just like everyone else, but I was wrong.”

38. In Brazil he is often called ‘Pérola Negra’, which means Black Pearl.

39. The Brazilian government declared Pelé an official national treasure in 1961 to prevent him from being transferred out of the country.

40. In 1993, Pelé was inducted into the National Soccer Hall of Fame.



41. To persuade Pelé to sign for the New York Cosmos in 1975, Clive Toye, the team's general manager, said: “Don't go to Italy, don't go to Spain, all you can do is win a championship. Come to the US and you can win a country.”

42. Pelé’s first football team was formed with a bunch of friends from his neighbourhood, and they called themselves ‘the shoeless ones’.

43. In Brazil, Coca-Cola sponsors a Pelé museum on wheels that travels throughout the country.

44. Cristiano Ronaldo said: “Pelé is the greatest player in football history, and there will only be one Pelé.”

45. Pelé is the only player to have been a part of three World Cup winning teams.

46. On November 21 1964, Pelé scored eight goals against as Santos ran riot against Botafogo to register a monumental 11-0 victory.

47. Pelé scored 92 hat-tricks, and scored four goals on 31 occasions, five on six occasions, and once scored eight.

48. As a boy, Pelé used to play with a sock stuffed with paper as he could not afford to buy a football.

49. Pelé on winning: “If you are first you are first. If you are second, you are nothing.”

50. Pelé has worked as a UNICEF Goodwill ambassador and as a United Nations ambassador, working to protect the environment and fight corruption in Brazil.



51. Pelé came out of international retirement to play one last game for Brazil on October 6, 1976 against club side Flamengo, who won the match 2-0. His last international game for Brazil, however, was a 2-2 draw with Yugoslavia on July 18, 1971.

52. On October 1, 1977, Pelé played his last game as a footballer as Santos played New York Cosmos at the Giants Stadium. He played the first half of the game for the American club, and the second half for Santos.

53. Brazil never lost a game when Pelé and the legendary Garrincha played together.

54. He holds the record for the most number of goals scored for the national team, which is a record that has stood for almost 40 years.

55. Pelé scored Brazil's 100th World Cup goal with his head.




56. Pelé had a video game named after him back in the 1980s called ‘Pelé’s Soccer’.

57. MMA (mixed martial arts) fighter Jose Landi-Jons was nicknamed ‘Pelé’ after him.

58. Dutch artist Dick Brynestein made a drawing of him and called him Pietje Pele.

59. His presence in the USA helped boost average attendance across the league by almost 80 percent from 1975 (7 597) to 1977 (13 584).

60. Scored his first hat-trick for Santos against Lavras on June 9, 1957.

61. Pelé made his first appearance for New York Cosmos on June 5, 1975, against Dallas Tornadoes. He managed to score on his debut, with the game ending in a 2-2 draw.



62. Pelé starred in Escape to Victory, a World War II drama about a team of prisoners of war who play their Nazi captors in a football match. Unsurprisingly, he played the team's star attacker, Corporal Luis Fernandez, who hailed from Trinidad and Tobago.

63. In 2005, Pelé fronted an advertising campaign for the drug Viagra, and was widely credited for breaking the taboo about speaking or receiving treatment for erectile dysfunction.



64. American forward Edson Buddle is named after the great Brazilian. “I thought naming him Pelé would be too much pressure,” his dad revealed. “Edson not many people would know.”

65. As he prepared to kick off in a game during Mexico '70, Pelé gestured to the referee that he needed to tie his laces. The cameras panned in to reveal the forward's Puma boots — the company subsequently experienced a huge sales boost.



66. Pelé scored three or more goals a staggering 129 times during his career.

67. Pelé has never liked his nickname, admitting it sounds like "baby-talk".

68. Pelé’s 1000th goal was a penalty. Romario, chasing his own 1 000th strike in 2007, eventually reached the milestone in the same manner, although his tally is disputed in some quarters.



69. How hard is it to turn an elephant into Pelé? Not very, at least if you're artist Paul Trevillion.

70. Filming on Citizen Kane, widely viewed as one of the defining films in Western cinema, finished on the day of Pelé’s birth. In 2001, on Pelé’s birthday the world got its first glimpse at one of the defining gadgets of the modern era - the iPod.

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