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Diaspora Figures | Pele
Pele
Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pele
Edson
Arantes do Nascimento, KBE (born October 23, 1940), nicknamed Pelé
(pron. IPA /p?.'l?/), is a former Brazilian football player and
thought by many to be the finest player of all time. Often considered
the complete attacking player, he was completely two-footed, a prolific
finisher, exceptional at dribbling and passing, and was a remarkably
good tackler for a forward. He was also famed for his speed and
kicking strength. Over the course of his career, Pelé scored
over a thousand goals and won three World Cups. Since his full retirement
in 1977 he has served as an ambassador for the sport.
Biography
Edson was born in Três Corações
Minas Gerais, Brazil, the son of Fluminense footballer João
Ramos do Nascimento, also known as Dondinho. He was named after
American inventor Thomas Edison, and did not receive the nickname
"Pelé" until his school days. He originally disliked
the nickname, but the more he complained the more he was called
by it. Later in life, when reflecting that the world came to know
the name, he stated his belief that it was chosen for him by God.
The fans loved him.
Growing up in poverty on the streets of Bauru,
São Paulo, he could not afford a football and usually played
with either a sock stuffed with papers or a grapefruit. He was given
his first leather ball on his sixth birthday by his father's teammate,
Sosa. At the age of eleven, Pelé was scouted by Brazilian
legend Waldemar de Brito and was invited to join de Brito's amateur
team, Clube Atlético Bauru. In 1956, Pele's mentor took him
to the city of São Paulo, to try out for professional club
Santos. De Brito told the directors at Santos that the 15-year-old
would be "the greatest football player in the world".
Pelé was offered professional terms and scored four goals
in his first league game. When the new season started, Pelé
was given a starting place in the first team and, at the age of
just sixteen, became the top scorer in the league. Just ten months
after signing professionally, the teenager was called up to the
Brazilian national team.
In 1958, Pelé became the youngest ever
World Cup winner in Sweden at 17, scoring two goals in the final
as Brazil crushed Sweden 5–2 in Stockholm. He played in three
more Brazilian World Cup teams in 1962, 1966 and 1970, two of which
Brazil won (1962 and 1970). Although his contributions were limited
in the 1962 and 1966 campaigns because of injuries inflicted by
the dirty play of opposition players, the 1970 tournament in Mexico
was to be Pelé's last. The 1970 team, featuring famous players
like Rivelino, Jairzinho, Gérson, and Tostão, is often
considered to be the greatest team ever. Brazil defeated Italy 4–1
in the final, with Pelé scoring one and gloriously setting
up Carlos Alberto for another in what some still consider to be
the finest ever World Cup.
Pelé's technique and deft touch combined
with his dribbling skills and scoring ability cannot be overstated.
His most spectacular signature move was probably the "bicycle
kick". He scored over twelve hundred career goals in all competitions,
the biggest haul by far among famous players.
After his retirement from Brazilian football on
October 2, 1974, he joined the New York Cosmos of the North American
Soccer League. A reported 7-million-dollar contract for three years
made him the highest paid soccer player of the North American Soccer
League.
During the three seasons playing for the Cosmos
he was named in the annual "NASL First Team": the 11 best
players of a particular season. He was also named as the league's
most valuable player in 1976. His lucrative contract for Cosmos
meant that Pele had to play in the regular US-based NASL season
but also travel the World playing many exhibition games. During
the 3 years Pele played for Cosmos, he played matches in countries
such as: China, Japan, Sweden, Puerto Rico, Bermuda and Uganda.
In his final year as a professional player, the
NY Cosmos won the 1977 NASL Championship. During that season Pele
was joined by fellow Brazilian Carlos Alberto and "the Kaiser",
Franz Beckenbauer.
He played his last game as a professional in a
friendly on October 1, 1977 in front of a capacity crowd at Giants
Stadium against his old club, Santos; he played the first half with
the Cosmos and the second half with Santos. The exhibition game
was sold out six weeks beforehand.
Pelé did appear in a few friendly games
for the Cosmos after he retired in 1977. Due to falling attendances
the Cosmos did try to bring Pelé out of retirement a second
time, but he declined.
He was received in the Vatican by three popes,
John XXIII, Paul VI and John Paul II.
In 1995, President Cardoso appointed Pelé
to the position of Minister of Sports.
Pelé is a long-standing contributor for
children's rights at UNICEF and acts as the figurehead of a charity
for erectile dysfunction. Pelé is certainly one of the most
famous men in football, with his nickname being recognized even
by those unfamiliar with the sport.
In 2005, Pelé drew international media
attention due to the imprisonment of Edson Cholbi Nascimento, his
son and ex-goalkeeper of Santos FC, who was arrested in an operation
to dismantle a drug gang in southeastern Brazil. Nascimento, 35,
was arrested along with some 50 other people after an eight-month
investigation into a cocaine trafficking operation in the port city
of Santos.
Recently he scouted for Premiership Football Team
Fulham FC.
Accolades
Pelé is in third place in the list of all-time
top goalscorers in World Cup play, with 12 goals, and was part of
three World Cup winning teams, although he did not play in the 1962
final through injury and did not receive a medal. He ended his career
with a total of 1281 goals in 1363 matches, becoming the highest
goalscorer in professional football ever. In his 92 appearances
for the Brazilian team, he scored 77 goals.
He was awarded Brazil's Gold Medal for outstanding
services to the sport, before becoming Sports Minister in 1995.
In 1997, he was given an honorary British knighthood.
In 1992, Pelé was appointed a United Nations
Ambassador for Ecology and the Environment.
In 1995, he was appowhy does it let me add whatever
i want this is a person i shouldnt get to change the documentinted
an Ambassador for UNESCO at the Goodwill Games.
He was voted athlete of the century by the International
Olympic Committee (IOC) in 1999.
In December 2000, Pelé was named Footballer
of the Century by a "Family of Football" committee appointed
by FIFA, after a web poll favored Diego Maradona. (For details of
the controversial process, see Sports Illustrated Article).
In the same year, Pelé received the Laureus
World Sports Awards Lifetime Achievement Award from South African
President Nelson Mandela.
Pelé is a UNESCO Goodwill Ambassador.
Trivia
* Pelé is the youngest player to be in
a world cup final at 17 years and 239 days old, in Gothenburg, June
19 - 1958.
* He is also the youngest player to score in
a world cup at 17 years old.
* In 1970, the two factions involved in a civil
war in Nigeria agreed for a 48-hour ceasefire so they could watch
Pelé play an exhibition game in Lagos.
* Pelé is the first sports figure featured
on a video game with the Atari 2600 game Pelé's Soccer.
* He also played in a friendly match with the
Lebanese club Nejmeh in 1974 (see Football in Lebanon).
* After the World Cup in 1962, wealthy European
clubs offered massive fees to sign the young player, but the government
of Brazil declared Pelé an official national treasure to
prevent him from being transferred out of the country.
* Pelé was one of the first black people
to be featured on the cover of Life Magazine.
* Pelé has presented trophies at the Brazilian
Grand Prix race several times, but in 2002 he was waving the checkered
flag to signify the end of the race and missed the race winner Michael
Schumacher crossing the line. Therefore, Takuma Sato who crossed
the line a lap down shortly afterwards, could have claimed to be
the race winner. The respected F1 Rejects website dubbed Pelé
'Reject of the Race' as a result.
* Pelé has published several bestselling
autobiographies, starred in documentary and semi-documentary films
and composed various musical pieces, including the entire soundtrack
for the film 'Pelé' in 1977. He had cameo role, alongside
many other well know footballers of the 60's and 70's, in the film
Escape to Victory, about a attempted escape from a Nazi POW Camp
during WWII.
* Tarcisio Burgnich, the famous Italian defender
who marked Pelé in the 1970 World Cup Finals: "I told
myself before the game, 'he's made of skin and bones just like everyone
else' — but I was wrong".
* Pelé hated his nickname, and was once
suspended from school for 2 days for punching the classmate that
coined it.
* Pelé states his most beautiful
goal was scored at Rua Javari on a Campeonato Paulista match against
Juventus in 02 August 1959. As there were no video footage of this
match, Pelé asked it to be made an computer animation of
this specific goal. This animation can be seen on Pelé Eterno,
a documentary about his career .
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