Mercury (Hobart)

FAREWELL TO LEGEND PELé

- JOSHUA ROBINSON

PELÉ, arguably the greatest soccer player of all time and a three-time World Cup winner with Brazil, died on Thursday in São Paulo of multiple organ failure due to colon cancer, according to the Albert Einstein Hospital, where he was being treated. He was 82.

During a 22-year profession­al career that set new standards for goal scoring and individual virtuosity, Pelé came to redefine the meaning of global sports celebrity and establishe­d Brazil as the supreme power of the world’s most popular game.

He spent most of that time with his boyhood club in Brazil, Santos, before a high-profile move to the New York Cosmos of the North American Soccer League in 1975, a disco-era experiment that created a brief surge of passion for the sport in the U.S.

But the moments he etched in soccer history all came in the yellowand-green No. 10 jersey of Brazil. Since the World Cup’s inception in 1930, he is the only man to lift the trophy three times.

His first triumph came at just 17 years old back when Brazil, strange as it might sound, was just another frustrated soccer nation that had never won the World Cup. But Pelé upended the world order of what he famously called “the beautiful game.”

“People called me the king in 1958 when we won the World Cup,” he said after being named co-player of the 20th century by soccer’s world governing body alongside Argentina’s Diego Maradona. “That is good enough for me.”

Pelé helped Brazil win the World Cup again in 1962, despite missing much of the tournament because of injury, and in 1970, led one of the most stylish teams in history to victory over Italy in the final.

“I told myself before the game, ‘He’s made of skin and bones just like everyone else,’” said Tarcisio Burgnich, the Italian player charged with defending Pelé in that game.

“But I was wrong.”

Pelé was born Edson Arantes do Nascimento to a journeyman soccer player and a teenage mother in Três Corações, Brazil.

His childhood of poverty fit all the cliches of a Brazilian soccer upbringing: He learned to play in the street with balls made of rags and socks. Individual skill was prized above all.

He and his friends once stole peanuts to sell so they could afford jerseys for their team.

This was long before he was known as Pelé. He hated the nickname so much that he punched a classmate over it, and he later wrote that he didn’t even know what it meant. He much preferred his given name, Edson – a tribute to Thomas Edison since electricit­y had recently reached his parents’ town, he said. But

the moniker, inspired by a teammate of his father’s, stuck.

Popes and presidents all knew it, even in countries where soccer isn’t king. When Pelé visited the White House in 1982, President Reagan introduced him by saying, “You probably are aware of who is with me here today. Oh, by the way, my name is Ronald Reagan.”

Global audiences were truly introduced to Pelé at the 1958 World Cup in Sweden. As a naive, but prodigious­ly talented 17-year-old, he made his first trip outside South America – his first trip on a plane, too – with a Brazilian team whose “samba soccer” style, defined by free-flowing dribblers and offensive creativity, had yet to conquer the world.

His biggest shock when he arrived in Europe, coming from racially diverse Brazil, was the ethnic homogeneit­y. “All the other teams had only white people. I thought it was really weird,” he wrote in his 2006 autobiogra­phy. “I can remember asking my

teammates, ‘Is it only in Brazil that there are blacks?’”

The event started Pelé on his road to becoming one of sports’ truly internatio­nal Black icons, around the same time of Muhammad Ali’s rise in boxing.

Pelé scored twice in the 5-2 victory over Sweden.

The highlight was his brilliant second goal, when he controlled a long pass on his chest, looped the ball over a defender and volleyed it home.

Four years later, Brazil repeated its success, but Pelé played a smaller role, severely hampered by injury. And at the 1966 World Cup, a bitter disappoint­ment for Brazil, his unrivalled dribbling, passing and ambidextro­us shooting abilities were at times violently suppressed by European defenders who were bamboozled by his skill.

Still, he excelled. In 1969, Pelé became the first man to crack the 1000goal barrier as he played before more than 65,000 fans at Rio de Janeiro’s

Maracanã Stadium for Santos in a Brazilian league match. The game took 25 minutes to resume in the midst of wild celebratio­ns.

Because of sketchy record-keeping at the time and loose definition­s of what constitute­d an official game, it is unclear what Pelé’s final goal total was, though it is often placed at 1283.

In any event, he remains the national team’s all-time leading marksman, scoring 77 times in 91 games for Brazil.

“Those of us who were lucky enough to see him play received alms of an extraordin­ary beauty: moments so worthy of immortalit­y that they make us believe immortalit­y exists,” the Uruguayan novelist Eduardo Galeano wrote of him in his book “Soccer in Sun and Shadow.”

Pelé’s fame echoed around the world, as he became one of the planet’s highest-paid athletes.

In 1966, Pelé wrote, John Lennon had even tried to organise a private Beatles show for the Brazilian national team. When Pelé visited Nigeria with Santos in 1967, the sides fighting the country’s civil war called a 48hour ceasefire for his visit. Andy Warhol said Pelé’s celebrity would last not for 15 minutes but for 15 centuries.

He cemented his status by winning the World Cup for a third time in Mexico in 1970. He was at the heart of one of the most electrifyi­ng teams ever to kick a ball.

Pelé didn’t play in another World Cup. But in the 1970s, seduced by a $1.4 million annual salary and a Manhattan lifestyle, he brought internatio­nal glitz to the struggling North American Soccer League. He was a New York Cosmos forward by day, playing alongside the Germany great Franz Beckenbaue­r, and a regular at Studio 54’s bacchanals by night, where he partied with the likes of Mick Jagger and Rod Stewart.

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 ?? ?? LEFT: An image of football icon Pele is displayed on the facade of a building in Sao Paulo after his death. ABOVE: Pele with the three World Cup trophies he won with Brazil in his internatio­nal career. Pictures: Mauro Horita/Getty Supplied
LEFT: An image of football icon Pele is displayed on the facade of a building in Sao Paulo after his death. ABOVE: Pele with the three World Cup trophies he won with Brazil in his internatio­nal career. Pictures: Mauro Horita/Getty Supplied
 ?? ?? Brazilian great Pele celebrates victory after winning the 1970 World Cup in Mexico. Picture: Alessandro Sabattini/Getty Images
Brazilian great Pele celebrates victory after winning the 1970 World Cup in Mexico. Picture: Alessandro Sabattini/Getty Images

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