Thứ Tư, 2 tháng 11, 2016

Carlos Alberto and the goal that shook the world

It came as a surprise when Carlos Alberto was not chosen for the Brazilian squad, which so catastrophically contested the 1966 World Cup in England. But in 1970, he was not only properly chosen, but given the captaincy.

Carlos Alberto, who has died at the age of 72, will always be remembered for the spectacular and dramatic goal he scored for Brazil in the 1970 World Cup Final against Italy in Mexico City’s Aztec Stadium. This is how he himself recalled it: “Clodoaldo (the young right half whose careless error had given Italy an equaliser in the first half) started the carnival in our half. He dribbled past four players. Then I started to run from right back. Slowly, not fast. When Jairzinho (the outside right) got the ball, I ran as fast as I could. I knew Pele would come into action. We had spoken about this kind of chance before the game. Before Pele stopped the ball, he saw I was coming. Then he stopped the ball and waited for the right time to give the ball to me. It was only that good because the ball bounced before I hit it and the stride was perfect. It was the most beautiful World Cup goal.”
And it crowned Brazil’s glittering display to give them a 4-1 victory. The shot was made from 21 yards out, its speed was 53.3 miles per hour, it came four minutes from the end of the match, the time elapsed between the shot and the goal itself was 0.84 seconds.
Carlos Alberto Torres, former Brazilian captain, kisses the 2014 FIFA World Cup trophy during its display in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.   –AP
I was lucky enough to be at that final, whose result was not only well deserved by a coruscating Brazil, but which exalted attacking, adventurous football over the dour negativity of so much of the Italian play. How fitting it was that Carlos Alberto, Brazil’s captain, should himself receive the World Cup trophy. It was of course Pele’s World Cup rather than anybody else's. His second, having won the first in Sweden 12 years earlier as a mere 17-year-old.
His was the first remarkable Brazilian goal of that 1970 Final, leaping wondrously high — a mere five-foot eight inches above the big Italian defender Tarcisio Burgnich to give Brazil an early lead.
Was Carlos Alberto, for all his power, pace and menace in attack, the complete right back? Arguably not. “Carlos Alberto,” I wrote in my History of the World Cup, “was a great force when he was coming forward but very much less impressive when he was against a winger who would take him on.” Italy, that day at the Azteca, deployed no such winger. Or rather, they did, but in their tactical obsession, they did not use him.
His name was Gigi Riva who, as an outside left, quick, strong and penetrative, had become the idol of Italian football, an almost Messianic figure on whose shoulders Italy’s fans placed their fondest hopes. The problem being that like other star wingers, such as George Best, Riva was unwilling to stay out on the wing. He wanted to work from the centre. In this Final, the consequence was that Carlos Alberto had no opponent to mark and could therefore attack at will. Italy were also betrayed by their obsession with man-to-man marking, enabling Brazil’s explosive right-winger, Jairzinho, to draw the towering Italian left back Giacinto Facchetti off the flank and into the middle. Giving Carlos Alberto, who already had no winger to mark, still more scope to attack.
Yet Clodoaldo’s abysmal back-heeled mistake, enabling Italy and Boninsegna to equalise, could well have turned the game. Pele, in Rome two years later, admitted as much. He had been astonished and relieved, he said, that the Azzurri had not pressed home their psychological advantage against a Brazilian team monumentally stunned. But those were the dim days in Italian football, when catenaccio was king, and even the libero was static.
Fifty-three times capped by Brazil, Carlos Alberto, like Pele, began his career with the Santos club. “Santos FC,” it declared, “regrets the death of the idol Carlos Alberto Torres, who was 72 years old. He played 445 matches and scored 40 goals between 1965 and 1975. The club has decreed official mourning for three days.”
Carlos Alberto would in fact move from Santos to Rio where he played successfully for Fluminense, winning the Brazilian championships with both clubs. He also played for another leading Rio club, Flamengo, whom he would manage. He would also manage other teams in Nigeria, Oman and the national team of Azerbaijan. His death would come from a heart attack.
Before he retired as a player, there was an episode with the heavily financial but ultimately ephemeral New York Cosmos, for whom Pele, swindled out of his fortune by a crooked agent, would briefly emerge from retirement to play. There, on one occasion remembered by the New York based English football writer Paul Gardner, the cloven hoof was once uneasily visible, when with no apparent provocation or motive, Carlos Alberto brutally hacked down a young opponent. When asked about it afterwards in the dressing room by Gardner, Carlos Alberto merely smiled.
It came as a surprise when Carlos Alberto was not chosen for the Brazilian squad, which so catastrophically contested the 1966 World Cup in England. But in 1970, he was not only properly chosen but given the captaincy.
When, in subsequent years, he was asked about his spectacular goal in that Final, he would reply with typical modesty, “My pride is in finishing the goal of all our team, for the football of Brazil. If people think it the greatest, I am happy for them.”.

More games: friv

Thứ Tư, 7 tháng 9, 2016

Pele reflects on 40 year history with Qatar

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Brazilian football star Pelé first came to Qatar in 1973 for a friendly match, with his legendary Santos side playing against Qatar’s Al Ahli at Doha Stadium, and has also visited the country’s Aspire Academy in Doha. 
The Brazilian icon holds records no one else has managed to beat, winning the FIFA World Cup on three occasions in 1958, 1962, and 1970, and also taking part in the 1966 tournament in England. 
Pelé, whose full name is Edson Arantes do Nascimento, spoke to beIN Sports recently, highlighting the importance of the two major sporting events his country had recently hosted, the 2014 FIFA World Cup and the 2016 Olympic Games. 
Asked about Qatar’s preparations to host the 2022 FIFA World Cup, he said: “I know Qatar well, I’ve visited it several times before. We have the 2018 World Cup in Russia first, so there’s a lot of time to talk about 2022. The thing that caught my attention is that the stadiums are going to be air-conditioned.” 
Pelé, who shared the FIFA Player of the Century award with Diego Maradona and is one of Time Magazine’s 100 most influential people of the 20th century, is confident that Qatar will fulfil all of FIFA’s requirements. “Qatar is capable of hosting a wonderful World Cup. It has the right to host the World Cup and it will definitely succeed in this,” he added. 
His many fans consider him the best player in the history of football and his dramatic appearances at the World Cup haven’t been forgotten. 
People still remember his tears when Brazil first lifted the trophy in in 1958; his shocking injuries at the 1966 FIFA World Cup; his attempted headed goal and the spectacular save by England goalkeeper Gordon Banks in 1970; and his goal against Italy in the 1970 final in Mexico, which Brazil won 4-1. 
His records are almost impossible to match. Throughout his career he played in 1,363 matches and scored 1,281 goals. 
He played for Brazil on 91 occasions, scoring 77 goals for his country. 
Pelé played for Santos in Brazil, staying with the team from 1956 to 1974, and then New York Cosmos in the United States from 1975 to 1977, where he ended his footballing career.

Thứ Tư, 20 tháng 7, 2016

Pele Olympic song hits wrong note

The first thing you need to know about Pele's new single is that it is not very good. This need not surprise you. The song is called Esperanza (hope), and Pele claims to have written it himself to coincide with next month's Rio Olympics.
Pele also sings and raps on the record, accompanied by a children's choir, an off-the-peg bossa nova beat and a wimpy guitar solo that sounds like it was coaxed from the guitarist at gunpoint. The lyrics read like they were generated at random by a 1970s computer fed a series of Olympic-themed keywords.
"The flame is lit and ready to fire," it begins, a line that means less and less the more you look at it. "Soul and heart here in Brazil. The nations of the world ready to celebrate. Love, and much peace."
Pele poses with his new necklace, presented to him in June by International Olympic Committee president Thomas Bach.
PAULO WHITAKER/ REUTERS
Pele poses with his new necklace, presented to him in June by International Olympic Committee president Thomas Bach.
Put it this way: we suspect Pele's invitation to the Ivor Novello awards may get lost in the post.
The second thing you need to know about Pele's Olympics single is that it is not actually that bad. If you are into bossa nova, empty sentiments and septuagenarian rappers, you will love it. It is neither accomplished enough to be a proper song, nor interesting enough to be a genuine novelty song.
Which raises a pertinent question: Why?
To answer that, you need to understand Brazil's curious ambivalence towards its greatest footballer. His feats on the pitch, bookended by those two World Cup triumphs of 1958 and 1970, are largely unarguable. But to a younger generation it is his second incarnation - as a statesman and largely self-appointed father of the nation - that is less palatable.
This is not simply about his avarice, his egomania or his collection of questionable opinions, of which the assertion that Nicky Butt was the outstanding player of the 2002 World Cup was not even the most contentious.
Pele's home country has long since stopped taking his public pronouncements seriously, whether in speech or in song. It was Romario, another great Brazilian footballer, who perhaps put it best a decade ago.
"Pele when silent," he said, "is a poet."
No, it is the growing feeling that the Brazil that Pele increasingly seems to embody - a Brazil of samba football, bikini bottoms, world peace and other Lovely Things - exists largely in the imagination. This was most evident during the Confederations Cup three years ago, when widespread anger against the government spilt over into a series of demonstrations across the country. Pele's response was to tell the protesters to pipe down.
"Let's forget all this commotion," he said, claiming that the protests were harming Brazil's image abroad.
Three years on, with just over a fortnight to go until the Olympic opening ceremony, the country is in crisis. Analysts are predicting the worst recession since the 1930s. The president, Dilma Rousseff, is on the verge of being thrown out of office. Unemployment, poverty, corruption, police brutality and the Zika virus are all rampant. Rio de Janeiro has declared a state of "public calamity" due to financial difficulties.
Into these frightening and uncertain times rides Pele to the rescue, with a jaunty mid-tempo number inspired by what he describes as "the feeling of hope and happiness" generated by the Games.
"Just look at the horizon for a new hope dawning," he sings.
"Open your eyes to the future where another sun will shine."
If it were a form of ironic self-parody - perhaps a Ricky Gervais sketch in which Pele plays an exaggerated version of himself - then it would still be in questionable taste.
But self-awareness has never been Pele's strong suit, and so it is entirely possible that he actually thinks he can revive the crumbling public sector and reverse years of declining oil revenues with a child choir and a jaunty brass section.
The more likely explanation is far more prosaic. Pele never played in an Olympic Games, a fact he has rarely omitted to point out in the past months.
"I won a lot of tournaments and scored more than 1000 goals, won three World Cups, but I could not play in an Olympic Games," he said in one interview.
"I like to joke that the only reason Brazil has never won a gold medal at football is because I didn't play."
Frequently he talks about slipping on a pair of shorts and making a comeback in time for the Games. And although it is all said with a chuckle and a reassuring hand on the arm, it offers an intriguing window into how Pele sees this whole hoopla. Is it about the Olympics? Is it about Brazil? Of course not. Like everything Pele does, it is about Pele.
Not that he can be entirely blamed for this. Imagine possessing the sort of fame that not only allows you to write, record and release an Olympic Games single at the age of 75, almost half a century after you did anything of note on a football pitch, but allows you to rap on it, too. Ever since the age of 17, Pele's world has revolved around his own legend.
In his own mind, he does not just embody Brazil. He is Brazil. But then, that is the thing about megalomania. When the world moves on, you are often the last to know about it.

Thứ Tư, 15 tháng 6, 2016

Maradona and Pele agree to truce

The historic rivalry between Maradona and Pele may just be coming to an end, as the Argentine reached out to embrace the Santos legend in reconciliation.
They both participated in a 'match for peace' and, keeping with the spirit of things, the Argentine great invited the Brazilian legend to put aside their differences once and for all.
"Thank you Pele, welcome to the family," Maradona said.
The charity match resulted in a tie at eight goals apiece, and the former Napoli star contributed with a penalty goal and an assist.
Maradona and Pele captained two star-studded teams, made up from some of football's most illustrious ex-players, including Rio Ferdinand, Clarence Seedorf, Fernando Hierro, Dida, Materazzi and Hernan Crespo to name but a few.
Their relationship was always fraught with tension, Maradona criticising Pele on several occasions, who rarely shied away from a respons.
"Pele is a FIFA slave," Maradona once accused the Brazilian.
"He [Maradona] is a one-footed player, and the only important goal he ever had, was by hand," Pele had responded in the past.

Thứ Hai, 9 tháng 5, 2016

Pele on Neymar's summer choice for Brazil, his legendary career

Brazil legend Pele will be watching closely as his native country and Olympic host plays for its first gold medal in men's soccer, with Neymar leading the charge.
Pele, whose biopic "Pele: Birth of a Legend" was released on Friday, speaks with Andy Adler about Brazil's quest for Olympic gold and the star player's summer plans to play in the Olympics and not Copa America Centenario. Barcelona stated it would not release Neymar for both competitions despite the player wishing to appear in both, and ultimately the club and country agreed that Neymar would only play at Rio 2016.
"This is a big argument," Pele said. "I don't know exactly what to say. ... He belongs to Barcelona." 
Pele also touches on his iconic career and legacy, maintaining his stance that he's the greatest to ever play." 
"People say, 'When is there going to be a new Pele, a new king?' I say never. Like Pele? Never." 
Watch the full interview in the video above.

Chủ Nhật, 27 tháng 3, 2016

Pele, Cruyff, Maldini and Maradona out of Legends World Cup

The semi-finalists for Goal's reader-voted competition have been decided, with Cristiano Ronaldo winning his last-eight tie in the most nail-biting way possible.
Goal's inaugural Legends World Cup has seen four star contenders eliminated at the quarter-final stage, as 118,977 votes were cast over the 24-hour period.

The biggest shock was perhaps Real Madrid and Hungary legend Ferenc Puskas completely surpassing Diego Maradona at the races. His compatriots came together - over 12,000 of them - to give him an 8,464-vote cushion over the World Cup 1986 winner.



Puskas, who only made it out of the last 16 by the absurdly slender margin of six votes against Marco van Basten, has been rewarded with a clash against another Madrid legend: Zinedine Zidane.



The two-time World Cup finalist, who won the Fifa tournament on home soil in 1998, battled hard against Pele, one of the favourites heading into the Legends World Cup. Ultimately, he defeated the Brazilian by the slender margin of 9,900 to 8,926 votes.

On the other side of the draw, the late Johan Cruyff was unable to defeat Lionel Messi, whose legacy the Flying Dutchman is partially responsible for due to his La Masia brainchild in the late 1970s.



World Cup finalist and four-time Champions League winner Messi conquered the legendary Cruyff by 10,386 votes to seal a semi-finalist match-up against his eternal Clasico nemesis: Cristiano Ronaldo.



In the closest clash of the quarter-finals, Ronaldo and the Italian defensive icon jostled for the lead over much of the voting timeframe before Real Madrid's current No.7 claimed a victory by just FIVE votes! The final tallies were 19,773-19,768.

Semi-final ties on Monday: Messi vs Maldini/Ronaldo (kick-off at 9am UK time), Zidane vsPuskas (12pm). Check out the full draw graphic below and make sure you log on to Goal tomorrow to cast your votes!

Thứ Bảy, 9 tháng 1, 2016

Pelé: "Messi is the best player of the last 10 years"

Pelé: Messi is the best player of the last 10 years

Pelé has come out and labelled Leo Messi the "best player" of the last decade. "A lot of people compare Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo, but they're different types of players. They're both fantastic, though", the Brazilian legend added.

The three-time World Cup winner also ruled out the idea of him replacing Sepp Blatter at the helm of FIFA. "No, I have no intention of running for the post of FIFA president", 'O Rei' stated.