1. #1
    VeggieDog
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    RIP Pele

    Dead at 82.

  2. #2
    franz555
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    One of the greatest of all time

    RIP Champ
    Nomination(s):
    This post was nominated 1 time . To view the nominated thread please click here. People who nominated: ChuckyTheGoat

  3. #3
    DiggityDaggityDo
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    RIP

    Fukk cancer


  4. #4
    lakerboy
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    His suffering is over.

    RIP

  5. #5
    thetrinity
    penetrate me to tears
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    Fuk bad year for sports guys

    RIP

  6. #6
    slayer14
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    RIP Pele

  7. #7
    slayer14
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  8. #8
    pologq
    When you are SBR you are SBR 4 Life
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    Always a big death right before New Year's. Sad.

  9. #9
    jjgold
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    Mr Soccer

  10. #10
    19th Hole
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    PELE
    A magnificent man inside and outside of soccer.


    REST IN PEACE.

    ~~~

    Edson Arantes do Nascimento was born on Oct. 23, 1940, in Três Corações, a tiny rural town in the state of Minas Gerais. His parents named him Edson in tribute to Thomas Edison. (Electricity had come to the town shortly before Pelé was born.) When he was about 7, he began shining shoes at the local railway station to supplement the family’s income.

    His father, a professional player whose career was cut short by injury, was nicknamed Dondinho.

    Brazilian soccer players often use a single name professionally, but even Pelé himself was unsure how he got his. He offered several possible derivations in “Pelé: The Autobiography” (2006, with Orlando Duarte and Alex Bellos)

    Most probably, he wrote, the nickname was a reference to a player on his father’s team whom he had admired and wanted to emulate as a boy. The player was known as Bilé (bee-LAY). Other boys teased Edson, calling him Bilé until it stuck

    Pelé is one of the few who contradicted my theory,” Andy Warhol once said. “Instead of 15 minutes of fame, he will have 15 centuries.”

    Celebrated for his peerless talent and originality on the field, Pelé (pronounced peh-LAY) also endeared himself to fans with his sunny personality and his belief in the power of soccer — football to most of the world — to connect people across dividing lines of race, class and nationality.

    He won three World Cup tournaments with Brazil and 10 league titles with Santos, his club team, as well as the 1977 North American Soccer League championship with the New York Cosmos. Having come out of retirement at 34, he spent three seasons with the Cosmos on a crusade to popularize soccer in the United States.

    Before his final game, in October 1977 at Giants Stadium in East Rutherford, N.J., Pelé took the microphone on a podium at the center of the field, his father and Muhammad Ali beside him, and exhorted a crowd of more than 75,000

    “Say with me three times now,” he declared, “for the kids: Love! Love! Love!”




    Pelé kicks a ball over his head in 1968 in an acrobatic move. Off-balance or not, he could lash the ball accurately with either foot. Credit...Associated Press


    In his 21-year career, Pelé — born Edson Arantes do Nascimento — scored 1,283 goals in 1,367 professional matches, including 77 goals for the Brazilian national team.

    Many of those goals became legendary, but Pelé’s influence on the sport went well beyond scoring. He helped create and promote what he later called “o jogo bonito” — the beautiful game — a style that valued clever ball control, inventive pinpoint passing and a voracious appetite for attacking. Pelé not only played it better than anyone; he also championed it around the world.

    Among his athletic assets was a remarkable center of gravity; as he ran, swerved, sprinted or backpedaled, his midriff seemed never to move, while his hips and his upper body swiveled around it.

    He could accelerate, decelerate or pivot in a flash. Off-balance or not, he could lash the ball accurately with either foot. Relatively small, at 5 feet 8 inches, he could nevertheless leap exceptionally high, often seeming to hang in the air to put power behind a header.

    Like other sports, soccer has evolved. Today, many of its stars can execute acrobatic shots or rapid-fire passing sequences. But in his day, Pelé’s playmaking and scoring skills were stunning.





    Pelé, right, hugging a teammate in 1958 after Brazil defeated Sweden 5-2 to win the World Cup.
    Credit...Associated Press/Reportagebild








    .
    Last edited by 19th Hole; 12-29-22 at 02:30 PM.

  11. #11
    Snowball
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    A true sports legend RIP
    I remember that final game in 1977
    Just a kid but I remember it on tv, a big deal !

  12. #12
    ExposingLines247
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    Long, mostly healthy, celebrated life, people should be so lucky. RIP to an original GOAT

  13. #13
    mjsuax13
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    Legend.

  14. #14
    Thrilla
    Goater a Legend
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    RIP sir

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