Why Pele's 1,000th goal still matters

BeSoccer 5 years ago 3.1k
Pele reached 1000 goals. GOAL

On November 19, 1969, Brazilian superstar Pele scored the 1,000th goal of his career. Fifty years later, it remains a superhuman feat.

It was the year of Easy Rider, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, Midnight Cowboy, Kes and The Italian Job; Abbey Road, Let It Bleed, Dusty In Memphis and Kick Out The Jams.

OK boomer.

Woodstock was a totemic cultural moment in 1969 - but so too the first flight of the Boeing 747, the wedding and bed-in of John Lennon and Yoko Ono, the Stonewall riots and the first manned Moon landing, Neil Armstrong and all that jazz. And jazz. Miles Davis’ classic In A Silent Way split critics down the middle.

There was Monty Python's television debut but also the Manson Family murders and the ongoing Vietnam War. The US magazine Life revealed at least 12 million Americans had experimented with marijuana.

All very adult, magic meets toxic; spaceman versus off your face, man.

Little wonder then, that when Pele scored his 1,000th career goal on November 19 of that year he begged the world to please think of the children. The babes of US boomers may have been treated to the very first broadcast of Scooby Doo on CBS in September, but Pele knew the kids in Brazil were still being sold short as the end of the decade drew near.

"For the love of God, people," the 29-year-old Pele said in Rio de Janeiro, on that historic night. "Now that everyone is listening, help the children, help the helpless. That's my only wish at this very special time for me."

Those who scoff at Pele never finishing as top scorer in a World Cup, questioning why he failed to match Just Fontaine in 1958 or Gerd Muller in 1970, rarely posit Pele's 12 goals (in 14 games) against Ronaldo's seven or Messi's six.

 

Pele deniers - who lamentably exist and presumably exist lamentably - challenge his credibility as a 1962 World Cup winner because he was injured in Brazil’s second game and missed the rest of the tournament. It almost needs a Greta Thunberg to stand up and question the motivations of such malevolent trash-talkers.

NOT THE TREMBLING KIND

Gradually, the witnesses to Pele's greatness are dying out. Gordon Banks, England's number one who produced the stunning save from that famous header at the 1970 World Cup, passed away in February, and Andrada, the man beaten from the spot for that landmark goal, joined the celestial goalkeepers' union in September.

Speaking about confronting Andrada on that famous November night in Rio, Pele said he had "trembled for the first time" in his career before planting the ball into the back of the net.

On November 20, 1969, Rio's O Globo newspaper gave the Moon landing and Pele's feat equal billing, with headlines of 'The Moon' and 'The Goal' decorating its front page.

Newspapers across the globe carried the story of Pele's feat, flagrantly refusing to bow to future mistrust of the deed's integrity.

The Daily Mirror quoted England captain Bobby Moore, describing Pele's achievement as "a fantastic record" and expressing the hope he would not net against the Three Lions at the following year's World Cup.

As it happened, Moore, Banks and co kept Pele out when the nation that gave the world the beautiful game faced the team that perfected it: a goal from Jairzinho separated the teams in Guadalajara.

READY TO BOW OUT

Half a century on from the "milesimo", Pele explained in an interview with Brazil's Estadao newspaper last week how he is recovering from back surgery. He also thanked well-wishers after he was recently hospitalised with a urinary tract infection, and suggested he would retire from public life after the 2022 World Cup.

He was offered a chance to speak out on racism in football and gave a flaccid response, seemingly having more to say about political divisions in Brazil, albeit without explicitly taking a side.

Pele turns 80 next year. He continues to be chided by generations that never saw him play, taunted by snide columnists: 'Top 5 Things Pele Does Not Want You To Know' was one recent word-chunder; another was labelled 'Why Pele Is The Most Overrated Player Of All Time'.

When Jason Cundy, a sunbed-scorched ex-Chelsea pro turned media arriviste, recently described Pele as "overrated" and "nowhere near the level of Ronaldo or Messi", it was arguably time to summon the PR heavies.

Believe those who were there. Believe the euphoric reports from the day Pele got that 1,000th goal. Believe a nation that still calls Pele 'King' - and will remember him that way in another 50 years from now. Just this once, believe the boomers.