The three-time World Cup winner passed away in Sao Paulo after a battle with colon cancer
Pele, pictured here in 1970, is the only player to have won three World Cups. © Alessandro Sabattini / Getty Images
The world of football is in mourning after it was confirmed that Brazilian legend Edson Arantes do Nascimento, better known as Pele, has died aged 82.
Pele was admitted to the Albert Einstein hospital in Sao Paulo at the end of November as he continued a battle with colon cancer.
Doctors had announced earlier in December that the disease was progressing, prompting major fears surrounding the three-time World Cup winner’s condition.
It was confirmed on Thursday that the football icon had passed away.
Pele is survived by his third wife Marcia Aoki and seven children.
A prolific goalscorer during his playing days, Pele is regarded by many as among the finest footballers – if not the finest – of all time.
Pele was football’s first truly global superstar. © Picture alliance via Getty Images
He was revered in his Brazilian homeland ever since winning the first of his three World Cups aged just 17 at the 1958 edition of the tournament in Sweden.
Pele graced the competition with six goals in total, including a hat-trick in the semifinal against France and a double against hosts Sweden in the final.
Pele and Brazil would follow that up with success at the 1962 World Cup in Chile, where he was forced to miss much of the tournament due to injury.
Pele tasted World Cup glory again with the imperious Brazil team which won the title in Mexico in 1970.
Pele was among football’s first global superstars. © Peter Robinson / EMPICS via Getty Images
Pele spent most of his club career at Santos in Brazil, debuting for the coastal club in Sao Paulo state as a 15-year-old in 1956.
He would leave the team as a six-time Brazilian league winner and two-time continental and world champion in 1974.
Renowned for his goalscoring feats, Pele retired from the Brazilian national team in 1971, having scored 77 goals in 92 games – a record matched only recently by Neymar.
Pele ended his club career at the New York Cosmos in 1977.
In his post-playing days, Pele was appointed a UN ambassador for ecology and the environment in 1992 and a UNESCO Goodwill Ambassador in 1994.
Pele pictured in 2018. He was diagnosed with colon cancer in 2021. © Amal KS / Hindustan Times via Getty Images
In a further sign of his global recognition, Pele received an honorary knighthood from Queen Elizabeth II at Buckingham Palace in 1997.
It was also in the mid-90s that France Football revised its policy of only including European players for Ballon d’Or contention, awarding Pele seven past editions of football’s highest individual honor in 2015.