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Eusébio, World Football Legend, Dies: Daily

By Robbie Blakeley, Senior Contributing Reporter

RIO DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL – Eusébio, one of the greatest ever players to have graced a football pitch, died yesterday aged 71. The former Portuguese international was the top scorer at the 1966 World Cup in England with nine goals, and until the emergence of Cristiano Ronaldo, was considered the country’s finest player ever.

Eusébio, World Football Legend, Dies, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil News
The great Eusébio in 2001, photo from Wikimedia/Wikimedia Creative Commons License.

Originally hailing from Mozambique, the forward notched 41 goals in just 64 international appearances, helping Portugal to third place in the 1966 tournament. Generally considered one of the most lethal finishers in the history of the game, his official record stands at 733 goals in 745 matches.

The former striker remains an idol at Portuguese club Benfica, where a statue of him stands outside the club’s stadium. While at the club, he won ten Portuguese league titles and five cups.

He helped the club lift the European Cup, now the UEFA Champions League, in 1962, converting a penalty in Benfica’s 5-3 win over Spanish giants Real Madrid. He was named European Footballer of the Year in 1965 before losing the 1968 European Cup final with Benfica to Manchester United.

Tributes have poured in from around the world. Former Brazil striker Pelé released a statement comparing Eusébio to a “brother.”

“Mourning the death of Eusebio, a brother to me. We became friends in England in the 1966 World Cup,” he said. “I last saw him at the recent Brazil-Portugal match in Boston. My condolences to his loved ones. May God receive him with open arms.”

Eusébio also had spells in the U.S. and Mexico, before becoming an ambassador for Benfica.

Read more (in Portuguese).

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