History Daily - Pelé's 1,000th Career Goal
Episode Date: November 19, 2025November 19, 1969. Legendary soccer player Pelé scores the 1,000th goal of his career. Support the show! Join Into History for ad-free listening and more.History Daily is a co-production of Airshi...p and Noiser.Go to HistoryDaily.com for more history, daily.
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Salku X,
tapam we again.
Viser number,
five vizett,
arvokesia,
Patheria,
Palkintone G-G-K-Sacthous,
Sacko,
Towsin-Omack-Mackx,
10-weekquo-a-Ratka
ROTE
KauttaX.
A-JECD,
ALEJECD.
It's November 19th,
1969,
at the Maracanaugh Stadium
in Rio Dijian
Brazil. His whistle gripped in his hands, referee Marco Amaro de Lima splashes across the
rain-soaked field. There are 70,000 soccer fans packed into the stadium. The local team Vasco
de Gama is playing Santos, but there's only one man they've really come to see, Pele.
29-year-old Pele is already a Brazilian national hero and has scored 999 goals in his career
so far, more than any other player in documented history. So today,
Everyone in the Maracana
hopes to see him make it to 1,000.
But the game isn't living up to the occasion.
A heavy downpour has made the field slick and treacherous.
The ball skids more than rolls over the wet grass,
and the white field markings are dissolving in the rain.
Even the great Pele has struggled to keep his footing.
So thanks to these tough conditions,
the game has entered a long.
The players are slowing, which gives Marco a welcome chance to catch his breath.
Or so he thought,
Because out of nowhere, Pele makes a run past three defenders and receives a pass that puts him clear on goal.
He darts forward, the ball seemingly glued to his feet.
Marco sprints to keep up with the action.
And as Pele closes in on the goal, a defender makes a panic tackle from behind.
Pele tumbles to the ground, the ball spinning away from the wet grass.
It's a clear foul, and Marco doesn't think twice.
He raises his arm and blows his whistle. Penalty.
Wasting no time, Pele retrieves the ball and places it on the penalty spot.
Wipes his face, takes three steps back, and settles himself.
As the rain continues, the crowd falls silent, aware that the next few seconds may make soccer history.
For the Brazilian people, this will be a moment of national joy.
But for Pele, the chance to score his 1,000th goal will be something simpler and more meaningful,
proof that even dreams born in the deepest of poverty can come true.
Rising from the streets of Brazil to the pinnacle of his sport,
Pellé's status as a soccer icon will be confirmed
with the milestone goal he scores on November 19, 1969.
We'll see again.
Vee numbera,
five vhietta,
arvuctions,
pouttellu,
poverty.
Palkintona X-B-G-K-Sahcthacko,
Towsin' omics.
10-weekcoa
time to
call outcast
Coddyosotees
Pover.5
coutta
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Don't get
chide.
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vitsimist
but
the
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so much
co-co-
over
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On-o-
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muttomastomast from S-pankist,
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S-Pank,
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How many
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I laido
this one
elamux and
then par
lhackackertia.
Maista.
Vaasan Club.
Ostaeasan
Tuotteita,
and
lunashtoes
I'm Lindsay
Graham,
and this is
History
is made
every day.
podcast every day, we tell the true stories of the people and events that shaped our world.
Today is November 19, 1969, Pelae's 1,000th career goal. It's 1947 in Bauru, Brazil, nearly three
decades before Paley's goal-scoring milestone. 30-year-old soccer player Donginio adjusts the bandage
on his aching knee before jogging out onto the field. Despite the pain, he's determined to prove
he can still play, and he hopes that the discomfort will ease once he gets warmed up.
But it doesn't.
By the time the whistle blows at the end of the game, Donginio's knee is throbbing.
He trudges off the field, almost dragging his leg through the dirt,
but he won't get a chance to ease his pain with a hot shower,
because waiting for him on the sideline is his eldest son, seven-year-old Edson,
known to all as Pele.
The young boy has a battered ball under his arm and a face alight with anticipation.
In post-war Brazil, being a professional soccer player isn't easy.
The wages are low, and even a top player is just one bad injury away from the end of their career.
Donginio's lingering knee problem means he can only play when the pain allows,
so to make ends meet, he has to take odd jobs around town.
But that doesn't stop his two sons from wanting to follow in his footsteps.
Soccer is more than a sport in Brazil.
It's a national obsession.
And Pelle and his brother don't let the family's poverty stop the same.
them from joining in. For them, every spare moment is consumed with the game. They can't afford a
real ball of their own, so the brothers use old socks stuffed with rags. But even with such basic
equipment, Pellet still stands out. Although he's small for his age, he has fast feet, an excellent
control, and is already building a reputation as one of the best young players in town. So when
Pele plays on the street, neighbors pause to watch him dribble past older boys twice his size. His balance
never faltering. Don Gino has recognized Pelléle's raw talent and has decided to take charge of
his son's training himself, so he ignores his aching knee and stays on the field to kick the ball
around with his son until the daylight fades. They practice like this night after night,
Don Gino teaching Pellet to head cleanly, to strike with either foot, and to never let his emotions
get the better of him on the field. With Don Gino's expert coaching, at the age of 13, Pellet joins a local
junior team. He's still small, but that doesn't hold him back. Pele scores in almost every game he
plays, and word of his talent starts to spread beyond his hometown. His name appears in regional
newspapers next to headlines that hail him as the new star from Bauru. So soon, Pele's
brilliance catches the eye of Brazil's top clubs. The one that makes the best offer is fast-rising
Santos-F-C. Over the past few years, Santos has transformed its fortunes on the field by investing in
young, skillful players who grew up playing soccer on the streets.
In Pele, the Santos manager thinks he's found the missing piece that might turn his team
into championship winners.
But though the offer Santos made to Pele fills Don Gino with pride, it also makes him nervous.
By now, he's retired from the sport, so knows better than most how unforgiving soccer can be.
Still, Don Gino can't help but wonder what kind of career he might have had were it not for his knee injury.
Perhaps Pele can live the dream that eluded him.
So soon Don Gino's mind is set,
15-year-old Pele will join Santos,
and soon Pele arrives at the club as a nervous teenager.
Some there doubt whether a boy from a small town can handle the pressure,
but then they see him play.
Within months, Pele is a fixture in the Santos' starting lineup.
He seems to score easily against even the country's best defenders,
and soon the national press takes notice.
Reporters hail him as the next great hope of Brazilian soccer.
And in his first full season, Pele scores 41 goals and 38 games.
In his second season, while still just a teenager,
he smashes record after record scoring 66 goals and 46 games,
including 11 hat tricks.
But for the barefoot boy from Bahru, success in Brazil isn't enough.
If Pele is to fulfill his destiny and make the dreams of his father come true,
You will need to shine on soccer's biggest stage of all the World Cup.
We're all, we're all.
H.S.L.
I don't know how much
than VITSOMPEO, but
the people are
a great stancho
every co-coucoucels.
Olegue H.S.
Are new cotio, Ki-Karissa.
Hae asuntolinae muttomast
A.Pankstomatsk,
pay-lainawattas.
Avah S-mobile and
do Lainanhackmckmck.
S-pank,
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how, how,
how, what's made
a day?
I'm,
what you laid
to say to
the leivampampo?
I laid
this one
one elamuctions
and then
par a
lothocorttia
maista
vaasan club
osta
vaasan tuottees
and
runnasta
psalcintoes
it's July 19th
1966 at
Goodison Park
a soccer
stadium in
Liverpool
England
ten years
after Pellet's
professional
debut for
Santos
now 25 years old
Pele
kneels down to
tie his laces
and take a breath
to steady himself
and he
straightens
walks to the
center of the
field and waits
for the
kickoff of Brazil's game against Portugal. Pele is playing in the World Cup, soccer's most
prestigious tournament. Held every four years, this time it's being hosted in England, and the
atmosphere at Goodison Park is electric. By now, Pele is the most famous soccer player in the world.
Eight years ago, when he was still just 17, he scored twice in the World Cup final to help
Brazil win their first ever championship. Four years later, he was part of the squad that retained
the trophy. And after that second World Cup victory, opponents concluded that to stop Brazil,
they had to stop Paley. Coaches studied his every move and developed special strategies to contain
him, and they didn't always play fair. But by now, Pellet is used to defenders bending the rules
to stop him. Still, the 1966 World Cup has brought the worst treatment yet. Whenever he has the
ball at his feet, his opponents tackle him with overt aggression and often go unpunished by referees.
But even when he doesn't have the ball, Pele isn't safe.
Defenders never seem to miss an opportunity to rough him up in their attempts to stop him from playing.
The strategy is cynical, but it also seems to be working.
Brazil has played two games so far in the tournament.
They managed to beat Bulgaria, but victory came at a cost.
Pele was so badly hurt by the Bulgarian defenders that he couldn't play in the next game against Hungary,
in which Brazil went down in a damaging defeat.
Now, unless Brazil can beat Portugal,
Pele's most recent World Cup will be over.
By halftime, though, Brazil is losing once again,
and Pele's legs are so bruised that he can hardly move.
He still gets back on the field, determined to help his country,
but midway through the second half,
another heavy challenge sends Paley crashing to the ground.
Pain shoots down his leg, but substitutions are not allowed,
so Pellet has no choice except to pull himself upright
and limp through the rest of the game.
But with their star,
striker injured, Brazil can't turn the score around. The game ends in a 3-1 defeat for Brazil,
ending the country's hopes of defending its title. Afterward, despondently nursing his injuries
in the locker room, Paley vows never to play in the World Cup again. A few days later, the Brazil
team leaves England to fly back home. They fear a hostile reception from disappointed fans,
but instead they're welcomed as heroes. Crowds wait at the airport, waving flags, and singing
Pelae's name. Despite their disappointment about losing the World Cup, Brazil fans still call him
the king, and their faith softens Pelléle's resolve and makes him reconsider his decision to boycott the
World Cup. But whether he decides to plan it or not, the next World Cup isn't for another four years.
In the meantime, there are plenty of games to play for Santos, and everywhere the team goes,
stadiums are sold out, with fans of all teams eager to watch Paley weave his magic. And by 1969,
has netted well over 900 goals.
Newspapers start printing his running total,
and the ever-increasing number becomes a story of its own.
But as he gets closer to goal number 1,000, the pressure mounts,
opponents mark him even more tightly,
and every mischance ratchets up the tension a little more.
Then, on November 14, 1969, Pellet scores goal number 99.
The crowd erupts, hoping that he will hit the net again,
but the game takes an unexpected turn.
When the Santos goalkeeper goes down injured and has to leave the field,
the team manager decides that the next best option to 10 goal is his star forward Pele.
So Pele takes his place between the goalposts,
shooting a wry grin to the disappointed fans and the stands behind him.
There won't be goal number 1,000 today.
But Pele won't keep the soccer world waiting much longer.
Five days after his 99th goal,
Santos will play another game against Vasco da Gama and Rio de Janeiro.
The stadium will be a sellout, and all across Brazil, millions more will tune in to listen on the radio.
One Man's Sporting Milestone is about to become a shared moment of national history.
We'll meet again.
Vibe number, five vizabeth, arvokesia, pithel of, poweria.
Palkintona, X-B, G-Q, Sacko Auto.
Towsin-omax.
10-weekcoa
time to
call outcast
Coddinox.
Cauttax.
Don't
jay-cudist.
Oleg-huh.
And,
and an
work-eat-
un-est-
Palkka.
Sillone,
it may
makesa
you'll
just more
than
vitsimist.
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the
the
is a
matter
so much
hope
H.S.
On the new
Kootio, Ki-Karissa.
Hae asuntolina
muttomastomast
Aptoplasts,
Avae
A-Mobile and
do linohackmackus.
S-pankx,
Suomen Mutkottomim
Pank.
Oh, how much?
What do you
laid out of
there?
I laid
this one
elamux and
then a
lothirtia
and then
Pausan
Clu
Osta Vasa
Tuotteita
and
come down
Piste
and lunasta
Palkintoes.
It's November
19th
1969
at the
Mara
Stia
and Rio de Janeiro, five days after Pele scored his 99th goal.
Every eye is fixed on Pele as he places the ball on the penalty spot and steps back.
It's the 78th minute of the game between Santos and Vasco da Gama, and Pele has his chance to make history.
All he has to do is beat the goalkeeper from 12 yards.
Behind the net, photographers jostle for space as Pele takes a deep breath.
The referee then blows his whistle, and Pele takes a deep breath. The referee then blows his whistle, and Pele
takes three quick strides forward, then pauses for a split second, just enough to deceive the
goalkeeper. He then swings his foot and the ball flies low toward the left corner of the goal.
The goalkeeper dives after it, but the ball is out of his reach. The net ripples, and Pele has done it.
He has scored his 1,000th goal. As the stadium erupts around him, Pele races past the goalkeeper
to collect the ball from the back of the net. He kisses it and raises it to the sky like a
trophy. And then within moments, he's surrounded by fans who have rushed onto the field in a wave
of euphoria. Among them is a reporter who thrusts a microphone under Pele's nose and asks for his
reaction. His voice shaking, Pele dedicates his goal to the millions of Brazilian children growing up
in poverty. He may now be a soccer legend, but he hasn't forgotten where he came from.
Pele's one thousandth goal makes headlines around the world. But he isn't finished just yet.
Pele's goal-scoring exploits will continue and include the opening goal for Brazil in its triumph at the World Cup final in 1970.
Pele will finally retire at the age of 36, after a glamorous stint in the United States with the New York Cosmos.
But Pele began by kicking a rag-stuffed ball on Brazil's back streets.
History will remember him as the greatest soccer player of all time, playing 1,363 games and scoring 1,279 goals.
none of which was more eagerly anticipated or celebrated than the 1,000th goal of his career,
one that thumped into the net at the Maracana Stadium on November 19, 1969.
Next on History Daily, November 20, 1820, 20, 20, 20, 2,000 miles off the coast of South America,
an American ship is attacked and sunk by an enormous whale.
From Noisor and Airship, this is History Daily, hosted, edited, and executive produced by me, Lindsay Graham.
Audio editing by Mohamed Shazim, sound design by Molly Baugh, music by Throne.
This episode is written and researched by Olivia Jordan, edited by Scott Reeves, managing producer Emily Burke.
Executive producers are William Simpson for airship and Pascal Hughes for Noiser.
We're back. Weiss numbera.
Five Vigette.
Arvauksia.
Poveria.
Palkintona X-B-G-6, Sackcox, Sacko, Auto.
Towsin' omics.
10-weekcoa
time to retka
Codio-cocteus.
Cautta X.
A lot y'clock
Yerick-Gyndies.
I'm not sure
to take things
because they are
very.
But they're not
very,
because we're
not to
not even uskall
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asuntolina
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Aba S-Mobili
and T
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S-Pank
