EPL
When Barcelona, Real Madrid & Man Utd tried to sign Pele

Barcelona, Real Madrid and Manchester United might have changed the course of football history had they gone through with attempted deals to sign Pele from Brazilian club Santos.
Pele was already a global superstar by the mid-1960s, winner of the previous two World Cups with Brazil. In his mid-twenties, he was also still young enough to have had a long career in Europe had the terms of proposed transfer been right and had he wanted to make it happen.
Pele had made his debut for Santos as early 1956 when he only 15. He became a prolific goalscorer at 16 and was a Brazil international before he had turned 17.
The 1958 World Cup, during which it was a coincidence he wore the number 10 shirt that he would soon become synonymous with, set him on the way to becoming football’s first global megastar.
With Santos soon going on to dominate Brazilian club football in the early 1960s, as well as winning back-to-back Copa Libertadores titles either side of Pele’s second World Cup triumph in 1962, that status and lasting legacy was cemented within only a few years.
Enric Llaudet was the Barcelona president who tried to bring Pele to Catalonia in late 1965 and early 1966, a few months before he was due to play in his third World Cup.
Llaudet himself spoke about it in an interview with Marca at the end of 1966, revealing that ultimately the financial demands were too much to contend with.
“We entered into negotiations with the man who had an exclusive put option on Pele, the Italian Gerardo Sannella,” Llaudet explained.
“On November 14, 1965, the negotiations began and on February 23, 1966, our friend Sannella told us that signing Pele would cost $1m to transfer for Santos and $200,000 for [Pele]. It was very clear that Pele could not be bought and that Santos simply put him on the market at a prohibitive price.”
There was also the small matter of a ban on signing foreign players that existed in Spanish football from 1953 until 1973, an alleged response to a poor display at the 1950 World Cup. There were certain loopholes, however, and the fascist government notably encouraged a number of Hungarian players to settle in Spain – including Ferenc Puskas. Whether Pele might have been given fast-tracked Spanish citizenship to allow him to play given his stature is ultimately moot.
Barcelona were later stuck with another Brazilian, Machado Da Silva, in 1966 after missing out on Pele but couldn’t use him. The ban was still in force and Llaudet had supposedly acted prematurely on information that it might be lifted sooner than it eventually was.
With Real Madrid dominant in the fledgling European Cup in the latter half of the 1950s, they were a club in the market for Pele on more than one occasion.
The legend himself confirmed as much, once stating that he had multiple opportunities to pack his bags and head to Madrid but never did.
“There were many times when I was very close to signing with Real Madrid. It’s not a regret. I was at Santos and, at the time, they were a powerhouse.
”I was very, very happy at Santos, I had the best 20 years of my life there. I had plenty of other proposals and not just from Real Madrid, but I was okay where I was.”
Non-British players were a very rare sight in English football until the 1980s, while it wasn’t until the Premier League era that an international and cosmopolitan make-up was embraced. Even George Robledo, Newcastle’s Chilean international, had been raised in Yorkshire from the age of five.
But if any club had the desire and foresight to land an international superstar, it was Manchester United. Already with three Ballon d’Or winners in Bobby Charlton, George Best and Denis Law, they tried exactly that in 1968, the same year they became the first English club to win the European Cup.
Speaking about it in a 2006 interview with The Guardian, Pele revealed, “I even had a proposal from Manchester United. Yes…1968…their best team. I said no to every team who asked me.”
Pele was, of course, well known to English audiences. On top of his previous World Cup successes, he had played in England at the 1966 tournament, with the Brazil team based in Liverpool.
But United’s approach was kept quiet at the time, with even the players in the existing unaware of Sir Matt Busby’s ambitious intentions until Pele himself spoke about it decades later.
In the end, Pele remained a Santos player until 1974, by which time he was 34. But, having spent years turning down offers in Europe, he did eventually head elsewhere before retiring altogether – his international career had already finished in 1971.
Pele spent his final three years as a professional footballer with New York Cosmos in the glitzy but ultimately flawed and short-lived North American Soccer League, the same league that also attracted the likes of Johan Cruyff, Franz Beckenbauer, George Best and others.
EPL
Jonas Eidevall hails dominant Stina Blackstenius performance in north London derby victory

Arsenal manager Jonas Eidevall has heaped praise on forward Stina Blackstenius after her sensational showing in Saturday’s 5-1 victory over Tottenham.
The Swede opened the scoring after just a few minutes and continued to lead the line with real dominance all game, creating plenty of chances for those around her in what turned out to be a comfortable victory.
Blackstenius’ performance did not go unnoticed by Eidevall, who took the time to praise the forward after the game.
“Every game poses different challenges, but Stina gave exactly what we needed at the start of the game by posing a threat from balls in-behind against a very compact Spurs’ team,” Eidevall told Sky Sports.
“I think it was very nice to see her take the first finish on her first touch when she first spots the goalkeeper a little bit out of position.”
READ NEXT
On the wider performance, Eidevall continued: “I was very pleased with the performance. There are still some aspects of our game we need to get better at compared to the first half. I think our players were brilliant and were very well positioned in the second half. I think we could have controlled the game right from the start.
“I think it starts with the way we attack. We were well positioned. I think we constantly overloaded them out in the wide areas and set up players that can play forward with the ball. We are good at arriving into the box with pace. In the first half and the last ten minutes, we got a little bit complacent and a bit of standing still which suits Spurs’ really well. We didn’t get into that trap in the second-half and that was pleasing.”
The win keeps Arsenal in the WSL title race, moving the Gunners up to 35 points, two behind leaders Chelsea having played a game more.
Emma Hayes’ Blues are in action on Sunday against fellow title hopefuls Manchester City, who can blow the title race wide open with a win.
EPL
Why do Liverpool fans boo the England national anthem?

Few managers of the modern era have developed a bond with their club’s fanbase as strong as the link between Jurgen Klopp and Liverpool.
A rapidly stacked trophy cabinet has obviously helped Klopp win over Merseyside but the humble and honest German coach has forged such a deep connection with the people of Liverpool by taking time to understand the history and beliefs of the city.
However, even Klopp was left a little perplexed by the deafening swell of boos which his supporters delivered in response to the English national anthem ahead of the 2022 FA Cup final.
“I know our people that well that they wouldn’t do it if there was no reason for it,” Klopp reasoned, before admitting: “And I’m not here surely not long enough to understand the reason for it.”
Don’t worry, Jurgen, we’ve got you covered.
We’re not English. We are Scouse. http://t.co/rcmBRtO1
— Liverpool FC (@LFC) March 17, 2012
As a port city which has welcomed countless immigrants over the years, many Liverpudlians have an ancestral reason to not consider themselves English. The xenophobia and racism which remains a plague on these shores are not exactly a set of welcoming, open arms.
The term ‘Scouse’, which is a traditional stew, was originally used as a derogatory term for Irish immigrants that could only afford to frequent soup kitchens. But the city’s inhabitants have harnessed the slur and the sense of otherness it was meant to hold.
Engraved in in the wall of the Museum of Liverpool is a quote from the former Gronby councillor Margaret Simey in 1999 which reads: “The magic of Liverpool is that it isn’t England.”
Liverpool’s port points west, which was particularly unhelpful during the 1980s when trade with Europe on the other side of the Isles was being prioritised. Naturally, this only stoked the flames of a dire relationship between Liverpool and the British government.
“Never Trust A Tory” is another common banner which can been seen circulating the Liverpool end on trips to Wembley.
This distrust has only festered over the last decade of Conservative rule. Labour – the more left-wing opposition in England to the Conservatives – have not had a prime minister in power since Gordon Brown in 2010.
Unlike the rest of the country, Liverpool have not given in to the blue invasion. The Labour Party has received more than 50% of the city’s votes in every general election between 1992 and 2019.
This unwavering favouring of Labour came immediately after Margaret Thatcher’s unpopular reign as Conservative party leader and prime minister. Thatcher’s Chancellor Sir Geoffrey Howe argued that Liverpool should be left to “managed decline”, as revealed by cabinet papers from the era which fed the distrust of that regime on Merseyside. In the wake of the Toxteth Riots, Howe urged Thatcher “not to over-commit scarce resources to Liverpool”.
The Conservatives and Thatcher were also in power at the time of the Hillsborough disaster and their handling of the situation, over a course of a decades-long quest for justice, also enraged a wounded city and its people.
The Tory hatred wasn’t always so suffocating. When the Iron Lady became prime minister in 1979, Sir Malcolm Thornton was first elected as Conservative MP for Liverpool Garston.
However, the distrust very much extends to the modern era as Boris Johnson, when prime minister, was asked to apologise for publishing an article in the Spectator which accused Liverpudlians of “wallowing” in their “victim status” while he was the publication’s editor in 2004. Shockingly, he did not offer a sorry amid his blustering response.
At Liverpool’s first FA Cup final triumph in 1965, the travelling Merseyside support belted out “God Save Our Gracious Team”. For many reasons, Liverpool fans have opted for a blunter approach over the subsequent years.
EPL
Reece James withdraws from England squad due to ‘ongoing issue’

Reece James has left the England camp and returned to Chelsea due to an ‘ongoing issue’.
The right-back was expected to start Sunday’s Euro 2024 qualifier against Ukraine at Wembley after Kyle Walker played all 90 minutes of Thursday’s 2-1 win away at Italy. But James has failed to prove his fitness and will reconvene with Chelsea at their Cobham training base.
A statement from England read: “Reece James has withdrawn from the England squad and will not feature against Ukraine on Sunday.
“The full-back has returned to Chelsea for assessment on an ongoing issue.
“No replacements are planned as Gareth Southgate’s squad, including the suspended Luke Shaw, continue their preparations at Tottenham Hotspur Training Ground.”
READ NEXT
Though James’ fitness record is patchy and he was suffering with a hamstring injury earlier this month, he joined up with the England squad this week having played 90 minutes in two of Chelsea’s final three games before the international break and was expected to be fit and healthy.
He came on as an 85th-minute substitute on Thursday for Bukayo Saka as 10-man England sought to hold onto their lead.
James missed England’s 2022 FIFA World Cup campaign after sustaining a knee injury in the autumn.
Chelsea will be hoping that James’ problem isn’t serious ahead of a busy month that sees them face the likes of Arsenal, Liverpool and Real Madrid.
James has already missed 17 games for Chelsea this season – 15 for his knee problem, one for a hamstring issue and one because of illness.
Prior to this season, James has been reported as to having nine other injuries during his time in the Chelsea senior setup, missing a total of 51 matches for the Blues.
LISTEN NOW
On this edition of Son of Chelsea, part of the 90min podcast network, Daniel Childs reviews Chelsea’s 2-2 draw with Everton & Graham Potter’s performance. If you can’t see this embed, click here to listen to the podcast!
-
Sportvectru on it1 week ago
NBA 2k23 NBA League Pass – How to fix problems
-
Champions League1 week ago
Official: Burna Boy set to perform live at Champions League final
-
Football1 week ago
Victor Osimhen reveals his striker idol
-
AFCON1 week ago
CONFIRMED: Super Eagles 23-man squad for 2023 AFCON qualifier
-
EPL1 week ago
Thierry Henry gives verdict on Man Utd Osimhen or Kane debate