LEGENDS - PORTUGAL - KEYPLAYER - EUSÉBIO
Personal information
Full name:
Eusébio da Silva Ferreira
Date of birth:
25 January 1942
Place of birth:
Lourenço Marques, Mozambique
Height
1.75 m (5 ft 9 in)
Playing position
Striker
National Team:
Portugal:
64x apps / 41x goals
Eusébio da Silva Ferreira, 25 January 1942 - 5 January 2014), was a Portuguese footballer who played as a striker.
Eusébio is considered one of the greatest footballers of all time.
During his professional career, he scored 749 goals in 745 matches at club level and 41 goals for his national team, a total of 790 goals.
Nicknamed the Black Panther, the Black Pearl, or o Rei (the King).
He was known for his speed, technique, athleticism and his ferocious right-footed shot, making him a prolific goalscorer.
He is considered S.L. Benfica's and the Portugal national team's most renowned player and one of the first world-class African strikers.
Although born in Mozambique and having an Angolan father, Eusébio, like Matateu and Mário Coluna, among others before him, could only play for the Portuguese team, since both of the African countries were overseas territories and their inhabitants were considered Portuguese.
He helped Portugal reach third place at the 1966 World Cup, being the top goalscorer of the tournament with nine goals (including four in one match against North Korea) and received the Bronze Ball award.
He won the Ballon d'Or award for European footballer of the year in 1965 and was runner-up in 1962 and 1966.
He played for Benfica for 15 out of his 22 years as a footballer, thus being mainly associated with the Portuguese club, and is the team's all-time top scorer with 638 goals scored in 614 official games.
There, he won eleven Primeira Liga titles, five Taça de Portugal titles, a European Cup (1961-62) and helped them reach three additional European Cup finals (1963, 1965, 1968).
He is the eighth-highest goalscorer in the history of the European Cup and the second-highest, behind Alfredo Di Stéfano, in the pre-Champions League era with 48 goals.
He was the European Cup top scorer in 1964-65, 1965-66 and 1967-68.
He also won the Bola de Prata (Primeira Liga top scorer award) a record seven times.
He was the first ever player to win the European Golden Boot, in 1968, a feat he replicated in 1973.
Eusébio's name often appears in best player of all time lists and polls by football critics and fans.
He was elected the ninth-best footballer of the 20th century in a poll by the IFFHS and the tenth-best footballer of the 20th century in a poll by the World Soccer magazine.
Pelé named Eusébio as one of the 125 best living footballers in his 2004 FIFA 100 list.
He was seventh in the online poll for UEFA Golden Jubilee Poll.
In November 2003, to celebrate UEFA's Jubilee, he was selected as the Golden Player of Portugal by the Portuguese Football Federation as their most outstanding player of the past 50 years.
He has been called "Africa's first great footballer" and "Africa's greatest-ever player".
From his retirement until his death, Eusébio was an ambassador of football and was one of the most recognizable faces of his generation.
Homages by FIFA, UEFA, the Portuguese Football Federation and Benfica have been held in his honour.
Former Benfica and Portugal teammate and friend António Simões acknowledges his influence on Benfica and said: "With Eusébio maybe we could be European Champions, without him maybe we could win the league".
Shortly after Eusébio's death, another legend Alfredo Di Stéfano stated: "For me Eusébio will always be the best player of all time".