List of international goals scored by Pelé
Pelé scored 77 goals in 92 international appearances for Brazil.
Pelé was a Brazilian professional footballer who represented the Brazil national football team as a forward from 1957 to 1971. Throughout his career, Pelé scored 77 goals in 92[ a] international appearances.[ b] He remained Brazil's top goalscorer for over 60 years, before being surpassed by Neymar in 2023.[ 2] [ 5] Pelé made his debut for Brazil in a 2–1 defeat against Argentina on 7 July 1957.[ 6] In that same match, he scored his first international goal aged 16 years and eight months, and remains Brazil's youngest ever goalscorer.[ 6] [ 7] Pelé scored seven international hat-tricks , which is still the most of any Brazilian player.[ 8]
Pelé scored 12 goals in 14 FIFA World Cup appearances spanning four separate World Cups. As of the most recent edition , he is the only footballer to have won three World Cups[ c] and is one of only five players, the others being Uwe Seeler , Miroslav Klose , Cristiano Ronaldo , and Lionel Messi , to have scored in four separate ones.[ 9] At the 1958 FIFA World Cup , Pelé was at the time the youngest player to participate in a World Cup[ d] and became the youngest scorer in a World Cup game.[ 10] [ 11] He also became the youngest footballer to score a hat-trick in a World Cup, doing so against France in the semifinal.[ 9] [ 12] In addition, Pelé achieved the distinction of being the youngest footballer to play in a World Cup final, where he scored two goals to help Brazil beat Sweden 5–2,[ 9] [ 13] and the youngest player to win a World Cup.[ 11] He finished the tournament with six goals, behind a record-breaking Just Fontaine , and was named best young player of the tournament.[ 14] [ 15] Following the tournament, he was nicknamed O Rei (The King), and emerged as a worldwide black sporting star.[ 16] [ 17]
In the South American Football Championship , Pelé scored six goals in eight appearances, all during the 1959 edition .[ 18] Although Brazil were runners-up, he was the top scorer and was named best player of the tournament.[ 19] Pelé scored one goal in the 1962 FIFA World Cup and one in the 1966 edition . He played in six World Cup qualifying matches for the 1970 edition , scoring six goals, and netted four more at the tournament itself. Pelé scored his final international goal on 11 July 1971 against Austria , and made his final appearance for Brazil against Yugoslavia on 18 July 1971. Pelé is widely regarded as one of the greatest football players of all time and was among the most successful and popular sports figures of the 20th century. In 1999, he was named Athlete of the Century by the International Olympic Committee [ 20] and included in the Time list of the 100 most important people of the 20th century ,[ 21] while, in 2000, he was voted the World Player of the Century by the International Federation of Football History & Statistics [ 22] and was a joint winner of the FIFA Player of the Century award.[ 23]
Goals
Scores and results list Brazil's goal tally first, score column indicates score after each Pelé goal.
List of international goals scored by Pelé
No.
Cap
Date
Venue
Opponent
Score
Result
Competition
Ref.
1
1
7 July 1957
Maracanã Stadium , Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Argentina
1–1
1–2
1957 Roca Cup
[ 24]
2
2
10 July 1957
Pacaembu Stadium , São Paulo, Brazil
Argentina
1–0
2–0 (a.e.t. )
1957 Roca Cup
[ 25]
3
3
4 May 1958
Maracanã Stadium , Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Paraguay
4–1
5–1
1958 Taça Oswaldo Cruz
[ 26]
4
5
18 May 1958
Pacaembu Stadium , São Paulo, Brazil
Bulgaria
2–1
3–1
Friendly
[ 27]
5
3–1
6
7
19 June 1958
Ullevi , Gothenburg, Sweden
Wales
1–0
1–0
1958 FIFA World Cup
[ 28]
7
8
24 June 1958
Råsunda Stadium , Solna, Sweden
France
3–1
5–2
1958 FIFA World Cup
[ 12]
8
4–1
9
5–1
10
9
29 June 1958
Råsunda Stadium , Solna, Sweden
Sweden
3–1
5–2
1958 FIFA World Cup final
[ 29]
11
5–2
12
10
10 March 1959
Estadio Monumental , Buenos Aires, Argentina
Peru
2–0
2–2
1959 South American Football Championship
[ 18]
13
11
15 March 1959
Estadio Monumental , Buenos Aires, Argentina
Chile
1–0
3–0
1959 South American Football Championship
[ 18]
14
2–0
15
12
21 March 1959
Estadio Monumental , Buenos Aires, Argentina
Bolivia
1–1
4–2
1959 South American Football Championship
[ 18]
16
14
29 March 1959
Estadio Monumental , Buenos Aires, Argentina
Paraguay
1–1
4–1
1959 South American Football Championship
[ 18]
17
3–1
18
4–1
19
15
4 April 1959
Estadio Monumental , Buenos Aires, Argentina
Argentina
1–1
1–1
1959 South American Football Championship
[ 18]
20
17
17 September 1959
Maracanã Stadium , Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Chile
1–0
7–0
1959 Copa Bernardo O'Higgins
[ 30]
21
3–0
22
4–0
23
20
1 May 1960
Alexandria Stadium , Alexandria, Egypt
United Arab Republic
1–0
3–1
Friendly
[ 31]
24
2–0
25
3–0
26
24
12 July 1960
Maracanã Stadium , Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Argentina
2–1
5–1
1960 Taça do Atlântico
[ 32]
27
25
21 April 1962
Maracanã Stadium , Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Paraguay
2–0
6–0
1962 Taça Oswaldo Cruz
[ 33]
28
26
24 April 1962
Estádio do Morumbi , São Paulo, Brazil
Paraguay
2–0
4–0
1962 Taça Oswaldo Cruz
[ 34]
29
3–0
30
28
9 May 1962
Maracanã Stadium , Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Portugal
1–0
1–0
Friendly
[ 35]
31
29
12 May 1962
Maracanã Stadium , Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Wales
3–1
3–1
Friendly
[ 36]
32
30
16 May 1962
Estádio do Morumbi , São Paulo, Brazil
Wales
2–1
3–1
Friendly
[ 37]
33
3–1
34
31
30 May 1962
Estadio Sausalito , Viña del Mar, Chile
Mexico
2–0
2–0
1962 FIFA World Cup
[ 38]
35
34
16 April 1963
Maracanã Stadium , Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Argentina
1–0
5–2 (a.e.t. )
1963 Roca Cup
[ 39]
36
3–1
37
4–1
38
36
28 April 1963
Stade de Colombes , Paris, France
France
1–0
3–2
Friendly
[ 40]
39
2–1
40
3–2
41
38
5 May 1963
Volksparkstadion , Hamburg, West Germany
West Germany
2–1
2–1
Friendly
[ 41]
42
40
30 May 1964
Maracanã Stadium , Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
England
3–1
5–1
Taça das Nações
[ 42]
43
42
30 May 1964
Maracanã Stadium , Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Portugal
1–0
4–1
Taça das Nações
[ 43]
44
43
2 June 1965
Maracanã Stadium , Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Belgium
1–0
5–0
Friendly
[ 44]
45
2–0
46
3–0
47
44
6 June 1965
Volksparkstadion , Hamburg, West Germany
West Germany
2–0
2–0
Friendly
[ 45]
48
46
17 June 1965
Ahmed Zabana Stadium , Oran, Algeria
Algeria
1–0
3–0
Friendly
[ 46]
49
48
30 June 1965
Råsunda Stadium , Solna, Sweden
Sweden
1–1
2–1
Friendly
[ 47]
50
49
4 July 1965
Luzhniki Stadium , Moscow, Soviet Union
Soviet Union
1–0
3–0
Friendly
[ 48]
51
3–0
52
50
21 November 1965
Maracanã Stadium , Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Soviet Union
2–0
2–2
Friendly
[ 49]
53
52
4 June 1966
Estádio do Morumbi , São Paulo, Brazil
Peru
1–0
4–0
Friendly
[ 50]
54
54
12 June 1966
Maracanã Stadium , Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Czechoslovakia
1–0
2–1
Friendly
[ 51]
55
2–0
56
55
15 June 1966
Maracanã Stadium , Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Czechoslovakia
1–0
2–2
Friendly
[ 52]
57
58
12 July 1966
Goodison Park , Liverpool, England
Bulgaria
1–0
2–0
1966 FIFA World Cup
[ 53]
58
60
25 July 1968
Estadio de Puerto Sajonia , Asunción, Paraguay
Paraguay
1–0
4–0
1968 Taça Oswaldo Cruz
[ 54]
59
2–0
60
63
3 November 1968
Mineirão , Belo Horizonte, Brazil
Mexico
2–0
2–1
Friendly
[ 55]
61
66
17 December 1968
Maracanã Stadium , Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Yugoslavia
2–2
3–3
Friendly
[ 56]
62
68
9 April 1969
Maracanã Stadium , Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Peru
1–2
3–2
Friendly
[ 57]
63
71
10 August 1969
Estadio Olímpico de la UCV , Caracas, Venezuela
Venezuela
2–0
5–0
1970 FIFA World Cup qualification
[ 58]
64
5–0
65
73
21 August 1969
Maracanã Stadium , Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Colombia
4–1
6–2
1970 FIFA World Cup qualification
[ 59]
66
74
24 August 1969
Maracanã Stadium , Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Venezuela
5–0
6–0
1970 FIFA World Cup qualification
[ 60]
67
6–0
68
75
31 August 1969
Maracanã Stadium , Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Paraguay
1–0
1–0
1970 FIFA World Cup qualification
[ 61]
69
77
8 March 1970
Maracanã Stadium , Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Argentina
2–1
2–1
Friendly
[ 62]
70
78
22 March 1970
Estádio do Morumbi , São Paulo, Brazil
Chile
4–0
5–0
Friendly
[ 63]
71
5–0
72
83
3 June 1970
Estadio Jalisco , Guadalajara, Mexico
Czechoslovakia
2–1
4–1
1970 FIFA World Cup
[ 64]
73
85
10 June 1970
Estadio Jalisco , Guadalajara, Mexico
Romania
1–0
3–2
1970 FIFA World Cup
[ 65]
74
3–1
75
88
21 June 1970
Estadio Azteca , Mexico City, Mexico
Italy
1–0
4–1
1970 FIFA World Cup final
[ 66]
76
90
4 October 1970
Estadio Nacional , Santiago, Chile
Chile
1–0
5–1
Friendly
[ 67]
77
91
11 July 1971
Estádio do Morumbi , São Paulo, Brazil
Austria
1–0
1–1
Friendly
[ 68]
Hat-tricks
Pelé scored seven hat-tricks for Brazil .
List of international hat-tricks scored by Pelé
No.
Opponent
Goals
Score
Venue
Competition
Date
Ref.
1
France
3 – (3–1, 4–1, 5–1)
5–2
Råsunda Stadium , Solna, Sweden
1958 FIFA World Cup
24 June 1958
[ 12]
2
Paraguay
3 – (1–1, 3–1, 4–1)
4–1
Estadio Monumental , Buenos Aires, Argentina
1959 South American Football Championship
29 March 1959
[ 18]
3
Chile
3 – (1–0, 3–0, 4–0)
7–0
Maracanã Stadium , Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
1959 Copa Bernardo O'Higgins
17 September 1959
[ 30]
4
United Arab Republic
3 – (1–0, 2–0, 3–0)
3–1
Alexandria Stadium , Alexandria, Egypt
Friendly
1 May 1960
[ 31]
5
Argentina
3 – (1–0, 3–1, 4–1)
5–2
Maracanã Stadium , Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
1963 Roca Cup
16 April 1963
[ 39]
6
France
3 – (1–0, 2–1, 3–2)
3–2
Stade de Colombes , Paris, France
Friendly
28 April 1963
[ 40]
7
Belgium
3 – (1–0, 2–0, 3–0)
5–0
Maracanã Stadium , Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Friendly
2 June 1965
[ 44]
Statistics
Appearances and goals by year
Year
Competitive
Friendly
Total
Apps
Goals
Apps
Goals
Apps
Goals
1957
2[ e]
2
—
2
2
1958
5[ f]
7
2
2
7
9
1959
8[ g]
11
1
0
9
11
1960
2[ h]
1
4
3
6
4
1961
—
—
0
0
1962
4[ i]
4
4
4
8
8
1963
2[ e]
3
5
4
7
7
1964
3[ j]
2
—
3
2
1965
—
8
9
8
9
1966
2[ k]
1
7
4
9
5
1967
—
—
0
0
1968
2[ l]
2
5
2
7[ a]
4
1969
6[ m]
6
3
1
9
7
1970
6[ n]
4
9
4
15
8
1971
—
2
1
2
1
Total
42
43
50
34
92
77
Notes
References
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