Mário Zagallo, Brazilian football legend, dies

Mario Zagallo Brazilian football legend dies

The only man to have won the World Cup a total of four times as a player and then coach, Mário Zagallo died on Friday January 5. He leaves behind one of the greatest legacies in world football.

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The “Old Wolf” has died out. Mário Zagallo, former player and then coach of the Seleção, died on Friday January 5 at the age of 92, leaving behind a timeless legacy with the Brazilian selection. The man also nicknamed “The Professor” played a key role in four of the five world titles won by Brazil and will especially remain the very first to have won the World Cup as a player, then as a coach.

In total, he lifted the trophy four times: first twice as a player alongside Pelé in 1958 in Sweden and in 1962 in Chile, then as coach in 1970 in Mexico and as assistant coach in 1994 in the UNITED STATES. He has only failed once in the final of a World Cup: in 1998 during Brazil’s 3-0 defeat against the Blues at the Stade de France.

To date, only two other men have succeeded in imitating him: the German Franz Beckenbauer (in 1974 as a player and 1990 as a coach) and Didier Deschamps, current coach of the France team, who was on the pitch in 1998 during the Blues’ first world title against Brazil and who was at the head of the selection in 2018 during their second victory in Russia.

A legend hailed by all generations

When his death was announced, tributes quickly multiplied to salute the man as much as the footballer. “ Mário Jorge Lobo Zagallo was one of the greatest football players and coaches of all time, a great winner and a symbol of love for the Brazilian national team and for Brazil », Declared Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula Da Silva on social networks.

Fifa logically saluted Zagallo’s achievements in the World Cup, while the Seleção announced, through its president Ednaldo Rodrigues, seven days of mourning in tribute to the Auriverde legend.

Many Brazilian players, both former teammates and players who played under him, also paid tribute to his career.

In August 2013, on the occasion of Zagallo’s 82nd birthday, the legend Pelé had already highlighted the importance of their relationship: ” Zagallo is like a brother to me. When we arrived in Sweden for the 1958 World Cup, I was 17 and the youngest member of the team and Zagallo, along with Zito and Gilmar, took me under their protection “. Having died a year ago, his official account maintained by the Pelé Foundation obviously saluted the mark he left in the history of Brazilian football.

Scheduled for Sunday January 7, Mário Zagallo’s funeral will take place at the headquarters of the Brazilian Football Confederation (CBF) in Rio de Janeiro, according to a press release released by his family. He will then be buried at the São João Batista cemetery in the Botafogo district.

(With AFP)



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