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    Real Madrid ‘ready to offer £89m for Jude Bellingham transfer’ but refuse to pay ‘crazy money’ for England World Cup ace

    REAL MADRID are ready to offer £89million for Borussia Dortmund and England ace Jude Bellingham, according to reports.Bellingham, 19, has impressed in Germany since his £25million 2020 transfer from Birmingham City.
    Real are willing to offer £89m for BellinghamCredit: PA
    And he took the World Cup by storm for Gareth Southgate’s Three Lions.
    Bellingham played five times in Qatar and scored in the 6-2 group game win over Iran.
    The teenager’s performances have reinforced his place on the wishlists of a number of Europe’s elite clubs.
    And according to ESPN, Spanish and European champions Real are ready to offer Dortmund £89m for the midfielder.
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    However, they will refuse to pay “crazy” money for Bellingham, which could come as a boost to other interested parties.
    As SunSport exclusively revealed, Pep Guardiola and the Manchester City hierarchy are determined to win the fight for Bellingham.
    Etihad sources reckon the prospect of working with Guardiola will swing the Dortmund star’s decision in their favour.
    The likes of Liverpool, Manchester United, Chelsea and Paris Saint-Germain are also keen.
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    Trent Alexander-Arnold and Jordan Henderson tried to convince Bellingham Anfield was the place for him while they were in Qatar for the World Cup.
    Asked about a January move, Liverpool boss Jurgen Klopp said: “I’m the wrong person to ask about whether Jude is available in January.
    “The January window? We are looking and if something happens, we’ll see. From a sports side, we are always prepared.” More

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    I filmed myself getting huge Messi tattoo across my forehead after World Cup win – two weeks later I hate it

    A LIONEL Messi fan says he regrets tattooing the footballer’s name on his forehead following Argentina’s victory in the World Cup.Colombian influencer, Maicol Quinonez, shared the shocking moment he got ‘Messi’ tattooed in huge letters across his head in a social media post.
    Colombian Maicol Quinonez says he regrets getting the tattoo
    He got the footballers name, three stars and D10s on his face
    Now only two weeks later, the influencer more widely known as Mike Jambs says he hates the tattoo.
    The bizarre inking was a tribute to World Cup champion Lionel Messi and Quinonez captioned his post “Fulfilling the challenge. I love you @leomessi’.
    The digital creator also had three stars tattooed on one of his cheeks representing Argentina’s World Cup wins and D10s on the other – a play on the Spanish word for ‘God’ and the footballers famous shirt number.
    Quinonez has racked up over 143,000 followers on Instagram, many of whom mocked the influencer for his latest ink.
    READ MORE ON THE WORLD CUP
    Viewers commented their thoughts on the influencers tribute tatts, one wrote: “People for likes do very stupid things, I don’t know why I follow you”.
    Another commented: “People are so backwards”.
    A third said: “Hopefully one day you won’t have to regret it and it’ll actually be worth it, I doubt it”.
    Initially, he defended his decision to get the tattoo, telling his followers: “I’m not harming anyone, I’m not doing anything illegal.”
    MOST READ IN FOOTBALL
    But now he has admitted in a recent social media video that he wishes he could turn back the clock, saying: “I regret having done the tattoo because instead of bringing me positive things, it’s led to lots of negative things, both personally and for my family.”
    “I didn’t think I would say this so soon. I was very proud [of it] the first few days, but I regret it.”
    “They just say that I am not a positive example for society.”
    “Be careful with your words. You don’t know the damage you can do to someone because of social media. You don’t know how you can destroy your life,” he added.
    Tattooists in Argentina were flooded with requests for Messi tributes following the triumphant World Cup win.
    Many fans were also left in hysterics after one fan got a tattoo of the Paris Saint-Germain striker on his back that was labelled the ‘worst ever’ by some viewers.
    Most read in The Sun
    The ink showed Messi holding up the World Cup trophy but his giant head seemed unnaturally large for his body.
    One critic joked: “When the tattoo artist is a Brazil supporter”.
    A second said: “Looks like Messi in 2026 being 39 and overweight”. More

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    Pele was paid huge $120,000 just to tie his laces at 1970 World Cup due to furious Adidas-Puma row

    THE LEGENDARY Pele was paid a whopping $120,000 to tie his laces at the 1970 World Cup amid a bitter row between Adidas and Puma.The world of football is in mourning after it was announced yesterday that the Pele had passed away aged 82 in his homeland.
    Pele once earned $120,000 in a crafty marketing move by Puma, whose boots he has on hereCredit: Rex
    He got the huge sum for tying his boot laces at the start of the 1970 World Cup quarter-finalCredit: YouTube
    The icon, who will be laid to rest in a “virtual cemetery”, had been receiving treatment for a tumour in his colon but stopped responding to care.
    However on Thursday evening the news broke that the greatest player in history has sadly passed away due to multiple organ failure as a result of his cancer.
    Nicknamed The King, Pele won three World Cups with Brazil between 1958 and 1970, the only player in football history to achieve the feat.
    His amazing haul of 1,279 goals in 1,363 games, which included friendlies, is recognised as a Guinness World Record.
    READ MORE ON PELE
    He also scored a remarkable 77 goals in 92 games for the national team – a record equalled by Neymar at the recent World Cup.
    The current Brazilian No.10 has led the huge outpouring of tributes to the late, great superstar along with modern day greats Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi.
    And since then a host of heartwarming, glorious and magical stories have been revealed about Pele’s incredible career.
    Now footage of a remarkable incident from the World Cup quarter-final against Peru in 1970 has resurfaced which shows the ex-forward bending down to tie his shoelaces after being paid $120,000 – worth around £50,000 in 1970 exchange rates – by boot manufacturers Puma.
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    Brothers Adolf and Rudolf Dassler went into the shoe manufacturing business together in the 1920s but a bitter family feud led to them going their separate ways in the 1940s.
    That led Adolf to create Adidas and Rudolf to set up Puma as the siblings battled to secure top names to market their brands.
    Pele had already shot to stardom after winning the 1958 World Cup and it was decided by the brothers that he would be too expensive to sign up for endorsements, an agreement that was dubbed the “Pele Pact”.
    But that all changed in 1970 when Puma offered the Brazilian $120,000 to wear their boots – as long as he asked the referee for some time to bend down and tie his laces before kick-off.
    They even went as far as to pay the cameraman to zoom in as Pele carried out the act.

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    Football world pays tribute to icon Pele after World Cup hero’s death aged 82

    Adolf Dassler and Adidas were left furious at Puma’s antics – although his brother will hardly have cared as he went on to register record annual sales.
    And Pele, with his nice earner too hand, went on to fire Brazil to World Cup glory again for a third time.
    Pele made his debut for his local team Santos aged just 15 and won his first cap for the Brazil national team at 16. 
    He won the World Cup in 1958 aged just 17, and then won it again in 1962 and 1970.

    The South American superstar racked up 643 goals in 659 appearances for club side Santos across his 18-year spell.
    He also played for the New York Cosmos and retired in 1977, in an exhibition match between the Cosmos and Santos. More

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    Lionel Messi and Wag Antonela enjoy another party to celebrate Argentina’s World Cup triumph as PSG edge win without him

    LIONEL MESSI enjoyed his latest party as he continues his post-World Cup break.The Argentine hero is in hometown Rosario still basking in his glory.
    Lionel Messi and wife Antonela pose with his parents Celia and JorgeCredit: Instagram / @jorge.sole
    Celia and Jorge pose with Angel Di Maria and his wife Jorgelina CardosoCredit: Instagram / @jorge.sole
    Messi’s parents pose with Leandro Paredes and wife Camila GalanteCredit: Instagram / @jorge.sole
    Messi’s club Paris Saint-Germain returned to action this week, but the 35-year-old is still on an extended break.
    He initially travelled to Buenos Aires from Qatar with his team-mates immediately after their triumph, before heading to Rosario a day later.
    The attacker has been spending plenty of time with wife Antonela, as well as parents Jorge and Celia.
    All were present as Messi hosted another post-World Cup bash last night.
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    Many of his team-mates have now returned to their clubs, including penalty shoot-out hero Emi Martinez.
    But others were at Messi’s bash, including his former PSG pals Angel Di Maria and Leandro Paredes.
    Di Maria, 34, and wife Jorgelina Cardoso posed with Messi’s parents for a snap together.
    While Paredes attended with wife Camila Galante.
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    Ex-Liverpool ace Maxi Rodriguez was in attendanceCredit: Instagram / @jorge.sole
    The party took place in Messi’s hometown RosarioCredit: Instagram / @jorge.sole
    Former Argentina stars Maxi Rodriguez and Javier Mascherano are also said to have been in attendance.
    Di Maria and Paredes are set to return to Juventus on January 2.
    While Messi is due back in Paris on Tuesday or Wednesday next week.
    Christophe Galtier’s side were back in action without him on Wednesday night against Strasbourg at Parc des Princes.
    While Messi was missing, fellow World Cup finalist Kylian Mbappe was back and in the starting XI.
    The match began in straightforward enough fashion, with Marquinhos heading home a 14th minute set piece to give his side the lead.
    He went from hero to villain in the second-half, however, when he deflected Ludovic Ajorque’s cross beyond Gianluigi Donnarumma and into his own net for the visitors’ shock equaliser.
    PSG were given another scare just after the hour mark, when Neymar was sent off for a second yellow card after a theatrical dive.

    They managed to find a winner deep into stoppage time, however, when Mbappe tucked away a 96th minute penalty after being fouled in the box.
    The win saw PSG move seven points clear of second-place Lens at the top of the Ligue 1 table, with a trip to face their title rivals scheduled for Sunday.
    Kylian Mbappe bailed PSG out against StrasbourgCredit: Rex More

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    Salt Bae slammed for ‘lifting World Cup without playing a match’ after sharing another unrecognisable throwback photo

    FAME hungry Salt Bae has been slammed for “lifting the World Cup without playing a match” after sharing another throwback photo. The celebrity chef has been under fire ever since he was accused of hijacking Argentina’s celebrations at the World Cup.
    Salt Bae touched the £17m 18-carat World Cup trophy breaking FIFA etiquetteCredit: instagram
    Salt Bae shared a throwback photo from his childhoodCredit: Instagram
    He shared a throwback photo from his childhood days looking unrecognisable without his trademark sunglasses and slicked-back ponytail.
    The Turkish social media star – real name Nusret Gökçe – uploaded the snap to his Instagram.
    The chef was pictured looking fresh-faced as a young boy without his signature props to hide behind.
    Gökçe simply captioned the photo: “No salt no life.”
    Read more on Salt Bae
    But Salt Bae’s World Cup antics have sparked relentless trolling from his followers – even on unrelated social media posts.
    He faced a storm of criticism after badgering Lionel Messi and grabbing the trophy from Argentina players after the final.
    One commented on the throwback picture: “Grew up to lift the World Cup without playing a match, legend.”
    Another said: “No salt, better life, and do not get back to the World Cups.”
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    A third wrote: “The face you make when you need to ask Messi three times for a picture and he finally gives in to get you away from him.”
    A fourth commented: “Next time don’t touch the World Cup and you won’t be banned.”
    It comes after he was accused of chatting on his AirPods while serving customers a steak that cost them £500.
    Gökçe was seen with his AirPods in as he carves up a steak tableside with his trademark swagger.
    But an angry customer took to TikTok to complain – rating the internet star’s restaurant a dismal 1.7 out of 10.
    Ehtisham Aziz shared the video – saying he paid £500 to have the musclebound butcher carve up his steak at his restaurant Nusr-Et in Doha, Qatar.
    But he was left unimpressed when Salt Bae appeared disinterested as he seemed to be chatting to someone via his AirPods.
    During the final in Qatar, footage showed the chef pestering the Argentina squad as they celebrated their World Cup glory with their families after the tense shootout.
    In a series of videos posted on his own Instagram, he interrupted the likes of Angel di Maria, Cristian Romero and Lisandro Martinez as they posed with the World Cup trophy, leaving the trio looking awkward.
    He was seen grabbing hold of Lionel Messi by the shoulder at least twice as the baffled megastar tried to shrug him off.
    His persistence paid off as he finally got a selfie with the striker, hailed the greatest of all time.
    The chef was also seen forcing himself into lineups with other stars as they clutched the famous golden trophy.
    He has now been barred from attending The US Open Cup, the equivalent of England’s FA Cup.
    Action will be taken against staff who allowed him access after social media footage showed his cringeworthy exchanges with players, who did their best to avoid Salt Bae.
    Fifa is conducting an internal investigation to see how the chef got onto the pitch.
    FIFA boss Gianni Infantino even unfollowed Salt Bae in the wake of his shameful antics.
    The Turkish cook has courted a years-long friendship with Fifa president Infantino.
    They have been pictured together several times, and the football chief has been gushing in his praise for the flamboyant Instagram star.

    However the bromance seems to be over after he unfollowed Salt Bae on Instagram. More

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    Pele made all of us want to be Brazilian for a month every four years, he was the complete footballer, says Tim Vickery

    PELE’S last lucid days were spent while the World Cup was taking place – which was entirely fitting.  With so many connected to the game gathered in one place, football could send out a message of love and respect to Pele – the man who did more than anyone else to turn the World Cup into the most gripping sporting event on the planet.
    Pele died after a battle with colon cancerCredit: AFP
    Born just 52 years after Brazil abolished slavery, Pele became the undisputed king of the global game – a tribute both to the democratic nature of the sport and to his own extraordinary talent and drive. 
    He was a machine for playing football, possessed of every technical, tactical and psychological virtue.
    Right foot, left foot, headers, acceleration and sustained pace, close control, vision and awareness, strength and impulse, imagination and daring plus huge doses of the great twin motivating factors, pride and fear – Pele had the complete package. 
    Watching him at his best is like time travel, as if a modern day player, with all the benefits of contemporary physical preparation, had been transported back to show the oldies how it’s done.
    read more on pele
    Pele holds up the Jules Rimet Trophy in 1970 – the third time he managed to lift the World CupCredit: Rex
    Pele made us all want to be Brazilian for a month every four yearsCredit: Rex
    His fame catapulted Pele to global icon statusCredit: Rex
    All of this made him a global icon long before football had gone through the globalising process. 
    He is without doubt the greatest diplomat that Brazil has ever produced. 
    Pele made all of us want to be Brazilian for a month every four years. 
    We all wanted to win, to win in style and to win in style with that easy going smile.
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    The story takes shape when a nine year old Pele is shocked to see his father in tears as he listens to the radio. 
    Brazil, still wearing white, let the final of the 1950 World Cup slip and lose 2-1 to Uruguay. 
    The child promises his father that he will put things right. 
    Twenty years later, after overcoming Uruguay in the semi final, Brazil beat Italy 4-1 to win the World Cup for the third time. 
    Mission accomplished.
    Pele wheels away after downing Italy in 1970Credit: Rex
    As an ambassador for the beautiful game – Pele will be sorely missedCredit: EPA More

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    How Brazil legend Pele, the most divine of footballers, learned to play with a sock stuffed with paper

    IN brilliant, Brazilian yellow on new-fangled colour TV sets, Pele appeared to have descended from footballing heaven.It was the 1970 World Cup and with balletic poise, devastating pace and clinical skill he defined what the Beautiful Game could be.
    Pele, who has died aged 82, will be remembered for Brazil’s triumph at the 1970 World CupCredit: Getty
    Pele ended up winning a total of three World Cup trophiesCredit: Instagram
    Pele learned to play football with a sock stuffed with newspaper after being born into poverty (pictured aged 17)Credit: Avalon.red
    For Pelé, it was never enough just to win, he had to entertain too.
    It’s all there on YouTube – the mazy dribbles, the cannonball shots and that elegant dummy sold to Uruguay’s keeper.
    He learned to play football with a sock stuffed with newspaper after being born into poverty
    Aged 17, he then became a global superstar after helping Brazil lift its first World Cup in 1958.
    read more on pele
    Now – in the searing heat of Mexico 1970 – Pele was in his pomp, playing for a team regarded by many as the greatest ever.
    Brazil’s second match saw them face holders England, with temperatures nudging 37C in Guadalajara.
    On ten minutes, Jairzinho crossed for Pelé whose powerful downward header was miraculously palmed away by Gordon Banks.
    The greatest-ever player thwarted by the greatest-ever save.
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    Pele would later reflect: “I have scored more than a thousand goals in my life and the thing people always talk to me about is the one I didn’t score.”
    Brazil won 1-0 despite an imperious defensive display by Bobby Moore, including an epic tackle on Jairzinho in the box.
    Brazil manager Mário Zagallo said: “The England match was our toughest test. That was the real final.”
    At the final whistle, Pele and Moore embraced like two battered prize fighters and swapped shirts.
    Pelé would later say: “He was my friend as well as the greatest defender I ever played against.
    In the final Brazil hammered Italy 4-1. Tarcisio Burgnich, who marked Pele, recalled: “I told myself before the game, ‘He’s made of skin and bones just like everyone else’.
    “But I was wrong.”
    Pele opened the scoring with a sublime header and his unforgettable killer pass to a rampaging Alberto capped off the victory.
    Alberto would later say: “Playing with Pele felt like you had God on your side.”
    He was born Edson Arantes do Nascimento – in subtropical Três Corações in 1940.
    A young Pele playing for Santos FC where he scored on his debut aged 15 in 1956Credit: Avalon.red
    Pele scoring in the 1970 World Cup FinalCredit: Rex
    He was named after US inventor Thomas Edison because his town had just been connected to the electricity mains.
    The eldest of three children, his father João Ramos do Nascimento, was a footballer whose career was cut short by injury, plunging the family into poverty.
    He later recalled the “constant anxiety” of where his next meal would come from.
    Pele wrote: “That fear, once it enters your bones, it’s like a chill that never leaves you.”
    He played football in the street with a sock stuffed with newspaper or a watermelon.
    Later his father would teach him how to use both feet and to head properly.
    Like all Brazilian footballers, there had to be a nickname.
    As a child, his favourite player was goalkeeper Bilé who he mispronounced as Pele. It stuck.
    Scouted by giants Santos FC, he scored on his debut aged 15 in 1956.
    The following year he was called up for the national team – scoring in a 2–1 loss to Argentina
    In 1958 Pele inspired Brazil to World Cup glory in Sweden with six goals. Some locals had never met a black man.
    He recalled: “This Swedish girl kept rubbing my skin to see if it’d come off.”
    In the 1962 World Cup he scored in the opening game but later limped out of the tournament, which Brazil won.
    Four years later in England he was fouled repeatedly and got injured again.
    A year after the 1970 triumph he retired from internationals as the original GOAT, greatest of all time.
    He would win six league titles with Santos plus two Copa Libertadores – the equivalent of the Champions League.
    In 1975 he joined New York Cosmos before hanging up his boots two years later.
    Mick Jagger said: “Everybody wanted to shake his hand, to get a photo with him.
    “Saying you had partied with Pele was the biggest badge of honour going.”
    His personal life was complicated.
    Pele said he was “too young” when he married Rosemeri dos Reis Cholbi in 1966.
    The couple had daughters, Kelly and Jennifer, and son Edinho, before divorce in 1982.
    The legend celebrates Brazil’s 1970 World Cup winCredit: Getty
    The ace lifts the World Cup trophy in 1970Credit: Alamy
    The last picture of Pele as he hugs daughter Kelly Nascimento on his hospital bedCredit: https://www.instagram.com/iamkelynascimento/
    In total, he has seven known offspring, including Sandra Machado who he refused to acknowledge.
    Sandra, who died from ­cancer in 2006, was the result of a romance with housemaid Anisia Machado.
    An affair in 1968 with journalist Lenita Kurtz produced daughter Flavia, 52.
    In 1994 he married psychologist Assíria Lemos Seixas, who gave birth to twins Joshua and Celeste in 1996. The couple divorced in 2008.
    Then in 2016, aged 75, he married “definitive love” businesswoman Marcia Cibele Aoki, 50.
    After he quit playing, Pele became a UNESCO Ambassador and later Brazilian Sports Minister and also earned a fortune through ad deals – including Viagra.
    He had long been dogged by health ­problems and last year had surgery to remove a tumour from his colon.

    But he was immortalised in canvas by pop artist Andy Warhol, who said “Pele was one of the few who contradicted my theory.
    “Instead of 15 minutes of fame, he will have 15 centuries.”
    Pele in hospital with daughter Kelly
    Pele hugs fellow sporting legend Muhammad AliCredit: AP:Associated Press
    Pele and Argentina legend MaradonaCredit: Splash
    Pele and Portugal’s Cristiano RonaldoCredit: Instagram More

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    Pele and Bobby Moore swapping shirts at Mexico 70 is one of game’s most iconic images and great moment of sportsmanship

    THE iconic image of Pele and England’s Bobby Moore swapping shirts at Mexico 70 is one of the game’s greatest moments of sportsmanship.The two legends had just battled it out in the ‘Clash of the Champions’ in Guadalajara, with 1958 and 1962 winners Brazil edging holders England 1-0 in one of the all-time World Cup classics.
    This picture of Pele and Bobby Moore embracing at the 1970 World Cup has become an iconic imageCredit: Getty
    Moore and Pele, whose mutual respect on the pitch turned into a lifelong friendship, told each other they would meet again the final.
    It was not to be, as the Three Lions crashed out against West Germany in the quarter-finals.
    The Brazilian superstar recognised England’s 1966 World Cup-winning captain as one of the great defenders — although he enjoyed a 100 per cent record against him in their three international meetings.
    Pele – who passed away on Thursday at the age of 82 – learned to play as a boy in Sao Paulo by using grapefruits or socks stuffed with paper as a makeshift ball.
    READ MORE ON PELE
    And after Brazil smashed Alf Ramsey’s team 5-1 in Rio de Janeiro in 1964, Moore gave an insight into his rival’s unique skills.
    Moore said: “You go into the tackle, you make contact. You think you’ve got him or the ball — or both — and then you find you haven’t got either.
    “I know it sounds impossible but I swear Pele deliberately flicked the ball against my shins then picked it up on the bounce as he ran past.
    “Again and again, I felt sure I had him in a tackle — again and again, he seemed to get the luck of the bounce and beat me.
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    Moore, left, and Pele, right, lined up together with captain Gerry Francis for Team USACredit: PA:Empics Sport
    Pele and Brazil went on to lift the World Cup in 1970 as England went out in the quartersCredit: AP:Associated Press
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    “Once might have been an accident — but he kept on doing it.”
    Pele’s Brazil went on to get the better of Moore in a 1969 Rio friendly and at Mexico 70.
    Remarkably, in 1976, the two friends would go on to line up in the SAME ‘international’ team.
    The pair played for Team USA, made up of NASL stars, in a tournament with England, Brazil and Italy. Pele refused to face his homeland. More