Hospitalised football icon Pele says he's 'strong, with a lot of hope'
Pele, widely regarded as greatest footballer of all time, was hospitalised earlier this week for respiratory infection amid colon cancer treatments
SAO PAULO: Brazilian football legend Pele said on Saturday that he feels "strong, with a lot of hope" despite medical problems that have kept the 82-year-old sports icon in the hospital with a respiratory infection.
Pele, widely regarded as the greatest footballer of all time, was hospitalised earlier this week amid ongoing colon cancer treatments.
"My friends, I want to keep everyone calm and positive," Pele said in an Instagram post. "I´m strong, with a lot of hope and I follow my treatment as usual."
Doctors treating Pele said earlier Saturday that the Brazilian legend remained "stable," with his condition not having deteriorated over the last day.
Pele "has had a good response to care without any worsening in the clinical picture in the last 24 hours," doctors at Sao Paulo´s Albert Einstein Hospital said in a statement.
Doctors made no reference to media reports earlier on Saturday that the three-time World Cup winner was receiving end-of-life care.
Pele was admitted to hospital earlier this week for what doctors said was a "re-evaluation" of the chemotherapy he has been undergoing since surgery to remove a colon tumor in September last year.
At the ongoing World Cup in Qatar, players expressed their support for Pele.
France striker Kylian Mbappe on Saturday tweeted: "Pray for the King."
England captain Harry Kane offered his support for Pele at a press conference ahead of his team´s last-16 tie against Senegal.
"We send our best wishes to him and obviously all his family as well," said Kane.
"He is an inspiration amongst our game and an incredible footballer and incredible person. We wish him well."
Pele is the only footballer in history to win three World Cups — 1958, 1962 and 1970 — and is one of the most successful and popular sports figures of the 20th century.
Nicknamed "O Rei" (The King), he scored more than 1,200 goals in one of the most storied careers in sport, before retiring in 1977.
Pele dazzled from an early age and took the 1958 World Cup by storm when he was 17 years old, netting a hat trick in the semifinals and two more goals in the final, catapulting his own career and launching the soccer dynasty of the Brazilian national team.
In recent years, Pele has faced deteriorating health but has dealt with the issues with trademark good humor.
In his Instagram post Saturday, the sports phenom said the flow of messages of love from all over the world "keeps me full of energy" and reported that he is eager to "watch Brazil in the World Cup too!"
-
Chelsea appoint Xabi Alonso as new manager on four-year deal
-
Ronda Rousey announces re-retirement following 17-second victory over Gina Carano
-
Man City faces crisis-hit Chelsea in FA Cup showdown at Wembley
-
Robert Lewandowski leaves FC Barcelona, shares emotional goodbye message
-
Why Justin Thomas, Keegan Bradley and Cameron Young were warned at PGA Championship
-
MLB star Josh Smith viral meningitis diagnosis leads him to the hospital
-
FIFA officials to offer ‘reassurance’ to Iran over World Cup participation amid US tensions
-
Stephon Castle leaves his mark on NBA history books as Spurs reach West Finals
-
Spurs crush Timberwolves to reach West Finals as De’Aaron Fox blueprint shines
-
Minnesota Timberwolves suffer total collapse against San Antonio Spurs
-
Canadiens beat Sabres in Game 5 to move one win from playoff series victory
-
Chicago Bears’ 2026 NFL schedule features 7 national prime-time matchups: Full details