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  1. #1
    Thailand Expat harrybarracuda's Avatar
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    Brazil legend Socrates dead at 57

    He drank. He smoked. He was a Doctor. He played beautiful football.

    Brazil legend Socrates dies at 57
    Rated as one of the greatest midfielders of all-time, Socrates has died from an intestinal infection in Sao Paulo.

    Last Modified: 04 Dec 2011 11:43



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    Socrates celebrates scoring in the 1986 World Cup [GALLO/GETTY]

    Former Brazil World Cup captain Socrates died in hospital on Sunday at the age of 57.

    Socrates had been in the Albert Einstein Israeli Hospital in Sao Paulo since Thursday when he was interned with food
    poisoning which developed into septic shock and had been on a life support machine, the daily O Estado said on their website.

    It was the third time Socrates has been taken to hospital since August when he spent nine days there due to a digestive
    haemorrhage caused by excessive drinking.

    Socrates was skipper of Brazil at the 1982 World Cup, a team widely-regarded as one of the finest never to have won the title.

    Socrates - who also played at the 1986 World Cup finals - was a flamboyant footballer who boasted a myriad of contradictions.

    He was a qualified doctor who never gave up his enjoyment of a smoke and a drink; he was an outspoken political activist, regularly protesting against the Brazilian military junta of the 1970s and 1980s.

    He once listed his heroes as Fidel Castro, Che Guevara and John Lennon, fathered six children and spent his retirement penning passionate articles on politics and economics as well as sport.

    Socrates won 60 caps for Brazil, scored 22 goals and was a contemporary of the great Zico.

    'Doctor Socrates'


    After officially ending his playing career in 1989, he bizarrely reappeared 15 years later, at the age of 50, with Garforth Town, an amateur side in the backwoods of northern England where he featured for just 10 minutes of action.

    During his peak, Socrates embodied the romantic side of the beautiful game, Brazil's beloved national sport, which was being threatened by cynicism, pragmatism and creeping commercialism.

    Born on February 19, 1954, in Belem, Socrates Brasileiro Sampaio de Sousa Vieira de Oliveira started his career with Botafogo in 1974.

    In 1978, he moved to Corinthians in San Paolo, where he spent six seasons, scoring 172 goals in 297 matches.

    It was a record which brought three domestic titles in 1979, 1982 and 1983. Socrates helped found the Corinthians Democracy movement with the playing squad taking over the management of the club.
    "I was in Florence for a year with Fiorentina and sometimes I didn't want to train, but to hang out with friends, party or have a smoke. There's more to life than football"
    Socrates
    In 1982, the players had "I want to vote for my president" printed on the back of their shirts in a daring, public act of defiance during the first elections since the 1964 military coup.

    His successful pursuit of a doctorate in medicine as well as his growing political awareness, earned Socrates the nickname "Doctor Socrates".

    After a brief spell with Italian side Fiorentina, from 1984 to 1985, Socrates returned to Brazil, playing at Santos and then Botafogo.

    "The way of life is so correct and organised in Europe. It's not like that in Brazil, where things are more spontaneous," Socrates told an interviewer in 2010.

    "I was in Florence for a year with Fiorentina and sometimes I didn't want to train, but to hang out with friends, party or have a smoke. There's more to life than football."

    He ended his full-time playing career in 1989 before moving into the media, but his drinking was always a danger even if he did not think so.

    "I never had many problems with alcohol because I was not addicted," he told SporTV Reporter last month.

    "All the time I interacted with alcohol as if it were a partner, but I never had withdrawal symptoms. I spent long periods without use."
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  2. #2
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    daveboy's Avatar
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    One of my favourite players ever, Sad day.

  3. #3
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    The balding Coot's Avatar
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    I will never forget watching him on TV direct from middle of the park that fabulous 1982 Brazil side in the World Cup finals.

    He was the pure definition of midfield maestro.

  4. #4
    Thailand Expat harrybarracuda's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by The balding Coot View Post
    I will never forget watching him on TV direct from middle of the park that fabulous 1982 Brazil side in the World Cup finals.

    He was the pure definition of midfield maestro.
    And ironically, he probably could have done it with a smoke going and a drink in his hand.


  5. #5
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    Quote Originally Posted by The balding Coot View Post
    I will never forget watching him on TV direct from middle of the park that fabulous 1982 Brazil side in the World Cup finals.

    He was the pure definition of midfield maestro.

    few games remain in my head but that one has.
    pure joy to watch.

  6. #6
    Thailand Expat CaptainNemo's Avatar
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    A genuine genius just like his namesake. An absolute hero.



    How many footballers can be said to have trained as a doctor at the same time as playing international football for arguably the best national side in history?!

    A heartfelt RIP.



    e por as pessoas que poder entender o portugues:
    Last edited by CaptainNemo; 04-12-2011 at 08:26 PM.

  7. #7
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    The Ghost Of The Moog's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by CaptainNemo View Post
    A genuine genius just like his namesake.
    Oh, for heaven's sake. He's a football player.

    Why isn't this in the RIP thread - along with Gary Speed?

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    I'm too young to remember him playing, but I have never seen a footballer with such skinny arms.

    RIP Socrates.

  9. #9
    Thailand Expat CaptainNemo's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by The_Ghost_Of_The_Moog View Post
    Quote Originally Posted by CaptainNemo View Post
    A genuine genius just like his namesake.
    Oh, for heaven's sake. He's a football player.

    Why isn't this in the RIP thread - along with Gary Speed?
    Oh relax, it's just a compliment.
    Socrates is more of a cultural figure than Gary Speed, who, with all due respect, was just a Welshman with a reasonably successful life who suddenly topped himself and left a distraught wife and children: hardly someone to idolise.



    Not a typical footballer: educated; political; and man's man - and not too bad with a ball. An inspiration to many outside of sport, and a foiler of stereotypes.

  10. #10
    Thailand Expat harrybarracuda's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by The_Ghost_Of_The_Moog View Post
    Quote Originally Posted by CaptainNemo View Post
    A genuine genius just like his namesake.
    Oh, for heaven's sake. He's a football player.

    Why isn't this in the RIP thread - along with Gary Speed?
    Dear me, you are a grumpy little sod. Get out of the wrong side of the bed, did we?

    Why bother reading if you aren't interested?


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