Brazil football great Pele (File Photo | AP) 
Football

'I try to keep the ball rolling': Pele thanks well-wishers, says feeling fine

His son had recently said that the Brazil great is experiencing "a kind of depression" and barely leaves home anymore because health problems have left him unable to walk normally.

From our online archive

RIO DE JANEIRO: Brazilian football legend Pele sought to reassure fans on Thursday that he was doing fine, after his son alluded to depression and said the ageing star now barely leaves home.

"Thanks for your prayers and your worry. I am doing fine. I will be 80 this year," Pele, considered by many to be the greatest footballer of all time, said in a statement.

"I have good days and bad days, which is normal for people my age."

Pele has been in and out of the hospital in recent years for various health issues. He never fully recovered from one of his hip operations, leaving him dependent on a walker, his son Edinho said in an interview published Monday.

"I am not missing my (advertising) commitments on my busy schedule," said Pele, the only player to win three World Cups -- in 1958, 1962 and 1970.

"I continue to accept my physical limitations in the best way possible, but I try to keep the ball rolling."

In the interview published on the sports news site Globoesporte.com, Edinho said his father is "pretty fragile in terms of his mobility... and that makes him suffer a kind of depression."

"Just imagine, he's the 'King,' he was always such an imposing figure, and now he can't walk normally. He gets very shy, very embarrassed about that," his son said.

The Brazilian great, whose real name is Edson Arantes do Nascimento, has only one kidney, after a broken rib during a match forced doctors to remove the other.

Indian student found dead in California, six days after going missing

The She vote in Bangladesh and how it has placed the victorious BNP on notice

No-confidence move against Speaker Om Birla revives debate on seven-year vacancy of Dy Speaker’s post

Trust will define Dhaka’s new era

ChatGPT and the Republic of Noddies

SCROLL FOR NEXT