I read the news this week that Abby Wambach had passed Mia Hamm as the all time goal scorer in international women's soccer. My attention was caught though by this statement embedded in the article "the record for men's international soccer is 109 goals, held by Ali Daie of Iran." What? I was dumbfounded. The leading international men's goal scorer is a guy from Iran? A guy I've never heard of?
I was particularly intrigued because Daie is from Iran, a country seen in so many ways as being at odds with the rest of the world. And yet here was a football hero who was not just a national phenome but was in fact on FIFA's steering committee.
Daie was recruited by no less a footballer than Beckenbauer and played professionally in Germany though it seems his national team appearances were sometimes a conflict with his club commitments.
For comparison, the other top men's scorers are not necessarily the most obvious names. Following Daie is Ferenc Puskas, the brilliant Hungarian striker, who tallied nearly a goal per game for eighty five appearances, sixty some fewer than Daie's.
The tally board is worth looking over. In part because the most effective strikers aren't necessarily household names. Pele is merely the fifth on the list- his appearances being fewer than some other strikers.
Far down the column is the USA's homegrown champion, Landon Donovan with forty nine goals in 144 appearances.
Worth thinking about, this question of footballers and the satistics we all crave about their performances.
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