Top 10 best unbreakable football records of all time

Top 10 best unbreakable football records of all time
Top 10 best unbreakable football records of all time

Best unbreakable football records in the world

  • Top 10 football records that will never be broken:
The numbers were created to be broken, a famous saying that is constantly circulated in the world of football. However, anyone who delves deeply into the game's records will find that there are numbers that require extraordinary efforts to break. It is a horror for many players even just to think about reaching it.

Throughout the history of the beautiful game, there have been individual and collective feats that will be difficult to replicate in this day and age, making them more valuable because a long time has passed or will pass by them as they are, and it seems that they will remain entrenched forever.

10 impossible records in football

And now here are 10 football records that are very difficult to break:
  1. The longest and fastest goal ever scored in history.
  2. The largest result in the history of football.
  3. The most goalkeeper who maintained the cleanliness of his net in history in a row.
  4. Five consecutive titles in the UEFA Champions League.
  5. The largest attendance in the history of football.
  6. More than the record of goals in one season and in one calendar year.
  7. Six titles in one calendar year.
  8. The goalkeeper scored 131 goals in his career.
  9. The owner of the most goals in a single edition of the World Cup.
  10. 5 goals in 9 minutes.

10 best unbreakable football records of all time

5 goals in 9 minutes
A few years ago, Robert Lewandowski made sure to be remembered in the rest of history thanks to a flurry of goals he scored in a short period, and the victim was the team Wolfsburg when the Polish striker came on as a substitute and scored 5 goals against them in just 9 minutes.

The scoreboard in the match between Bayern Munich and Wolfsburg indicated the latter's lead 0-1, and in the fifty-fifth minute, Lewandowski came on and gave his team a 2-1 lead in just a minute, then scored the third goal after three minutes before scoring two goals in the fifty-seventh and sixtieth minutes respectively. He also set records for the fastest hat trick in the history of the German league and became the first substitute to score five goals as well.

The owner of the most goals in a single edition of the World Cup
The record for the most goals scored by a player in a single edition of the World Cup goes back to the Frenchman Just Fontaine, who scored a total of 13 goals in the 1958 World Cup, leading France to third place in the competition.

Fontaine scored three goals in the opening match against Paraguay, two more goals against Yugoslavia, and one goal against Scotland in the group stage. In the quarter-finals, he raised his tally to eight goals after scoring two goals against the Northern Ireland national team, then scored a goal in France's loss to Brazil in the semi-finals before scoring four goals against Sweden in the third-place match, setting his remarkable record of 13 goals in a single World Cup.

The goalkeeper scored 131 goals in his career
Goalkeepers aim to keep their goal clean and not to move forward, but the Brazilian goalkeeper Rogerio Ceni, unbelievably did both. He scored 131 goals before retiring in 1256 matches he played, which is enough to embarrass a large number of attackers.

Ceni played throughout his career at Sao Paulo club and was skilled in taking penalty kicks and direct free kicks, and the fans expected him to score goals as if he were a striker. To add more admiration to this record, the goalkeeper in second place in shaking the net is Jose Chilavert, who has 67 goals, which is 64 goals away from our goalkeeper's record.

  • Six titles in one calendar year
It is known that the era of coach Pep Guardiola with Barcelona is the most successful period in the history of the Catalan club, even though the coach did not spend many years at the helm of Blaugrana, he was known for the successes he achieved over four years at Camp Nou.

Returning to Guardiola's first seasons with Barcelona, we find that in 2009 he raised the Spanish League, the King's Cup, and the Champions League, making the team a candidate to win three more titles before the end of the calendar year. With great ease, Barça managed to win the Spanish Super Cup, the European Super Cup, and the Club World Cup. It's six titles, and this is a remarkable record that will require a lot of time and a little luck to break.

More than the record of goals in one season and in one calendar year
When Bayern Munich was at its peak in the 1970s, Gerd Müller set two record numbers that many thought would never be surpassed. The German striker scored 67 goals in one season and 85 goals in a single calendar year.

In the 2011/2012 season, those records were surpassed by Lionel Messi, who managed to score 73 goals in that season and 91 goals in 2012, leading to his fourth consecutive Ballon d'Or win. What amazing numbers from the Barcelona legend who also set another record, scoring the most goals in a single season in the history of the Spanish league (50 goals).

The largest attendance in the history of football
The 1950 World Cup final is one of the most common matches in history. This clash between Uruguay and Brazil is called the Maracanazo, as the match held at the famous Maracanã stadium witnessed the largest gathering of fans in the history of football.

The official attendance was 173,850 people, but most sources confirm that the number of spectators exceeded 200,000, far more than the maximum capacity. Most of them witnessed Brazil's defeat at home to Uruguay 1-2. After the end of the match, there were several riot events, which made the laws stricter in the presence of a large number of fans. As a future safety measure, it is impossible to see that number in the stadium again after today.

Five consecutive titles in the UEFA Champions League
Do you think Real Madrid's three consecutive titles in the Champions League is a record? Well, it's amazing and a record, but only in the recent edition and not in the history of the tournament in general. The royal club was more terrifying and deadly to its competitors in the past.

Los Blancos won the European Champions League in the first edition of the 1955/1956 season and continued to win it in the next five tournaments until 1959/1960, which is truly amazing. Even the three consecutive titles they recently achieved in 2016, 2017, and 2018 are also a record. It seems that the European princess loves the Real Madrid emblem.

The most goalkeeper who maintained the cleanliness of his net in history in a row
As football fans, we are sure that when the two teams enter the field, they have a great chance of scoring goals, and this is the beauty of our game, but in the case where you find yourself facing Italy in the days of Dino Zoff, your chances will be almost non-existent to shake the net, and we are talking here about international matches because Zoff holds the record for maintaining the cleanliness of his net between 1972 and 1974 with a total of 1142 full minutes.

According to the International Federation of Football History and Statistics, the highest number recorded by a goalkeeper in history without conceding any goals goes to the Brazilian goalkeeper Mazurubi, who played 1816 minutes with his team Vasco da Gama in the 1977/1978 season, which is more than 20 consecutive matches with a clean sheet.

There is another notable number in this regard that belongs to the former Manchester United goalkeeper Edwin van der Sar, who managed to play 1311 minutes in the Premier League season 2008/2009 with clean sheets.

The largest result in the history of football
149-0 Believe it or not, this is the largest result in the history of professional football, recognized by the Guinness World Records when the Adema team defeated their rival Stade Olympique de L'Emyrne in the Madagascar league on October 31, 2002. However, this result is naturally unusual because the L'Emyrne team's players intentionally scored all these goals in their net in protest against the referee's decisions. The attending fans claimed that the team was scoring a goal every time the kickoff was played from their side.

As for the largest international result, it was achieved by the Australian national team, which defeated the American Samoa national team with a score of 31-0 in the qualifying rounds for the 2002 World Cup. Additionally, player Archie Thompson set the record for the most goals scored by a player in a single match in the history of football, finding the opponent's net on 13 occasions.

The longest and fastest goal ever scored in history
This is called the wind of fate, as in a Premier League match, Stoke City goalkeeper Asmir Begovic secured a place in the Guinness World Records for the longest and fastest goal scored in the history of football when he scored a goal against Southampton from 91.9 meters (301 feet and 6 inches) and just 13 seconds after the start of the match.

Stoke's goalkeeper did not celebrate this goal out of respect for his counterpart Artur Boruc, but he did not hide his pride in what he achieved as well.

There is other information that a player from South Korea named Ko San Min scored a goal from a distance of 97 meters (318 feet and 2 inches).


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