Page 22 - Brislington FC v FC Bristol 280123
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Non-League Paper
For many, he is the best player Marine have ever
had, but what some might not know about are
Peter Smith’s summers in America’s NASL where
he ended up playing with George Best for the LA
Aztecs – and marking Brazilian legend, the late
Pele!
Non-League is such a vast church it never ceases to surprise how deep the stories go.
When the iconic Pele passed away recently, friend of the paper Barry Lenton dropped over
an email to remind me Mariners legend Smith had gone up against the great forward.
What’s more, Pele remarked how well he played – despite New York Cosmos bea ng
Smith’s Aztecs 6-0.
A few days later I caught up with the very humble Smith to hear his remarkable football
story that began with Wrexham reserves and took him across the Atlan c.
It came from Marine manager Roly Howard, who had contacts in the States.
Smith first played six games for Philadelphia Atoms but without a work permit he had to
return home.
Fast-forward a year and some representa ves from LA Aztecs came over to sign John
Marsh from Stoke and Chelsea’s Charlie Cooke to add to the squad that already had Best
commi ed.
“We played one night in March and the two guys were there – part owner John Chaffetz
and another guy," Smith, who scored 174 goals in his 957 appearances for Marine a er
being converted from a forward into a centre back, tells me. "I sat down with them and
they were saying, ‘It’s going to be spectacular with Best’. Like a typical American trying to
sell something but would I be interested. I said, ‘Yes, I would’.
“I was working for BT at the me so I had to get special leave. He opened his briefcase, got
out a contract and I signed it. There was interna onal clearance to sort and making sure I
would return back and stuff and that was that. At the end of the season, I packed my bags
and off I went.”
Flying all over the America as the season played out, they were soon at the Yankees
Stadium up against Pele’s Cosmos, who were also fielding a well-known debutant, Italy
World Cup striker Giorgio Chinaglia.
Smith was used to mixing it with the stars. He also played against Bobby Moore and Geoff
Hurst, as well as calling Best a team-mate.
Smith recalls: “He said, ‘My name is George Best, Peter nice to meet you’. I’m thinking,
‘Yeah, I know who you are!’ It was surreal. He was so normal, a smashing fella.”
And he’ll never forget going toe-to-toe with Pele, who scored twice in the win including a
trademark wonderstrike.
“We basically just stood in awe,” Smith says.
“The ball came to him on his chest. It didn’t touch the floor, he flicked it over a lad called
Jose Lopez’s head, and volleyed it with the opposite foot into the top corner. You think to
yourself, ‘That’s not bad’.”