The last block of voting saw several upset winners beating goals much higher-seeded in the bracket:

But one of those upset winners was not Paulinho’s winner against Germany in the 2017 U-17 World Cup quarterfinals, as Ronaldinho’s first goal for Brazil very comfortably beat it out with 75% of the vote.

Josimar’s goal against Poland in the 1986 World Cup round of 16 was a different story, earning 61% of the vote against Júnior’s higher-seeded strike against Argentina in the 1982 World Cup:

Less of a surprise was Adriano’s insanely clutch last-minute tying goal in the 2004 Copa América final beating out Rivaldo’s long-range strike in a 2000 friendly against Thailand with 69% of the vote.

And in the biggest upset so far, Pelé’s goal against Mexico in the 1962 World Cup group stage beat Romário’s opener against the Netherlands in 1994 with an impressive 78% of the vote:

And now…

TODAY’S VOTING

We begin with a classic goal pitted against a forgotten gem. The only goal from Brazil’s game against England in the 1970 World Cup group stage is iconic—impressive dribbling from Tostão, stellar first touch and layoff from Pelé, and a laser of a shot from Jairzinho.

It’s up against gorgeous, but forgotten, solo goal: Elivelton opening the scoring in a 1991 friendly against Czechoslovakia.

Bebeto’s goal that put Brazil 2-0 up against the Netherlands in the 1994 World Cup quarterfinals is iconic primarily for his “rocking the cradle” celebration, but it’s a damn fine goal in its own right. Give the replay angles a watch and discuss in the comments whether or not this counts as a no-look goal.

It faces Careca’s bicycle kick which gave Brazil the lead in a 1985 friendly against Argentina.

Next up, a matchup between two monster hits from the right side of the box. Of either one, Alan Partridge might have said, “he must have a foot like a traction engine“.

We have the time Elano hit the everloving crap out of the ball in a 6-2 friendly win over Portugal in 2008…

…up against Müller’s thwack that temporarily leveled the scores in a 3-2 loss to Chile in the 1993 Copa América group stage.

Our last matchup features another iconic goal—Pelé’s chapéu over a Swedish defender in the 1958 World Cup final.

It’s up against the first goal from the women’s team we’ve seen in the bracket so far! This comes from the semifinal of the 2008 Olympics against Germany, where delightful skill from Cristiane and Marta allowed Formiga to level the scoreline in the dying minutes of the first half and pave the way for an eventual 4-1 thrashing.

I’m going to try and wrap up the voting on this group by Saturday night.