Claudio Pizarro became the oldest goalscorer in Bundesliga history with the equaliser in Werder Bremen's 1-1 draw with Hertha Berlin on Saturday.
Aged 40 years, four months and 13 days, Pizarro found the net with a deflected free-kick in the sixth minute of added time at the Olympic Stadium, after coming on as a second-half substitute for Johannes Eggestein.
The previous record was held by ex-Bremen midfielder Mirko Votava, who scored in a Bundesliga game against VfB Stuttgart at the age of 40 years, three months and one day, in August 1996.
Pizarro's milestone effort - his third in 17 Bundesliga appearances in 2018/19 - also means he has now registered at least one league goal every calendar year since joining Bayern Munich from Allianza Lima in August 1999.
"I'm very happy, very proud about [being the oldest scorer in Bundesliga history]," Pizarro told bundesliga.com after the game. "We had one opportunity at the end, and we scored. One point is very important."
Pizarro's indefatigable journey is made up of two stints with record champions Bayern, four with current employers Bremen, one with Cologne and his English Premier League detour with Chelsea in 2007/08.
The seemingly bionic Peruvian has won six Bundesliga titles, six DFB Cups and the 2012/13 UEFA Champions League in that time, and is the Bundesliga’s leading non-German goalscorer with 195 goals in 463 top-flight outings.
Pizarro's former Bayern teammate Robert Lewandowski, 30, is next on the Bundesliga's all-time list of foreign goalscorers on 193 strikes.
 
 
 
 
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