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Diego Maradona

Diego Armando Maradona (Spanish: [ˈdjeɣo maɾaˈðona]; 30 October 1960 – 25 November 2020) was an Argentine professional football player and manager. Widely regarded as one of the greatest players in the history of the sport, he was one of the two joint winners of the FIFA Player of the 20th Century award.

Diego Maradona
Maradona after winning the 1986 FIFA World Cup with Argentina
Personal information
Full name Diego Armando Maradona[1]
Date of birth (1960-10-30)30 October 1960
Place of birth Lanús, Argentina
Date of death 25 November 2020(2020-11-25) (aged 60)
Place of death Dique Luján, Argentina
Height 1.65 m (5 ft 5 in)[2]
Position(s) Attacking midfielder, second striker
Youth career
1969–1976 Argentinos Juniors
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1976–1981 Argentinos Juniors 166 (116)
1981–1982 Boca Juniors 40 (28)
1982–1984 Barcelona 36 (22)
1984–1991 Napoli 188 (81)
1992–1993 Sevilla 26 (5)
1993–1994 Newell's Old Boys 5 (0)
1995–1997 Boca Juniors 30 (7)
Total 491 (259)
International career
1977–1979 Argentina U20 15 (8)
1977–1994 Argentina 91 (34)
Managerial career
1994 Deportivo Mandiyú
1995 Racing Club
2008–2010 Argentina
2011–2012 Al-Wasl
2013–2017 Deportivo Riestra (assistant)
2017–2018 Fujairah
2018–2019 Dorados de Sinaloa
2019–2020 Gimnasia de La Plata
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Maradona's vision, passing, ball control, and dribbling skills were combined with his small stature, which gave him a low centre of gravity and allowed him to manoeuvre better than most other players. His presence and leadership on the field had a great effect on his team's general performance, while he would often be singled out by the opposition. In addition to his creative abilities, he possessed an eye for goal and was known to be a free kick specialist. A precocious talent, Maradona was given the nickname "El Pibe de Oro" ("The Golden Boy"), a name that stuck with him throughout his career. He also had a troubled off-field life and was banned in both 1991 and 1994 for abusing drugs.

An advanced playmaker who operated in the classic number 10 position, Maradona was the first player to set the world record transfer fee twice: in 1982 when he transferred to Barcelona for £5 million, and in 1984 when he moved to Napoli for a fee of £6.9 million. He played for Argentinos Juniors, Boca Juniors, Barcelona, Napoli, Sevilla, and Newell's Old Boys during his club career, and is most famous for his time at Napoli where he won numerous accolades.

In his international career with Argentina, he earned 91 caps and scored 34 goals. Maradona played in four FIFA World Cups, including the 1986 World Cup in Mexico, where he captained Argentina and led them to victory over West Germany in the final, and won the Golden Ball as the tournament's best player. In the 1986 World Cup quarter final, he scored both goals in a 2–1 victory over England that entered football history for two different reasons. The first goal was an unpenalized handling foul known as the "Hand of God", while the second goal followed a 60 m (66 yd) dribble past five England players, voted "Goal of the Century" by FIFA.com voters in 2002.

Maradona became the coach of Argentina's national football team in November 2008. He was in charge of the team at the 2010 World Cup in South Africa before leaving at the end of the tournament. He then coached Dubai-based club Al Wasl in the UAE Pro-League for the 2011–12 season. In 2017, Maradona became the coach of Fujairah before leaving at the end of the season. In May 2018, Maradona was announced as the new chairman of Belarusian club Dynamo Brest. He arrived in Brest and was presented by the club to start his duties in July. From September 2018 to June 2019, Maradona was coach of Mexican club Dorados. He was the coach of Argentine Primera División club Gimnasia de La Plata from September 2019 until his death in November 2020.

Early years

Diego Armando Maradona was born on 30 October 1960, at the Policlínico (Polyclinic) Evita Hospital in Lanús, Buenos Aires Province, to a poor family that had moved from Corrientes Province; he was raised in Villa Fiorito, a shantytown on the southern outskirts of Buenos Aires, Argentina.[3][4] He was the first son after four daughters. He has two younger brothers, Hugo (el Turco) and Raúl (Lalo), both of whom were also professional football players.[5][6] His father Diego Maradona "Chitoro" (1927–2015), who worked at a chemicals factory, was of Guaraní (Indigenous) and Spanish (Basque) descent, and his mother Dalma Salvadora Franco, "Doña Tota" (1930–2011), was of Italian and Croatian descent.[7][8][9][10]

When Diego came to Argentinos Juniors for trials, I was really struck by his talent and couldn't believe he was only eight years old. In fact, we asked him for his ID card so we could check it, but he told us he didn't have it on him. We were sure he was having us on because, although he had the physique of a child, he played like an adult. When we discovered he'd been telling us the truth, we decided to devote ourselves purely to him.

— Francisco Cornejo, youth coach who discovered Maradona[11]
 
Maradona playing at the Torneos Evita in 1973 (a national sporting event in Argentina) with the "Cebollitas"

Maradona's parents were both born and brought up in the town of Esquina in the north-east province of Corrientes on the banks of the Corriente River. In the 1950s, they left Esquina and settled in Buenos Aires.[4] Maradona received his first football as a gift at age three and quickly became devoted to the game.[12] At age eight, he was spotted by a talent scout while he was playing in his local club Estrella Roja. In March 1969 he was recommended to Los Cebollitas (The Little Onions), the junior team of Buenos Aires's Argentinos Juniors by his close friend and football rival Gregorio Carrizo who had already been picked by coach Francis Gregorio Cornejo.[13][14] Maradona became a star for the Cebollitas, and as a 12-year-old ball boy he amused spectators by showing his ball skills during the halftime breaks of Argentinos Juniors' first division games.[15] During 1973 and 1974, Maradona led Cebollitas to two Evita Tournament wins and 141 undefeated games in a row, playing alongside players like Adrian Domenech and Claudio Rodríguez, in what is regarded as the best youth team in the history of Argentine football.[16] Maradona named Brazilian playmaker Rivellino and Manchester United winger George Best among his inspirations growing up.[17][18]

Club career

Argentinos Juniors

 
Maradona's most famous nutmeg during his debut in the Primera División, 20 October 1976

On 20 October 1976, Maradona made his professional debut for Argentinos Juniors, 10 days before his 16th birthday,[19] versus Talleres de Córdoba. He entered to the pitch wearing the number 16 jersey, and became the youngest player in the history of the Argentine Primera División. A few minutes into his debut, Maradona kicked the ball through the legs of Juan Domingo Cabrera, a nutmeg that would become symbolic of his talent.[20] After the game, Maradona said, "That day I felt I had held the sky in my hands."[21] Thirty years later, Cabrera remembered Maradona's debut: "I was on the right side of the field and went to press him, but he didn't give me a chance. He made the nutmeg and when I turned around, he was far away from me".[22] Maradona scored his first goal in the Primera División against Marplatense team San Lorenzo on 14 November 1976, two weeks after turning 16.[23]

Boca Juniors

 
Maradona being held aloft by fans of Boca Juniors after winning the 1981 Metropolitano championship

Maradona spent five years at Argentinos Juniors, from 1976 to 1981, scoring 115 goals in 167 appearances before his US$4 million transfer to Boca Juniors.[24] Maradona received offers to join other clubs, including River Plate who offered to make him the club's best paid player.[25] However, River decided to drop its bid due to its large payroll in keeping Daniel Passarella and Ubaldo Fillol.[26]

Maradona signed a contract with Boca Juniors on 20 February 1981. He made his debut two days later against Talleres de Córdoba, scoring twice in the club's 4–1 win. On 10 April, Maradona played his first Superclásico against River Plate at La Bombonera stadium. Boca defeated River 3–0 with Maradona scoring a goal after dribbling past Alberto Tarantini and Fillol.[27] Despite the distrustful relationship between Maradona and Boca Juniors manager, Silvio Marzolini,[28] Boca had a successful season, winning the league title after securing a point against Racing Club.[29] That would be the only title won by Maradona in the Argentine domestic league.[30]

Barcelona

"He had complete mastery of the ball. When Maradona ran with the ball or dribbled through the defence, he seemed to have the ball tied to his boots. I remember our early training sessions with him: the rest of the team were so amazed that they just stood and watched him. We all thought ourselves privileged to be witnesses of his genius."

—Barcelona teammate Lobo Carrasco[31]

After the 1982 World Cup, in June, Maradona was transferred to Barcelona in Spain for a then world record fee of £5 million ($7.6 million).[32] In 1983, under coach César Luis Menotti, Barcelona and Maradona won the Copa del Rey (Spain's annual national cup competition), beating Real Madrid, and the Spanish Super Cup, beating Athletic Bilbao. On 26 June 1983, Barcelona won away to Real Madrid in one of the world's biggest club games, El Clásico, a match where Maradona scored and became the first Barcelona player to be applauded by arch-rival Real Madrid fans.[33] Maradona dribbled past Madrid goalkeeper Agustín, and as he approached the empty goal, he stopped just as Madrid defender Juan José came sliding in an attempt to block the shot. José ended up crashing into the post, before Maradona slotted the ball into the net.[34] With the manner in which the goal was scored resulting in applause from opposition fans, only Ronaldinho (in November 2005) and Andrés Iniesta (in November 2015) have since been granted such an ovation as Barcelona players from Madrid fans at the Santiago Bernabéu.[33][35]

 
The moment when Atlético de Bilbao defender Andoni Goikoetxea injured Maradona on 24 September 1983

Due to illness and injury as well as controversial incidents on the field, Maradona had a difficult tenure in Barcelona.[36] First a bout of hepatitis, then a broken ankle in a La Liga game at the Camp Nou in September 1983 caused by a reckless tackle by Athletic Bilbao's Andoni Goikoetxea—nicknamed "the Butcher of Bilbao"—threatened to jeopardize Maradona's career, but with treatment and rehabilitation, it was possible for him to return to the pitch after a three-month recovery period.[19][37]

 
Maradona with his fellow countryman Mario Kempes before a Barcelona match against Valencia

Maradona was directly involved in a violent and chaotic fight at the 1984 Copa del Rey Final at the Santiago Bernabéu stadium in Madrid against Athletic Bilbao.[38] After receiving another hard tackle by Goikoetxea, as well as being taunted with racist insults related to his father's Native American ancestry throughout the match by Bilbao fans, and being provoked by Bilbao's Miguel Sola at full time after Barcelona lost 1–0, Maradona snapped.[38] He aggressively got up, stood inches from Sola's face and the two exchanged words. This started a chain reaction of emotional reactions from both teams. Using expletives, Sola mimicked a gesture from the crowd towards Maradona by using a xenophobic term.[39] Maradona then headbutted Sola, elbowed another Bilbao player in the face and kneed another player in the head, knocking him out cold.[38] The Bilbao squad surrounded Maradona to exact some retribution, with Goikoetxea connecting with a high kick to his chest, before the rest of the Barcelona squad joined in to help Maradona. From this point, Barcelona and Bilbao players brawled on the field with Maradona in the centre of the action, kicking and punching anyone in a Bilbao shirt.[38]

The mass brawl was played out in front of the Spanish King Juan Carlos and an audience of 100,000 fans inside the stadium, and more than half of Spain watching on television.[40] After fans began throwing solid objects on the field at the players, coaches and even photographers, sixty people were injured, with the incident effectively sealing Maradona's transfer out of the club in what was his last game in a Barcelona shirt.[39] One Barcelona executive stated, "When I saw those scenes of Maradona fighting and the chaos that followed I realized we couldn't go any further with him."[40] Maradona got into frequent disputes with FC Barcelona executives, particularly club president Josep Lluís Núñez, culminating with a demand to be transferred out of Camp Nou in 1984. During his two injury-hit seasons at Barcelona, Maradona scored 38 goals in 58 games.[41] Maradona transferred to Napoli in Italy's Serie A for another world record fee, £6.9 million ($10.48 million).[42]

Napoli

 
Maradona saluting the crowd at the Stadio San Paolo in Naples during his presentation on 5 July 1984

Maradona arrived in Naples and was presented to the world media as a Napoli player on 5 July 1984, where he was welcomed by 75,000 fans at his presentation at the Stadio San Paolo.[43] Sports writer David Goldblatt commented, "They [the fans] were convinced that the saviour had arrived."[44] A local newspaper stated that despite the lack of a "mayor, houses, schools, buses, employment and sanitation, none of this matters because we have Maradona".[44] Prior to Maradona's arrival, Italian football was dominated by teams from the north and centre of the country, such as A.C. Milan, Juventus, Inter Milan, and Roma, and no team in the south of the Italian Peninsula had ever won a league title. This was perhaps the perfect scenario for the Maradona and his working-class-sympathetic image, as he joined a once-great team that was facing relegation at the end of the 1983–84 Serie A season, in what was the toughest and most highly regarded football league in Europe.[44][45]

At Napoli, Maradona reached the peak of his professional career: he soon inherited the captain's armband from Napoli veteran defender Giuseppe Bruscolotti[46] and quickly became an adored star among the club's fans; in his time there he elevated the team to the most successful era in its history.[44] Maradona played for Napoli at a period when north–south tensions in Italy were at a peak due to a variety of issues, notably the economic differences between the two.[44] Led by Maradona, Napoli won their first ever Serie A Italian Championship in 1986–87.[44] Goldblatt wrote, "The celebrations were tumultuous. A rolling series of impromptu street parties and festivities broke out contagiously across the city in a round-the-clock carnival which ran for over a week. The world was turned upside down. The Neapolitans held mock funerals for Juventus and Milan, burning their coffins, their death notices announcing 'May 1987, the other Italy has been defeated. A new empire is born.'"[44] Murals of Maradona were painted on the city's ancient buildings, and newborn children were named in his honour.[44] The following season, the team's prolific attacking trio, formed by Maradona, Bruno Giordano, and Careca, was later dubbed the "Ma-Gi-Ca" (magical) front-line.[47]

Napoli would win their second league title in 1989–90, and finish runners up in the league twice, in 1987–88 and 1988–89.[44] Other honours during the Maradona era at Napoli included the Coppa Italia in 1987 (as well as a second-place finish in the Coppa Italia in 1989), the UEFA Cup in 1989, and the Italian Supercup in 1990.[44] During the 1989 UEFA Cup Final against Stuttgart, Maradona scored from a penalty in a 2–1 home victory in the first leg, later assisting Careca's match-winning goal,[48][49] while in the second leg on 17 May—a 3–3 away draw—he assisted Ciro Ferrara's goal with a header.[50][51] Despite primarily playing in a creative role as an attacking midfielder, Maradona was the top scorer in Serie A in 1987–88 with 15 goals, and was the all-time leading goalscorer for Napoli, with 115 goals,[52] until his record was broken by Marek Hamšík in 2017.[30][53][54] When asked who was the toughest player he ever faced, A.C. Milan central defender Franco Baresi stated it was Maradona, a view shared by his Milan teammate Paolo Maldini.[55][56]

Although Maradona was successful on the field during his time in Italy, his personal problems increased. His cocaine use continued, and he received US$70,000 in fines from his club for missing games and practices, ostensibly because of "stress".[57] He faced a scandal there regarding an illegitimate son, and he was also the object of some suspicion over an alleged friendship with the Camorra crime syndicate.[58][59][60][61] He also faced intense backlash and harassment from some local fans after the 1990 World Cup, in which he and Argentina beat Italy in a semi-final match at the San Paolo stadium. In 2000, the number 10 jersey of Napoli was officially retired.[62] On 4 December 2020, nine days after Maradona's death, Napoli's home stadium was renamed Stadio Diego Armando Maradona.[63]

Late career

After serving a 15-month ban for failing a drug test for cocaine, Maradona left Napoli in disgrace in 1992. Despite interest from Real Madrid and Marseille, he signed for Sevilla, where he stayed for one year.[64] In 1993, he played for Newell's Old Boys and in 1995 returned to Boca Juniors for a two-year stint.[19] Maradona also appeared for Tottenham Hotspur in a testimonial match for Osvaldo Ardiles against Internazionale, shortly before the 1986 World Cup.[65] In 1996, he played in a friendly match alongside his brother Raul for Toronto Italia against the Canadian National Soccer League All-Stars.[66] In 2000, he captained Bayern Munich in a friendly against the German national team in the farewell game of Lothar Matthäus.[67] Maradona was himself given a testimonial match in November 2001, played between an all-star World XI and the Argentina national team.[68]

International career

 
Maradona on the ball against the Soviet Union in the 1979 FIFA World Youth Championship Final in Japan

During his time with the Argentina national team, Maradona scored 34 goals in 91 appearances. He made his full international debut at age 16, against Hungary, on 27 February 1977. Maradona was left off the Argentine squad for the 1978 World Cup on home soil by coach César Luis Menotti who felt he was too young at age 17.[69] At age 18, Maradona played the 1979 FIFA World Youth Championship in Japan and emerged as the star of the tournament, shining in Argentina's 3–1 final win over the Soviet Union, scoring a total of six goals in six appearances in the tournament.[70] On 2 June 1979, Maradona scored his first senior international goal in a 3–1 win against Scotland at Hampden Park.[71] He went on to play for Argentina in two 1979 Copa América ties during August 1979, a 2–1 loss against Brazil and a 3–0 win over Bolivia in which he scored his side's third goal.[72]

Speaking thirty years later on the impact of Maradona's performances in 1979, FIFA President Sepp Blatter stated, "Everyone has an opinion on Diego Armando Maradona, and that’s been the case since his playing days. My most vivid recollection is of this incredibly gifted kid at the second FIFA U-20 World Cup in Japan in 1979. He left everyone open-mouthed every time he got on the ball."[73] Maradona and his compatriot Lionel Messi are the only players to win the Golden Ball at both the FIFA U-20 World Cup and FIFA World Cup. Maradona did so in 1979 and 1986, which Messi emulated in 2005 and 2014 (and again in 2022).[74][75]

1982 World Cup

Maradona played his first World Cup tournament in 1982 in his new country of residence, Spain. Argentina played Belgium in the opening game of the 1982 Cup at the Camp Nou in Barcelona. Maradona did not perform to expectations,[76] as Argentina, the defending champions, lost 1–0. Although the team convincingly beat both Hungary and El Salvador in Alicante to progress to the second round, there were internal tensions within the team, with the younger, less experienced players at odds with the older, more experienced players. With a team that also included such players as Mario Kempes, Osvaldo Ardiles, Ramón Díaz, Daniel Bertoni, Alberto Tarantini, Ubaldo Fillol, and Daniel Passarella, the Argentine side was defeated in the second round by Brazil and by eventual winners Italy. The Italian match is renowned for Maradona being aggressively man-marked by Claudio Gentile, as Italy beat Argentina at the Sarrià Stadium in Barcelona, 2–1.[77]

Maradona played in all five matches without being substituted, scoring twice against Hungary. He was fouled repeatedly in all five games and particularly in the last one against Brazil at the Sarrià, a game that was blighted by poor officiating and violent fouls. With Argentina already down 3–0 to Brazil, Maradona's temper eventually got the better of him and he was sent off with five minutes remaining for a serious retaliatory foul against Batista.[78][77]

1986 World Cup

 
Maradona holding the World Cup in 1986

Maradona captained the Argentine national team to victory in the 1986 World Cup in Mexico, winning the final in Mexico City against West Germany.[79] Throughout the tournament, Maradona asserted his dominance and was the most dynamic player of the competition. He played every minute of every Argentina game, scoring five goals and making five assists; three of the assists came in the opening match against South Korea at the Olímpico Universitario Stadium in Mexico City. His first goal of the tournament came against Italy in the second group game in Puebla.[80] Argentina eliminated Uruguay in the first knockout round in Puebla, setting up a match against England at the Azteca Stadium, also in Mexico City.

After scoring two contrasting goals in the 2–1 quarter-final win against England, his legend was cemented.[37] The majesty of his second goal and the notoriety of his first led to the French newspaper L'Équipe describing Maradona as "half-angel, half-devil".[81] This match was played with the background of the Falklands War between Argentina and the United Kingdom.[82] Replays showed that the first goal was scored by striking the ball with his hand. Maradona was coyly evasive, describing it as "a little with the head of Maradona and a little with the hand of God".[79] It became known as the "Hand of God". Ultimately, on 22 August 2005, Maradona acknowledged on his television show that he had hit the ball with his hand purposely, and no contact with his head was made, and that he immediately knew the goal was illegitimate. This became known as an international fiasco in World Cup history. The goal stood, much to the wrath of the English players.[83]

"Maradona, turns like a little eel and comes away from trouble, little squat man... comes inside Butcher and leaves him for dead, outside Fenwick and leaves him for dead, and puts the ball away... and that is why Maradona is the greatest player in the world."

—Bryon Butler's BBC Radio commentary on Maradona's second goal against England.[84]

Maradona's second goal, just four minutes after the hotly disputed hand-goal, was later voted by FIFA as the greatest goal in the history of the World Cup. He received the ball in his own half, swivelled around and with 11 touches ran more than half the length of the field, dribbling past five English outfield players (Peter Beardsley, Steve Hodge, Peter Reid, Terry Butcher, and Terry Fenwick) before he left goalkeeper Peter Shilton on his backside with a feint, and slotted the ball into the net.[85] This goal was voted "Goal of the Century" in a 2002 online poll conducted by FIFA.[86] A 2002 Channel 4 poll in the UK saw his performance ranked number 6 in the list of the 100 Greatest Sporting Moments.[87]

 
Maradona right before scoring the "Goal of the Century" (four minutes after his "Hand of God" goal) against England in Mexico 1986. In 2022, his shirt sold for £7.1 million ($9.3 million), the highest for a piece of sports memorabilia.[88]

Maradona followed this with two more goals in a semi-final match against Belgium at the Azteca, including another virtuoso dribbling display for the second goal. In the final match, West Germany attempted to contain him by double-marking him, but in the 84th minute he nevertheless found space past West German player Lothar Matthäus to give the final pass to Jorge Burruchaga for the winning goal. Argentina beat West Germany 3–2 in front of 115,000 fans at the Azteca with Maradona lifting the World Cup as captain.[89]

During the tournament, Maradona attempted or created more than half of Argentina's shots, attempted a tournament-best 90 dribbles—three times more than any other player—and was fouled a record 53 times, winning his team twice as many free kicks as any player.[78] Maradona scored or assisted 10 of Argentina's 14 goals (71%), including the assist for the winning goal in the final, ensuring that he would be remembered as one of the greatest names in football history.[78][90] By the end of the World Cup, Maradona went on to win the Golden Ball as the best player of the tournament by unanimous vote and was widely regarded to have won the World Cup virtually single-handedly, something that he later stated he did not entirely agree with.[78][91][92][93] Zinedine Zidane, watching the 1986 World Cup as a 14-year-old, stated Maradona "was on another level".[94] In a tribute to him, Azteca Stadium authorities built a statue of him scoring the "Goal of the Century" and placed it at the entrance of the stadium.[95]

Regarding Maradona's performance at the 1986 World Cup in Mexico, in 2014, Roger Bennett of ESPN FC described it as "the most virtuoso performance a World Cup has ever witnessed,"[96] while Kevin Baxter of the Los Angeles Times called it "one of the greatest individual performances in tournament history,"[97] with Steven Goff of The Washington Post dubbing his performance as "one of the finest in tournament annals."[98] In 2002, Russell Thomas of The Guardian described Maradona's second goal against England in the 1986 World Cup quarter-finals as "arguably the greatest individual goal ever."[99] In a 2009 article for CBC Sports, John Molinaro described the goal as "the greatest ever scored in the tournament – and, maybe, in soccer."[100] In a 2018 article for Sportsnet, he added: "No other player, not even Pel[é] in 1958 nor Paolo Rossi in 1982, had dominated a single competition the way Maradona did in Mexico." He also went on to say of Maradona's performance: "The brilliant Argentine artist single-handedly delivered his country its second World Cup." Regarding his two memorable goals against England in the quarter-finals, he commented: "Yes, it was Maradona’s hand, and not God’s, that was responsible for the first goal against England. But while the 'Hand of God' goal remains one of the most contentious moments in World Cup history, there can be no disputing that his second goal against England ranks as the greatest ever scored in the tournament. It transcended mere sports – his goal was pure art."[101]

1990 World Cup

 
Maradona making the defence splitting pass to Claudio Caniggia (top right) for the winning goal against Brazil, 24 June 1990

Maradona captained Argentina again in the 1990 World Cup in Italy to yet another World Cup final. An ankle injury affected his overall performance, and he was much less dominant than four years earlier, and the team were missing three of their best players due to injury. After losing their opening game to Cameroon at the San Siro in Milan, Argentina were almost eliminated in the group stage, only qualifying in third position from their group. In the round of 16 match against Brazil in Turin, Claudio Caniggia scored the only goal after being set up by Maradona.[102]

In the quarter-final, Argentina faced Yugoslavia in Florence; the match ended 0–0 after 120 minutes, with Argentina advancing in a penalty shootout even though Maradona's kick, a weak shot to the goalkeeper's right, was saved. The semi-final against the host nation Italy at Maradona's club stadium in Naples, the Stadio San Paolo, was also resolved on penalties after a 1–1 draw. This time, however, Maradona was successful with his effort, daringly rolling the ball into the net with an almost exact replica of his unsuccessful kick in the previous round. At the final in Rome, Argentina lost 1–0 to West Germany, the only goal being a controversial penalty scored by Andreas Brehme in the 85th minute, after Rudi Völler was adjudged to be fouled.[102]

1994 World Cup

 
Maradona at the Foxboro Stadium in Massachusetts, going to do a drug test after playing v Nigeria, 25 June 1994

At the 1994 World Cup in the United States, Maradona played in only two games (both at the Foxboro Stadium near Boston), scoring one goal against Greece, before being sent home after failing a drug test for ephedrine doping.[103] After scoring Argentina's third goal against Greece, Maradona had one of the most remarkable World Cup goal celebrations as he ran towards one of the sideline cameras shouting with a distorted face and bulging eyes, in sheer elation of his return to international football.[104] This turned out to be Maradona's last international goal for Argentina.[105] In the second game, a 2–1 victory over Nigeria which was to be his last game for Argentina, he set up both of his team's goals on free kicks, the second an assist to Caniggia, in what were two very strong showings by the Argentine team.[106]

In his autobiography, Maradona argued that the test result was due to his personal trainer giving him the energy drink Rip Fuel.[107] His claim was that the U.S. version, unlike the Argentine one, contained the chemical and that, having run out of his Argentine dosage, his trainer unwittingly bought the U.S. formula.[107] FIFA expelled him from USA '94, and Argentina were subsequently eliminated in the round of 16 by Romania in Los Angeles, having been a weaker team without Maradona, even with players like Gabriel Batistuta and Caniggia on the squad.[108] Maradona also separately claimed that he had an agreement with FIFA, on which the organization reneged, to allow him to use the drug for weight loss before the competition in order to be able to play.[109] His failed drug test at the 1994 World Cup signalled the end of his international career, which lasted 17 years and yielded 34 goals from 91 games, including one winner's medal and one runners-up medal in the World Cup.[110]

Alongside official internationals, Maradona also played and scored for an Argentina XI against the World XI in 1978 to mark the first anniversary of their first World Cup win,[111][112] scored for The Americas against the World in a UNICEF fundraiser a short time after the 1986 triumph,[111][112] a year after that captained the 'Rest of the World' against the English Football League XI to celebrate the organisation's centenary (after reportedly securing a £100,000 appearance fee)[113][114] and was on the scoresheet for the Argentina XI once more in his own 'farewell match' in 2001.[115]

Player profile

Style of play

 
 
Maradona exhibiting his ball control in a match against Lazio (left) and during a training session. Michel Platini stated, "Diego was capable of things no one else could match. The things I could do with a football, he could do with an orange."[11]

Described as a "classic number 10" in the media,[116] Maradona was a traditional playmaker who usually played in a free role, either as an attacking midfielder behind the forwards, or as a second striker in a front–two,[117][118][119] although he was also deployed as an offensive–minded central midfielder in a 4–4–2 formation on occasion.[120][121][122][123] A precocious talent, Maradona was given the nickname "El Pibe de Oro" ("The Golden Boy"), a name that stuck with him throughout his career.[124] He was renowned for his dribbling ability, vision, close ball control, passing, and creativity, and is considered to have been one of the most skilful players in the sport.[93][125][126] He had a compact physique, and with his strong legs, low center of gravity, and resulting balance, he could withstand physical pressure well while running with the ball, despite his small stature,[96][127][128] while his acceleration, quick feet, and agility, combined with his dribbling skills and close control at speed, allowed him to change direction quickly, making him difficult for opponents to defend against.[129][130][131][132]

 
Viewed as one of the best dribblers in the game, Maradona (pictured on the ball against Belgium in 1986) would often go on runs against the opposition.

On his dribbling ability, former Dutch player Johan Cruyff saw similarities between Maradona and Lionel Messi with the ball seemingly attached to their boot.[133][134][135] His physical strengths were illustrated by his two goals against Belgium in the 1986 World Cup. Although he was known for his penchant for undertaking individual runs with the ball,[136] he was also a strategist and an intelligent team player, with excellent spatial awareness, as well as being highly technical with the ball. He was effective in limited spaces, and would attract defenders only to quickly dash out of the melee (as in the second goal against England in 1986),[137][138][139][140] or give an assist to a free teammate. Being short, but strong, he could hold the ball long enough with a defender on his back to wait for a teammate making a run or to find a gap for a quick shot. He showed leadership qualities on the field and captained Argentina in their World Cup campaigns of 1986, 1990, and 1994.[141][142] While he was primarily a creative playmaker, Maradona was also known for his finishing and goalscoring ability.[93][143] Former Milan manager Arrigo Sacchi also praised Maradona for his defensive work-rate off the ball in a 2010 interview with Il Corriere dello Sport.[144]

 
Maradona at the 1986 World Cup in Mexico

The team leader on and off the field – he would speak up on a range of issues on behalf of the players – Maradona's ability as a player and his overpowering personality had a major positive effect on his team, with his 1986 World Cup teammate Jorge Valdano stating:

Maradona was a technical leader: a guy who resolved all difficulties that may come up on the pitch. Firstly, he was in charge of making the miracles happen, that's something that gives team-mates a lot of confidence. Secondly, the scope of his celebrity was such that he absorbed all the pressures on behalf of his team-mates. What I mean is: one slept soundly the night before a game not just because you knew you were playing next to Diego and Diego did things no other player in the world could do, but also because unconsciously we knew that if it was the case that we lost then Maradona would shoulder more of the burden, would be blamed more, than the rest of us. That was the kind of influence he exercised on the team.[145]

Lauding the "charisma" of Maradona, another of his Argentina teammates, prolific striker Gabriel Batistuta, stated, "Diego could command a stadium, have everyone watch him. I played with him and I can tell you how technically decisive he was for the team".[146] Napoli's former president – Corrado Ferlaino – commented on Maradona's leadership qualities during his time with the club in 2008, describing him as "a coach on the pitch."[147]

"Even if I played for a million years, I'd never come close to Maradona. Not that I'd want to anyway. He's the greatest there's ever been."

—Lionel Messi, the player most closely identified with the "New Maradona" label.[73]

One of Maradona's trademark moves was dribbling full-speed on the right wing, and on reaching the opponent's goal line, delivering accurate passes to his teammates. Another trademark was the rabona, a reverse-cross pass shot behind the leg that holds all the weight.[148] This manoeuvre led to several assists, such as the cross for Ramón Díaz's header against Switzerland in 1980.[149] Moreover, he was also a well–known proponent of the roulette, a feint which involved him dragging the ball back first with one foot and then the other, while simultaneously performing a 360° turn; due to his penchant for using this move, it has even occasionally been described as the "Maradona turn" in the media.[150] He was also a dangerous free kick and penalty kick taker, who was renowned for his ability to bend the ball from corners and direct set pieces.[151][152][153] Regarded as one of the best dead-ball specialists of all time,[154][155][156][157] his free kick technique, which often saw him raise his knee at a high angle when striking the ball, thus enabling him to lift it high over the wall, allowed him to score free kicks even from close range, within 22 to 17 yards (20 to 16 metres) from the goal, or even just outside the penalty area.[158] His style of taking free kicks influenced several other specialists, including Gianfranco Zola,[156] Andrea Pirlo,[159] and Lionel Messi.[160]

Maradona was famous for his cunning personality.[161] Some critics view his controversial "Hand of God" goal at the 1986 World Cup as a clever manoeuvre, with one of the opposition players, Glenn Hoddle, admitting that Maradona had disguised it by flicking his head at the same time as palming the ball.[162] The goal itself has been viewed as an embodiment of the Buenos Aires shanty town Maradona was brought up in and its concept of viveza criolla—"cunning of the criollos".[163] Although critical of the illegitimate first goal, England striker Gary Lineker conceded, "When Diego scored that second goal against us, I felt like applauding. It was impossible to score such a beautiful goal. He's the greatest player of all time, by a long way. A genuine phenomenon."[11] Maradona used his hand in the 1990 World Cup, again without punishment, and this time on his own goal line, to prevent the Soviet Union from scoring.[164] A number of publications have referred to Maradona as the Artful Dodger, the urchin pickpocket from Charles Dickens' Oliver Twist.[165][166][167][168]

Maradona was dominantly left-footed, often using his left foot even when the ball was positioned more suitably for a right-footed connection.[169] His first goal against Belgium in the 1986 World Cup semi-final is a worthy indicator of such; he had run into the inside right channel to receive a pass but let the ball travel across to his left foot, requiring more technical ability. During his run past several England players in the previous round for the "Goal of the Century" he did not use his right foot once, despite spending the whole movement on the right-hand side of the pitch. In the 1990 World Cup second-round tie against Brazil, he used his right foot to set up the winning goal for Claudio Caniggia due to two Brazilian markers forcing him into a position that made use of his left foot less practical.[170]

Reception

Pelé scored more goals. Lionel Messi has won more trophies. Both have lived more stable lives than the overweight former cocaine addict who tops this list, whose relationship with football became increasingly strained the longer his career continued. If you've seen Diego Maradona with a football at his feet, you'll understand.

— Andrew Murray on Maradona topping FourFourTwo magazine's "100 Greatest Footballers Ever" list, July 2017.[171]
 
Maradona (right) and Lionel Messi in The Sistine Chapel of Football painting, on a ceiling of a sports club in Barracas, Buenos Aires

Maradona is widely regarded as the best player of his generation.[138] He is considered one of the greatest players of all time by pundits, players, and managers,[73][172][173] and by some as the best player ever.[171][174][175][176] Known as one of the most skillful players in the game, he is regarded as one of the greatest dribblers[96][127][134][135] and free kick takers in history.[154][155][156][157] A precocious talent in his youth,[124] in addition to his playing ability, Maradona also drew praise from his former manager Menotti for his dedication, determination, and the work-ethic he demonstrated in order to improve the technical aspect of his game in training, despite his natural gifts, with the manager noting: "I'm always cautious about using the word 'genius'. I find it hard to apply that even to Mozart. The beauty of Diego's game has a hereditary element – his natural ease with the ball – but it also owes a lot to his ability to learn: a lot of those brushstrokes, those strokes of 'genius', are in fact a product of his hard work. Diego worked very hard to be the best."[177] Maradona's former Napoli manager – Ottavio Bianchi – also praised his discipline in training, commenting: "Diego is different to the one that they depict. When you got him on his own he was a very good kid. It was beautiful to watch him and coach him. They all speak of the fact that he did not train, but it was not true because Diego was the last person to leave the pitch, it was necessary to send him away because otherwise he would stay for hours to invent free kicks."[178] However, although, as Bianchi noted, Maradona was known for making "great plays" and doing "unimaginable" and "incredible things" with the ball during training sessions,[179][180][181] and would even go through periods of rigorous exercise, he was equally known for his limited work-rate in training without the ball, and even gained a degree of infamy during his time in Italy for missing training sessions with Napoli, while he often trained independently instead of with his team.[179][182][183][184]

 
Mural of Maradona in Buenos Aires, created following his death

In a 2019 documentary film on his life, Diego Maradona, Maradona confessed that his weekly regime consisted of "playing a game on Sunday, going out until Wednesday, then hitting the gym on Thursday." Regarding his inconsistent training regimen, the film's director, Asif Kapadia, commented in 2020: "He had a metabolism. He would look so incredibly out of shape, but then he’d train like crazy and sweat it off by the time matchday came along. His body shape just didn’t look like a footballer, but then he had this ability and this balance. He had a way of being, and that idea of talking to him honestly about how a typical week transpired was pretty amazing." He also revealed that Maradona was ahead of his time in the fact that he had a personal fitness coach – Fernando Signorini – who trained him in a variety of areas, in addition to looking after his physical conditioning, adding: "While he [Maradona] was in a football team he had his own regime. How many players would do that? How many players would even know to think like that? 'I’m different to anyone else so I need to train at what I’m good at and what I’m weak at.' Signorini is very well read and very intelligent. He would literally say, 'This is the way I’m going to train you, read this book.' He would help him psychologically, talk to him about philosophy, and things like that."[185][186] Moreover, Maradona was notorious for his poor diet and extreme lifestyle off the pitch, including his use of illicit drugs and alcohol abuse, which along with personal issues, his metabolism, medication that he was prescribed, and periods of inactivity due to injuries and suspensions, led to his significant weight–gain and physical decline as his career progressed; his lack of discipline and difficulties in his turbulent personal life are thought by some in the sport to have negatively impacted his performances and longevity in the later years of his playing career.[177][187][188]

A controversial figure in the sport, while he earned critical acclaim from players, pundits, and managers over his playing style, he also drew criticism in the media for his temper and confrontational behaviour, both on and off the pitch.[189][190][191] However, in 2005, Paolo Maldini, described Maradona both as the greatest player he ever faced, and also as the most honest, stating: "He was a model of good behaviour on the pitch – he was respectful of everyone, from the great players down to the ordinary team member. He was always getting kicked around and he never complained – not like some of today's strikers."[192] Franco Baresi stated when he was asked who was his greatest opponent: "Maradona; when he was on form, there was almost no way of stopping him,"[55] while fellow former Italy defender Giuseppe Bergomi described Maradona as the greatest player of all time in 2018.[193] Zlatan Ibrahimović said that his off-field antics did not matter, and that he should only be judged for the impact he made on the field. "For me Maradona is more than football. What he did as a footballer, in my opinion, he will be remembered forever. When you see number 10 who do you think about? Maradona. It is a symbol, even today there are those who choose that number for him."[194]

Today his skills would afford him greater protection. Back then they merely served as the red rag of provocation that would guarantee he would be the victim of brutal challenges wherever he played. The rules changed as a direct result of some of the injuries Maradona received. When I interviewed him a few years ago, he told me he thought players such as Lionel Messi owed him a great deal because some of the tackles he had endured would never be allowed today.

— Guillem Balagué writing for the BBC in 2020 on 'the magician, the cheat, the god, the flawed genius'.[37]

In 1999, Maradona was placed second behind Pelé by World Soccer in the magazine's list of the "100 Greatest Players of the 20th Century".[195] Along with Pelé, Maradona was one of the two joint winners of the "FIFA Player of the Century" award in 2000,[196][172] and also placed fifth in "IFFHS' Century Elections".[197] In a 2014 FIFA poll, Maradona was voted the second-greatest number 10 of all-time, behind only Pelé,[198] and later that year, was ranked second in The Guardian's list of the 100 greatest World Cup players of all-time, ahead of the 2014 World Cup in Brazil, once again behind Pelé.[199] In 2017, FourFourTwo ranked him in first place in their list of "100 greatest players",[171] while in 2018 he was ranked in first place by the same magazine in their list of the "Greatest Football Players in World Cup History";[200] in March 2020, he was also ranked first by Jack Gallagher of 90min.com in their list of "Top 50 Greatest Players of All Time".[201] In May 2020, Sky Sports ranked Maradona as the best player never to have won the UEFA Champions League/European Cup.[202]

Retirement and tributes

 
Diego Maradona's blaugrana shirt on display in the FC Barcelona Museum

Hounded for years by the press, Maradona once fired a compressed-air rifle at reporters whom he claimed were invading his privacy.[203][204] This quote from former teammate Jorge Valdano summarizes the feelings of many:

He is someone many people want to emulate, a controversial figure, loved, hated, who stirs great upheaval, especially in Argentina... Stressing his personal life is a mistake. Maradona has no peers inside the pitch, but he has turned his life into a show, and is now living a personal ordeal that should not be imitated.[205]

In 1990, the Konex Foundation from Argentina granted him the Diamond Konex Award, one of the most prestigious culture awards in Argentina, as the most important personality in Sports in the last decade in his country.[206]

In April 1996, Maradona had a three-round exhibition boxing match with Santos Laciar for charity.[207] In 2000, Maradona published his autobiography Yo Soy El Diego ("I am The Diego"), which became a bestseller in Argentina.[208] Two years later, Maradona donated the Cuban royalties of his book to "the Cuban people and Fidel".[209]

 
Maradona at the Soccer Aid charity game at Old Trafford, Manchester, in May 2006, after losing weight

In 2000, he won FIFA Player of the Century award which was to be decided by votes on their official website, their official magazine and a grand jury. Maradona won the Internet-based poll, garnering 53.6% of the votes against 18.53% for Pelé.[210] In spite of this, and shortly before the ceremony, FIFA added a second award and appointed a "Football Family" committee composed of football journalists that also gave to Pelé the title of best player of the century to make it a draw. Maradona also came fifth in the vote of the IFFHS (International Federation of Football History and Statistics).[197] In 2001, the Argentine Football Association (AFA) asked FIFA for authorization to retire the jersey number 10 for Maradona. FIFA did not grant the request, even though Argentine officials have maintained that FIFA hinted that it would.[211]

Maradona has topped a number of fan polls, including a 2002 FIFA poll in which his second goal against England was chosen as the best goal ever scored in a World Cup; he also won the most votes in a poll to determine the All-Time Ultimate World Cup Team. On 22 March 2010, Maradona was chosen number 1 in 'The Greatest 10 World Cup Players of All Time' by the London-based newspaper The Times.[212] Argentinos Juniors named its stadium after Maradona on 26 December 2003. In 2003, Maradona was employed by the Libyan footballer Al-Saadi Gaddafi, the third son of Colonel Muammar Gaddafi, as a "technical consultant", while Al-Saadi was playing for the Italian club, Perugia, which was playing in Serie A at the time.[213]

 
Maradona in Kolkata, India, in December 2008. Maradona laid the foundation stone for a football academy in the eastern suburbs of the city, and was greeted by over 100,000 fans in Salt Lake Stadium.[214]

On 22 June 2005, it was announced that Maradona would return to former club Boca Juniors as a sports vice-president in charge of managing the First Division roster (after a disappointing 2004–05 season, which coincided with Boca's centenary).[215][216] His contract began 1 August 2005, and one of his first recommendations proved to be very effective: advising the club to hire Alfio Basile as the new coach.[217] With Maradona fostering a close relationship with the players, Boca won the 2005 Apertura, the 2006 Clausura, the 2005 Copa Sudamericana, and the 2005 Recopa Sudamericana.

On 15 August 2005, Maradona made his debut as host of a talk-variety show on Argentine television, La Noche del 10 ("The Night of the no. 10"). His main guest on opening night was Pelé; the two had a friendly chat, showing no signs of past differences.[218] However, the show also included a cartoon villain with a clear physical resemblance to Pelé. In subsequent evenings, he led the ratings on all occasions but one. Most guests were drawn from the worlds of football and show business, including Ronaldo and Zinedine Zidane, but also included interviews with other notable friends and personalities such as Cuban leader Fidel Castro and boxers Roberto Durán and Mike Tyson.[219] Maradona gave each of his guests a signed Argentina jersey, which Tyson wore when he arrived in Brazil, Argentina's biggest rivals.[220] In November 2005, however, Maradona rejected an offer to work with Argentina's national football team.[221]

In May 2006, Maradona agreed to take part in UK's Soccer Aid (a program to raise money for UNICEF).[222] In September 2006, Maradona, in his famous blue and white number 10, was the captain for Argentina in a three-day World Cup of Indoor Football tournament in Spain. On 26 August 2006, it was announced that Maradona was quitting his position in the club Boca Juniors because of disagreements with the AFA, who selected Alfio Basile to be the new coach of the Argentina national team.[223] In 2008, Serbian filmmaker Emir Kusturica made Maradona, a documentary about Maradona's life.[224]

On 1 September 2014, Maradona, along with many current and former footballing stars, took part in the "Match for Peace", which was played at the Stadio Olimpico in Rome, with the proceeds being donated entirely to charity.[225] Maradona set up a goal for Roberto Baggio during the first half of the match, with a chipped through-ball over the defence with the outside of his left foot.[226] Unusually, both Baggio and Maradona wore the number 10 shirt, despite playing on the same team.[226] On 17 August 2015, Maradona visited Ali Bin Nasser, the Tunisian referee of the Argentina–England quarter-final match at the 1986 World Cup where Maradona scored his Hand of God, and paid tribute to him by giving him a signed Argentine jersey.[227][228]

Managerial career

Club management

 
 
Left: Maradona sitting on the bench during his debut coaching Racing Club in a preseason match against Independiente, January 1995. Right: greeting fans after being appointed manager of Dubai club Al Wasl of UAE in 2011.

Maradona began his managerial career alongside former Argentinos Juniors midfield teammate Carlos Fren. The pair led Mandiyú of Corrientes in 1994 and Racing Club in 1995, with little success.[161][229] In May 2011 he became manager of Dubai club Al Wasl FC in the United Arab Emirates.[230][231] Maradona was sacked on 10 July 2012.[232][233][234] In August 2013, Maradona moved on to become 'spiritual coach' at Argentine club Deportivo Riestra.[235] Maradona departed this role in 2017 to become the head coach of Fujairah, in the UAE second division, before leaving at the end of the season upon failure to secure promotion at the club.[236][237] In May 2018, Maradona was announced as the new chairman of Belarusian club Dynamo Brest.[238] He arrived in Brest and was presented by the club to start his duties in July.[239] In September 2018, he was appointed manager of Mexican second division side Dorados.[240] He made his debut with Dorados on 17 September with a 4–1 victory over Cafetaleros de Tapachula.[241] On 13 June 2019, after Dorados failed to clinch promotion to the Mexican top flight, Maradona's lawyer announced that he would be stepping down from the role, citing health reasons.[242]

On 5 September 2019, Maradona was unveiled as the new head coach of Gimnasia de La Plata, signing a contract until the end of the season.[243] After two months in charge he left the club on 19 November.[244] However, two days later, Maradona rejoined the club as manager saying that "we finally achieved political unity in the club".[245] Maradona insisted that Gabriel Pellegrino remain club president if he were to stay with Gimnasia de La Plata.[246][247] However it was still not clear if Pellegrino, who declined to run for re-election,[246][247] would stay on as club President.[246][247] Originally scheduled to be held on 23 November,[246] the election was delayed 15 days.[247] On 15 December, Pellegrino, who was encouraged by Maradona to seek re-election, was re-elected to a three-year term.[248] Despite having a bad record during the 2019–20 season, Gimnasia renewed Maradona's contract on 3 June 2020 for the 2020–21 season.[249] In November 2020, Maradona died in post. His coaching staff resigned from the club following his death.[250]

International management

After the resignation of Argentina national team coach Alfio Basile in 2008, Maradona immediately proposed his candidacy for the vacant role.[251] According to several press sources, his major challengers included; Diego Simeone, Carlos Bianchi, Miguel Ángel Russo, and Sergio Batista.[252] On 29 October 2008, AFA chairman Julio Grondona confirmed that Maradona would be the head coach of the national team.[253] On 19 November, Maradona managed Argentina for the first time when they played against Scotland at Hampden Park in Glasgow, which Argentina won 1–0.[254]

 
Maradona as coach of Argentina in 2009. He left the position after the 2010 FIFA World Cup in South Africa.

After winning his first three matches as the coach of the national team, he oversaw a 6–1 defeat to Bolivia, equalling the team's worst ever margin of defeat.[255][256] With two matches remaining in the qualification tournament for the 2010 World Cup, Argentina was in fifth place and faced the possibility of failing to qualify, but victory in the last two matches secured qualification for the finals.[257][258] After Argentina's qualification, Maradona used abusive language at the live post-game press conference, telling members of the media to "suck it and keep on sucking it".[259] FIFA responded with a two-month ban on all footballing activity, which expired on 15 January 2010, and a CHF 25,000 fine, with a warning as to his future conduct.[260] The friendly match scheduled to take place at home to the Czech Republic on 15 December, during the period of the ban, was cancelled. The only match Argentina played during Maradona's ban was a friendly away to Catalonia, which they lost 4–2.[261]

At the World Cup finals in June 2010, Argentina started by winning 1–0 against Nigeria, followed by a 4–1 victory over South Korea on the strength of a Gonzalo Higuaín hat-trick.[262][263] In the final match of the group stage, Argentina won 2–0 against Greece to win the group and advance to a second round, meeting Mexico.[264] After defeating Mexico 3–1, however, Argentina was routed by Germany 4–0 in the quarter-finals to go out of the competition.[265] Argentina was ranked fifth in the tournament.[266] After the defeat to Germany, Maradona admitted that he was reconsidering his future as Argentina's coach, stating, "I may leave tomorrow."[267] On 15 July, the AFA said that he would be offered a new four-year deal that would keep him in charge through to the summer of 2014 when Brazil staged the World Cup.[268] On 27 July, however, the AFA announced that its board had unanimously decided not to renew his contract.[269] Afterwards, on 29 July, Maradona claimed that AFA president Julio Grondona and director of national teams (as well as his former Argentine national team and Sevilla coach) Carlos Bilardo had "lied to", "betrayed", and effectively sacked him from the role. He said, "They wanted me to continue, but seven of my staff should not go on, if he told me that, it meant he did not want me to keep working."[270]

Personal life

Family

 
Having returned to his Catholic faith, Maradona donated a signed Argentina jersey to Pope Francis, and it is kept in one of the Vatican Museums.

Born to a Roman Catholic family, his parents were Diego Maradona Senior and Dalma Salvadora Franco. Maradona married long-time fiancée Claudia Villafañe on 7 November 1989 in Buenos Aires,[271] and they had two daughters, Dalma Nerea (born 2 April 1987) and Gianinna Dinorah (born 16 May 1989), by whom he became a grandfather in 2009 after she married Sergio Agüero (now divorced).[272]

Maradona and Villafañe divorced in 2004. Daughter Dalma has since asserted that the divorce was the best solution for all as her parents remained on friendly terms. They travelled together to Naples for a series of homages in June 2005 and were seen together on other occasions, including the Argentina games during 2006 World Cup.[273] During the divorce proceedings, Maradona admitted that he was the father of Diego Sinagra (born in Naples on 20 September 1986). The Italian courts had already ruled so in 1993, after Maradona refused to undergo DNA tests to prove or disprove his paternity. Diego Junior met Maradona for the first time in May 2003 after tricking his way onto a golf course in Italy where Maradona was playing.[274] Sinagra is now a footballer playing in Italy.[275]

After the divorce, Claudia embarked on a career as a theatre producer, and Dalma sought an acting career; she previously had expressed her desire to attend the Actors Studio West in Los Angeles.[276][277]

Maradona's relationship with his immediate family was a close one. In a 1990 interview with Sports Illustrated he showed phone bills where he had spent a minimum of $15,000 US per month calling his parents and siblings.[278] Maradona's mother, Dalma, died on 19 November 2011. He was in Dubai at the time, and desperately tried to fly back in time to see her, but was too late. She was 81 years old. His father, "Don" Diego, died on 25 June 2015 at age 87.[279]

In 2014, Maradona was accused of assaulting his girlfriend, Rocío Oliva, allegations which he denied.[280][281] In 2017, he gifted her a house in Bella Vista, but in December 2018 they split up.[282] Maradona's great-nephew Hernán López is also a professional footballer.[283]

Drug abuse and health problems

 
Maradona at the 2018 FIFA World Cup in Russia, where he was treated by paramedics after collapsing following Argentina's victory over Nigeria.[284]

From the mid-1980s until 2004, Maradona was addicted to cocaine. He allegedly began using the drug in Barcelona in 1983.[285] By the time he was playing for Napoli, he had a full-blown addiction, which interfered with his ability to play football.[286] In the midst of his drug crisis in 1991, Maradona was asked by journalists if the hit song "Mi enfermedad" (lit. "My Disease") was dedicated to him.[287] Maradona was banned from football in both 1991 and 1994 for abusing drugs.[288]

Maradona had a tendency to put on weight and suffered increasingly from obesity, at one point weighing 280 lb (130 kg). He was obese from the end of his playing career until undergoing gastric bypass surgery in a clinic in Cartagena de Indias, Colombia, on 6 March 2005. His surgeon said that Maradona would follow a liquid diet for three months in order to return to his normal weight.[289] When Maradona resumed public appearances shortly thereafter, he displayed a notably thinner figure.[290]

On 29 March 2007, Maradona was readmitted to a hospital in Buenos Aires. He was treated for hepatitis and effects of alcohol abuse and was released on 11 April, but readmitted two days later.[291] In the following days, there were constant rumours about his health, including three false claims of his death within a month.[292] After being transferred to a psychiatric clinic specializing in alcohol-related problems, Maradona was discharged on 7 May.[293] On 8 May, Maradona appeared on Argentine television and stated that he had quit drinking and had not used drugs in two and a half years.[294] During the 2018 World Cup match between Argentina and Nigeria, Maradona was shown on television cameras behaving extremely erratically, with an abundance of white residue visible on the glass in front of his seat in the stands. The smudges could have been fingerprints, and he later blamed his behaviour on consuming lots of wine.[295] In January 2019, Maradona underwent surgery after a hernia caused internal bleeding in his stomach.[296]

Political views

 
Maradona (right) presenting a signed jersey to the former President of Argentina Néstor Kirchner in December 2007

Maradona was idelogically left-wing.[297] He supported the establishment of an independent Palestinian state and condemned Israel's military strikes in the Gaza Strip during the 2014 Israel–Gaza conflict, saying: "What Israel is doing to the Palestinians is shameful."[298] He became friends with Cuban president Fidel Castro while receiving treatment on the island, with Castro stating, "Diego is a great friend and very noble, too. There's also no question he’s a wonderful athlete and has maintained a friendship with Cuba to no material gain of his own."[73] Maradona had a portrait of Castro tattooed on his left leg and one of Fidel's second in command, fellow Argentine Che Guevara on his right arm.[299] In his autobiography, El Diego, he dedicated the book to various people, including Castro. He wrote, "To Fidel Castro and, through him, all the Cuban people."[300]

 
Maradona, then-president Cristina Fernández de Kirchner and Evo Morales, at the funeral of former President of Argentina Néstor Kirchner, 28 October 2010

Maradona voiced support for Bolivia's president Evo Morales[301] and was also a supporter of former Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez. In 2005, he came to Venezuela to meet Chávez, who received him in the presidential Miraflores Palace. After the meeting, Maradona said that he had come to meet a "great man" (un grande, which can also mean "a big man", in Spanish), but had instead met a gigantic man (un gigante). He also stated, "I believe in Chávez, I am a Chavista. Everything Fidel does, everything Chávez does, for me is the best."[302] Maradona was Chávez's guest of honour at the opening game of the 2007 Copa América held in Venezuela.[303]

Many sportsmen claim to be champions of the people, but Maradona's populism is underwritten by his itinerary — the proletarian strongholds of Buenos Aires, Naples, and now Havana.

— Martin Amis writing for The Guardian, 2004.[304]

In 2004, Maradona participated in a protest against the U.S.-led war in Iraq.[297] Maradona declared his opposition to what he identified as imperialism, particularly during the 2005 Summit of the Americas in Mar del Plata, Argentina. There he protested George W. Bush's presence in Argentina, wearing a T-shirt labelled "STOP BUSH" (with the "s" in "Bush" being replaced with a swastika) and referring to Bush as "human garbage".[305][306] In August 2007, Maradona went further, making an appearance on Chávez's weekly television show Aló Presidente and saying, "I hate everything that comes from the United States. I hate it with all my strength."[307] By December 2008, however, Maradona had adopted a more pro-U.S. attitude and expressed admiration for Bush's successor, then-President-elect Barack Obama, for whom he had great expectations.[214]

"I asked myself, 'Who is this man? Who is this footballing magician, this Sex Pistol of international football, this cocaine victim who kicked the habit, looked like Falstaff and was as weak as spaghetti?' If Andy Warhol had still been alive, he would have definitely put Maradona alongside Marilyn Monroe and Mao Tse-tung. I'm convinced that if he hadn’t been a footballer, he'd've become a revolutionary."

Emir Kusturica, film director[73]

With his poor shanty town (villa miseria) upbringing, Maradona cultivated a man-of-the-people persona.[308] During a meeting with Pope John Paul II at the Vatican in 1987, they clashed on the issue of wealth disparity, with Maradona stating, "I argued with him because I was in the Vatican and I saw all these golden ceilings and afterwards I heard the Pope say the Church was worried about the welfare of poor kids. Sell your ceiling then, amigo, do something!"[308] In September 2014, Maradona met with Pope Francis in Rome, crediting Francis for inspiring him to return to religion after many years away; he stated, "We should all imitate Pope Francis. If each one of us gives something to someone else, no one in the world would be starving."[309]

In December 2007, Maradona presented a signed shirt with a message of support to the people of Iran: it is displayed in the Iranian Ministry of Foreign Affairs' museum.[310] In April 2013, Maradona visited the tomb of Hugo Chávez and urged Venezuelans to elect the late leader's designated successor, Nicolás Maduro, to continue the socialist leader's legacy; "Continue the struggle," Maradona said on television.[311] Maradona attended Maduro's final campaign rally in Caracas, signing footballs and kicking them to the crowd, and presented Maduro with an Argentina jersey.[311] Having visited Chávez's tomb with Maradona, Maduro said, "Speaking with Diego was very emotional because comandante Chávez also loved him very much."[311] Maradona participated and danced at the electoral campaign rally during the 2018 presidential elections in Venezuela.[312][313] During the 2019 Venezuelan presidential crisis, the Mexican Football Federation fined him for violating their code of ethics and dedicating a team victory to Nicolás Maduro.[314]

 
Maradona (center) visiting Argentina's new president Alberto Fernández (right) in December 2019

Maradona in his 2000 autobiography Yo Soy El Diego, linked the "Hand of God" goal against England at the 1986 World Cup to the Falklands War: "Although we had said before the game that football had nothing to do with the Malvinas [Falklands] War, we knew they had killed a lot of Argentine boys there, killed them like little birds. And this was revenge."[315] In October 2015, Maradona thanked Queen Elizabeth II and the Houses of Parliament in London for giving him the chance to provide "true justice" as head of an organization designed to help young children.[316] In a video released on his official Facebook page, Maradona confirmed he would accept their nomination for him to become Latin American director for the non-governmental organization Football for Unity.[316]

Failure to pay tax

In March 2009, Italian officials announced that Maradona still owed the Italian government €37 million in local taxes, €23.5 million of which was accrued interest on his original debt. They reported that at that point, Maradona had paid only €42,000, two luxury watches and a set of earrings.[317][318]

Death

On 2 November 2020, Maradona was admitted to a hospital in La Plata, supposedly for psychological reasons. A representative of the ex-footballer said his condition was not serious.[319] A day later, he underwent emergency brain surgery to treat a subdural hematoma.[320] He was released on 12 November after successful surgery and was supervised by doctors as an outpatient.[321] On 25 November, at the age of 60, Maradona suffered cardiac arrest and died in his sleep at his home in Dique Luján, Buenos Aires Province, Argentina.[322][323] Maradona's coffin – draped in Argentina's national flag and three Maradona number 10 shirts (Argentinos Juniors, Boca Juniors and Argentina) – lay in state at the Presidential Palace, the Casa Rosada, with mourners filing past his coffin.[324] On 26 November, Maradona's wake, which was attended by tens of thousands of people, was cut short by his family as his coffin was relocated from the rotunda of the Presidential Palace after fans took over an inner courtyard and also clashed with police.[325][326] The same day, a private funeral service was held and Maradona was buried next to his parents at the Jardín de Bella Vista cemetery in Bella Vista, Buenos Aires.[327]

Tributes

"I have lost a great friend and the world has lost a legend. There's still so much to be said, but for now, may God give strength to his relatives. One day I hope we can play football together in heaven."

Pelé paying tribute following Maradona's death[328]

In a statement on social media, the Argentine Football Association expressed "its deepest sorrow for the death of our legend", adding: "You will always be in our hearts."[329] President Alberto Fernández announced three days of national mourning.[330] UEFA and CONMEBOL announced that every match in the Champions League, Europa League, Copa Libertadores, and Copa Sudamericana would hold a moment of silence prior to kickoff.[331][332] Boca Juniors' game was postponed in respect to Maradona.[333] Subsequently, other confederations around the world followed suit, with every fixture observing a minute of silence, starting with the 2020 AFC Champions League's fixtures.[334] In addition to the minute of silence in Serie A, an image of Maradona was projected on stadium screens in the 10th minute of play.[335]

In Naples, the Stadio San Paolo—officially renamed Stadio Diego Armando Maradona on 4 December 2020—was illuminated at night in honour of Maradona, with numerous fans gathering outside the stadium placing murals and paintings as a tribute. Both Napoli owner Aurelio De Laurentiis and the mayor of Naples Luigi de Magistris expressed their desire to rename their stadium after Maradona, which was unanimously approved by Naples City Council.[63] Prior to Napoli's Europa League match against Rijeka the day after Maradona's death, all of the Napoli players wore shirts with "Maradona 10" on the back of them, before observing a minute of silence.[336] Figures in the sport from every continent around the world also paid tribute to him.[328][337][338] Celebrities and other sports people outside football also paid tribute to Maradona.[339][340][341][342][343]

On 27 November 2020, the Aditya School of Sports in Barasat, Kolkata, India named their cricket stadium after Maradona.[344] Three years earlier Maradona had conducted a workshop with 100 kids in the stadium and played a charity match at the same venue with former Indian cricket captain, Sourav Ganguly.[344] The AFA announced that the 2020 Copa de la Liga Profesional, which is the debut season of Copa de la Liga Profesional, would be renamed Copa Diego Armando Maradona.[345] On 28 November, Pakistan Football Federation's main cup PFF National Challenge Cup honoured Maradona along with Wali Mohammad.[346][347] In a rugby union test match between Argentina and New Zealand on 28 November, as the New Zealand team lined up to perform the haka their captain Sam Cane presented a black jersey with Maradona's name and his number 10.[348][349] On 29 November, compatriot Lionel Messi scored in Barcelona's 4–0 home win over Osasuna in La Liga, dedicating his goal to Maradona by revealing a Newell's Old Boys shirt worn by the latter under his own, and subsequently pointing to the sky.[350]

On 30 November, after Boca Juniors opened the scoring against Newell's Old Boys at La Bombonera, the club's players paid an emotional tribute by laying a Maradona jersey in front of his private suite where his daughter Dalma was present.[351]

Aftermath

In May 2021, seven medical professionals were charged with homicide over Maradona's death, in violation of their duties, and could face between 8 and 25 years in prison if convicted.[352] On 25 June, psychiatrist Agustina Cosachov was summoned by the Prosecution Office of San Isidro and faced a formal questioning, where she agreed to answer more than 100 queries regarding the medical treatment given to Maradona in that medical field.[353][354] After seven hours of questioning, Cosachov's lawyer Vadim Mischanchuk addressed the press and denied that Cosachov's prescription medication could have worsened Maradona's heart condition, and Cosachov further denied any responsibility in the death.[355] On 28 June, multiple arrest warrants were requested by a plaintiff lawyer against Cosachov, personal doctor Leopoldo Luque, psychologist Carlos Díaz, and doctor Nancy Forlini in direct connection with Maradona's alleged negligent death.[356] On 1 July, the prosecutors in the case refused to ask a judge to issue arrest warrants against all the aforementioned professionals, on the basis that they considered the request had been a media stunt ("incursión mediática") for the case, coinciding with personal doctor Luque's interrogation.[357][358]

In June 2022, a judge ruled that eight medical personnel should face trial for criminal negligence and homicide in regards to Maradona's death.[359][360][361]

In popular culture

 
Graffiti of Maradona. His nickname D10S alludes to his playing number and the Spanish word for God.[362]

In Argentina, Maradona is considered an icon. Concerning the idolatry that exists in his country, former teammate Jorge Valdano said:

"At the time that Maradona retired from active football, he left Argentina traumatized. Maradona was more than just a great footballer. He was a special compensation factor for a country that in a few years lived through several military dictatorships and social frustrations of all kinds. Maradona offered to Argentines a way out of their collective frustration, and that's why people there love him as a divine figure."[363]

In leading his nation to the 1986 World Cup, and in particular his performance and two goals in the quarter-final against England, Guillem Balagué writes: "That Sunday in Mexico City, the world saw one man single-handedly – in more than one sense of the phrase – lift the mood of a depressed and downtrodden nation into the stratosphere. With two goals in the space of four minutes, he allowed them to dare to dream that they, like him, could be the best in the world. He did it first by nefarious and then spellbindingly brilliant means. In those moments, he went from star player to legend."[37]

Since 1986, it has been common for Argentines abroad to hear Maradona's name as a token of recognition, even in remote places.[36] The Tartan Army sing a version of the Hokey Cokey in honour of the Hand of God goal against England.[364] In Argentina, Maradona is often talked about in terms reserved for legends. In the Argentine film El hijo de la novia ("Son of the Bride"), somebody who impersonates a Catholic priest says to a bar patron, "They idolized him and then crucified him." When a friend scolds him for taking the prank too far, the fake priest retorts, "But I was talking about Maradona." He is the subject of the film El camino de San Diego, though he himself only appears in archive footage.[365]

Maradona was included in many cameos in the Argentine comic book El Cazador de Aventuras. After the closing of it, the authors started a new short-lived comic book titled El Die, using Maradona as the main character. Maradona has had several online Flash games that are entirely dedicated to his legacy.[366] In Rosario, Argentina, locals organized the parody religion of the "Church of Maradona". The organization reformulates many elements from Christian tradition, such as Christmas or prayers, reflecting instead details from Maradona. It had 200 founding members, and tens of thousands more have become members via the church's official web site.[367]

 
Maradona (middle) with Queen during the rock band's 1981 South American tour

Many Argentine artists performed songs in tribute to Diego, such as "La Mano de Dios" by El Potro Rodrigo, "Maradona" by Andrés Calamaro, "Para siempre Diego" (Diego Forever) by Los Ratones Paranoicos, "Francotirador" (Sniper) by Attaque 77, "Maradona Blues" by Charly García, "Santa Maradona" (Saint Maradona) by Mano Negra, and "La Vida Tómbola" by Manu Chao, among others. There are also other films, such as: Maradona, La Mano de Dios (Maradona, the Hand of God), Amando a Maradona (Loving Maradona), and Maradona by Kusturica.[224] In March 1981, Queen were introduced to Maradona backstage during their concert at the Vélez Sarsfield Stadium.[368]

By 1982, Maradona had become one of the biggest sports stars in the world and had endorsements with many companies, including Puma and Coca-Cola, earning him an additional $1.5 million per year on top of his club salary.[369] In 1982, he featured in a World Cup commercial for Coca-Cola, and a Japanese commercial for Puma.[369] In 1984 he earned $7m a year at Napoli, and sponsorships included $5m from Hitachi.[304] In 1984, a poll from IMG named Maradona the best known person in the world.[304] In 2010 he appeared in a commercial for French fashion house Louis Vuitton, indulging in a game of table football with fellow World Cup winners Pelé and Zinedine Zidane.[370] Maradona featured in the music video to the 2010 World Cup song "Waka Waka" by Shakira, with footage shown of him celebrating Argentina winning the 1986 World Cup.[371]

 
Banners depicting Maradona – such as this where he features alongside Lionel Messi at the 2018 World Cup in Russia – often appear at Argentina games.

A 2006 television commercial for Brazilian soft drink Guaraná Antarctica portrayed Maradona as a member of the Brazil national team, including wearing the yellow jersey and singing the Brazilian national anthem with Brazilian players Ronaldo and Kaká.[372] Later on in the commercial he wakes up realizing it was a nightmare after having too much of the drink. This generated some controversy in the Argentine media after its release (although the commercial was not supposed to air for the Argentine market, fans could see it online). Maradona replied that he had no problem wearing the Brazilian national squad jersey despite Argentina and Brazil's tense football rivalry, but that he would refuse to wear the shirt of River Plate, Boca Juniors' traditional rival.[373] There is a documented phenomenon of Brazilians being named in honour of Maradona,[374] an example being footballer Diego Costa.[375]

In 2017, Maradona featured as a legendary player in the football video games FIFA 18 and Pro Evolution Soccer 2018.[376] In 2019, a documentary film titled Diego Maradona was released by Academy Award and BAFTA Award winning filmmaker Asif Kapadia, director of Amy (on singer Amy Winehouse) and Senna (on motor racing driver Ayrton Senna). Kapadia stated that " ...Maradona is the third part of a trilogy about child geniuses and fame."[377] He added, "...I was fascinated by his journey, wherever he went there were moments of incredible brilliance and drama. He was a leader, taking his teams to the very top, but also many lows in his career. He was always the little guy fighting against the system... and he was willing to do anything, to use all of his cunning and intelligence to win."[378]

Career statistics

Maradona made 680 appearances and scored 345 goals for club and country combined, with a goalscoring average of 0.51.

Club

Appearances and goals by club, season and competition
Club Season League Cup Continental Other Total
Division Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals
Argentinos Juniors[52][379] 1976 Argentine Primera División 11 2 11 2
1977 Argentine Primera División 49 19 49 19
1978 Argentine Primera División 35 26 35 26
1979 Argentine Primera División 26 26 26 26
1980 Argentine Primera División 45 43 45 43
Total 166 116 166 116
Boca Juniors[52][379] 1981 Argentine Primera División 40 28 40 28
Barcelona[52] 1982–83 La Liga 20 11 5[a] 3 4[b] 5 6[c] 4 35 23
1983–84 La Liga 16 11 4[d] 1 3[e] 3 23 15
Total 36 22 9 4 7 8 6 4 58 38
Napoli[52] 1984–85 Serie A 30 14 6[f] 3 36 17
1985–86 Serie A 29 11 2[g] 2 31 13
1986–87 Serie A 29 10 10[h] 7 2[i] 0 41 17
1987–88 Serie A 28 15 9[j] 6 2[k] 0 39 21
1988–89 Serie A 26 9 12[l] 7 12[m] 3 50 19
1989–90 Serie A 28 16 3[n] 2 5[o] 0 36 18
1990–91 Serie A 18 6 3[p] 2 4[q] 2 1[r] 0 26 10
Total 188 81 45 29 25 5 1 0 259 115
Sevilla[52] 1992–93 La Liga 26 5 4[s] 2 30 7
Newell's Old Boys[52][379] 1993–94 Argentine Primera División 5 0 5 0
Boca Juniors[52][379] 1995–96 Argentine Primera División 24 5 24 5
1996–97 Argentine Primera División 1 0 1[t] 0 2 0
1997–98 Argentine Primera División 5 2 5 2
Total 70 35 1 0 71 35
Career total 491 259 58 35 32 13 8 4 589 311

Notes

  1. ^ Appearances in the 1982–83 Copa del Rey
  2. ^ Appearances in the 1982–83 European Cup Winners' Cup
  3. ^ Appearances in the 1983 Copa de la Liga
  4. ^ Appearances in the 1983–84 Copa del Rey
  5. ^ Appearances in the 1983–84 European Cup Winners' Cup
  6. ^ Appearances in the 1984–85 Coppa Italia
  7. ^ Appearances in the 1985–86 Coppa Italia
  8. ^ Appearances in the 1986–87 Coppa Italia
  9. ^ Appearances in the 1986–87 UEFA Cup
  10. ^ Appearances in the 1987–88 Coppa Italia
  11. ^ Appearances in the 1987–88 European Cup
  12. ^ Appearances in the 1988–89 Coppa Italia
  13. ^ Appearances in the 1988–89 UEFA Cup
  14. ^ Appearances in the 1989–90 Coppa Italia
  15. ^ Appearances in the 1989–90 UEFA Cup
  16. ^ Appearances in the 1990–91 Coppa Italia
  17. ^ Appearances in the 1990–91 European Cup
  18. ^ Appearance in the 1990 Supercoppa Italiana
  19. ^ Appearances in the 1992–93 Copa del Rey
  20. ^ Appearance in the 1997 Supercopa Libertadores

International

Appearances and goals by national team, year and competition
Team Year Competitive Friendly Total
Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals
Argentina U20[380] 1977 3[a] 0 3 0
1978
1979 11[b] 7 1 1 12 8
Total 14 7 1 1 15 8
Argentina[52][72] 1977 3 0 3 0
1978 1 0 1 0
1979 2[c] 1 6 2 8 3
1980 10 7 10 7
1981 2[d] 1 2 1
1982 5[e] 2 5 0 10 2
1983
1984
1985 6[f] 3 4 3 10 6
1986 7[g] 5 3 2 10 7
1987 4[h] 3 2 1 6 4
1988 2[i] 1 1 0 3 1
1989 6[j] 0 1 0 7 0
1990 7[k] 0 3 1 10 1
1991
1992
1993 3[l] 0 1 0 4 0
1994 2[m] 1 5 1 7 2
Total 46 17 45 17 91 34
Career total 60 24 46 18 106 42

Notes

  1. ^ Appearances in the 1977 South American U-20 Championship
  2. ^ Five appearances and one goal in the 1979 South American U-20 Championship, six appearances and six goals in the 1979 FIFA World Youth Championship
  3. ^ Appearances in the 1979 Copa América
  4. ^ Appearances in the 1980 Mundialito
  5. ^ Appearances in the 1982 World Cup
  6. ^ Appearances in the 1986 FIFA World Cup qualification
  7. ^ Appearances in the 1986 World Cup
  8. ^ Appearances in the 1987 Copa América
  9. ^ Appearances in the Four Nations Tournament
  10. ^ Appearances in the 1989 Copa América
  11. ^ Appearances in the 1990 World Cup
  12. ^ One appearance in the Artemio Franchi Trophy, two appearances in the 1994 FIFA World Cup qualification
  13. ^ Appearances in the 1994 World Cup

Managerial statistics

Team Nat From To Record
G W D L Win %
Textil Mandiyú[381]   January 1994 June 1994 12 1 6 5 008.33
Racing Club[381]   May 1995 November 1995 11 2 6 3 018.18
Argentina[381]   November 2008 July 2010 24 18 0 6 075.00
Al-Wasl[381]   May 2011 July 2012 23 11 3 9 047.83
Fujairah[381]   April 2017 April 2018 11 7 3 1 063.64
Dorados[381]   September 2018 June 2019 38 20 9 9 052.63
Gimnasia de La Plata[381]   September 2019 November 2020 21 8 4 9 038.10
Total 140 67 31 42 047.86

Honours

Boca Juniors[382]

Barcelona[382]

Napoli[382]

Argentina U20

Argentina

Individual

 
Maradona's Golden Foot award in "The Champions Promenade" on the seafront of the Principality of Monaco

Works

  • Maradona, Diego Armando (2000). Yo Soy el Diego [I Am the Diego] (in Spanish). Planeta Pub. Corp. ISBN 84-08036-74-2.
  • Maradona, Diego (2016). México 86 : así ganamos la copa : mi mundial, mi verdad (in Spanish) (1st ed.). Barcelona: Debate. ISBN 978-84-9992-627-8. OCLC 953395867.

See also

References

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diego, maradona, maradona, redirects, here, other, uses, maradona, disambiguation, 2019, documentary, film, film, diego, armando, maradona, spanish, ˈdjeɣo, maɾaˈðona, october, 1960, november, 2020, argentine, professional, football, player, manager, widely, r. Maradona redirects here For other uses see Maradona disambiguation For the 2019 documentary film see Diego Maradona film Diego Armando Maradona Spanish ˈdjeɣo maɾaˈdona 30 October 1960 25 November 2020 was an Argentine professional football player and manager Widely regarded as one of the greatest players in the history of the sport he was one of the two joint winners of the FIFA Player of the 20th Century award Diego MaradonaMaradona after winning the 1986 FIFA World Cup with ArgentinaPersonal informationFull nameDiego Armando Maradona 1 Date of birth 1960 10 30 30 October 1960Place of birthLanus ArgentinaDate of death25 November 2020 2020 11 25 aged 60 Place of deathDique Lujan ArgentinaHeight1 65 m 5 ft 5 in 2 Position s Attacking midfielder second strikerYouth career1969 1976Argentinos JuniorsSenior career YearsTeamApps Gls 1976 1981Argentinos Juniors166 116 1981 1982Boca Juniors40 28 1982 1984Barcelona36 22 1984 1991Napoli188 81 1992 1993Sevilla26 5 1993 1994Newell s Old Boys5 0 1995 1997Boca Juniors30 7 Total491 259 International career1977 1979Argentina U2015 8 1977 1994Argentina91 34 Managerial career1994Deportivo Mandiyu1995Racing Club2008 2010Argentina2011 2012Al Wasl2013 2017Deportivo Riestra assistant 2017 2018Fujairah2018 2019Dorados de Sinaloa2019 2020Gimnasia de La PlataHonours Men s footballRepresenting Argentina as player FIFA World CupWinner 1986 MexicoRunner up 1990 ItalyCopa America1989 BrazilCONMEBOL UEFA Cup of ChampionsWinner 1993 ArgentinaFIFA U 20 World CupWinner 1979 JapanSouth American U 20 ChampionshipRunner up 1979 Uruguay Club domestic league appearances and goalsMaradona s vision passing ball control and dribbling skills were combined with his small stature which gave him a low centre of gravity and allowed him to manoeuvre better than most other players His presence and leadership on the field had a great effect on his team s general performance while he would often be singled out by the opposition In addition to his creative abilities he possessed an eye for goal and was known to be a free kick specialist A precocious talent Maradona was given the nickname El Pibe de Oro The Golden Boy a name that stuck with him throughout his career He also had a troubled off field life and was banned in both 1991 and 1994 for abusing drugs An advanced playmaker who operated in the classic number 10 position Maradona was the first player to set the world record transfer fee twice in 1982 when he transferred to Barcelona for 5 million and in 1984 when he moved to Napoli for a fee of 6 9 million He played for Argentinos Juniors Boca Juniors Barcelona Napoli Sevilla and Newell s Old Boys during his club career and is most famous for his time at Napoli where he won numerous accolades In his international career with Argentina he earned 91 caps and scored 34 goals Maradona played in four FIFA World Cups including the 1986 World Cup in Mexico where he captained Argentina and led them to victory over West Germany in the final and won the Golden Ball as the tournament s best player In the 1986 World Cup quarter final he scored both goals in a 2 1 victory over England that entered football history for two different reasons The first goal was an unpenalized handling foul known as the Hand of God while the second goal followed a 60 m 66 yd dribble past five England players voted Goal of the Century by FIFA com voters in 2002 Maradona became the coach of Argentina s national football team in November 2008 He was in charge of the team at the 2010 World Cup in South Africa before leaving at the end of the tournament He then coached Dubai based club Al Wasl in the UAE Pro League for the 2011 12 season In 2017 Maradona became the coach of Fujairah before leaving at the end of the season In May 2018 Maradona was announced as the new chairman of Belarusian club Dynamo Brest He arrived in Brest and was presented by the club to start his duties in July From September 2018 to June 2019 Maradona was coach of Mexican club Dorados He was the coach of Argentine Primera Division club Gimnasia de La Plata from September 2019 until his death in November 2020 Contents 1 Early years 2 Club career 2 1 Argentinos Juniors 2 2 Boca Juniors 2 3 Barcelona 2 4 Napoli 2 5 Late career 3 International career 3 1 1982 World Cup 3 2 1986 World Cup 3 3 1990 World Cup 3 4 1994 World Cup 4 Player profile 4 1 Style of play 4 2 Reception 5 Retirement and tributes 6 Managerial career 6 1 Club management 6 2 International management 7 Personal life 7 1 Family 7 2 Drug abuse and health problems 7 3 Political views 7 4 Failure to pay tax 8 Death 8 1 Tributes 8 2 Aftermath 9 In popular culture 10 Career statistics 10 1 Club 10 2 International 11 Managerial statistics 12 Honours 13 Works 14 See also 15 References 16 External linksEarly yearsDiego Armando Maradona was born on 30 October 1960 at the Policlinico Polyclinic Evita Hospital in Lanus Buenos Aires Province to a poor family that had moved from Corrientes Province he was raised in Villa Fiorito a shantytown on the southern outskirts of Buenos Aires Argentina 3 4 He was the first son after four daughters He has two younger brothers Hugo el Turco and Raul Lalo both of whom were also professional football players 5 6 His father Diego Maradona Chitoro 1927 2015 who worked at a chemicals factory was of Guarani Indigenous and Spanish Basque descent and his mother Dalma Salvadora Franco Dona Tota 1930 2011 was of Italian and Croatian descent 7 8 9 10 When Diego came to Argentinos Juniors for trials I was really struck by his talent and couldn t believe he was only eight years old In fact we asked him for his ID card so we could check it but he told us he didn t have it on him We were sure he was having us on because although he had the physique of a child he played like an adult When we discovered he d been telling us the truth we decided to devote ourselves purely to him Francisco Cornejo youth coach who discovered Maradona 11 Maradona playing at the Torneos Evita in 1973 a national sporting event in Argentina with the Cebollitas Maradona s parents were both born and brought up in the town of Esquina in the north east province of Corrientes on the banks of the Corriente River In the 1950s they left Esquina and settled in Buenos Aires 4 Maradona received his first football as a gift at age three and quickly became devoted to the game 12 At age eight he was spotted by a talent scout while he was playing in his local club Estrella Roja In March 1969 he was recommended to Los Cebollitas The Little Onions the junior team of Buenos Aires s Argentinos Juniors by his close friend and football rival Gregorio Carrizo who had already been picked by coach Francis Gregorio Cornejo 13 14 Maradona became a star for the Cebollitas and as a 12 year old ball boy he amused spectators by showing his ball skills during the halftime breaks of Argentinos Juniors first division games 15 During 1973 and 1974 Maradona led Cebollitas to two Evita Tournament wins and 141 undefeated games in a row playing alongside players like Adrian Domenech and Claudio Rodriguez in what is regarded as the best youth team in the history of Argentine football 16 Maradona named Brazilian playmaker Rivellino and Manchester United winger George Best among his inspirations growing up 17 18 Club careerArgentinos Juniors Maradona s most famous nutmeg during his debut in the Primera Division 20 October 1976 On 20 October 1976 Maradona made his professional debut for Argentinos Juniors 10 days before his 16th birthday 19 versus Talleres de Cordoba He entered to the pitch wearing the number 16 jersey and became the youngest player in the history of the Argentine Primera Division A few minutes into his debut Maradona kicked the ball through the legs of Juan Domingo Cabrera a nutmeg that would become symbolic of his talent 20 After the game Maradona said That day I felt I had held the sky in my hands 21 Thirty years later Cabrera remembered Maradona s debut I was on the right side of the field and went to press him but he didn t give me a chance He made the nutmeg and when I turned around he was far away from me 22 Maradona scored his first goal in the Primera Division against Marplatense team San Lorenzo on 14 November 1976 two weeks after turning 16 23 Boca Juniors Maradona being held aloft by fans of Boca Juniors after winning the 1981 Metropolitano championship Maradona spent five years at Argentinos Juniors from 1976 to 1981 scoring 115 goals in 167 appearances before his US 4 million transfer to Boca Juniors 24 Maradona received offers to join other clubs including River Plate who offered to make him the club s best paid player 25 However River decided to drop its bid due to its large payroll in keeping Daniel Passarella and Ubaldo Fillol 26 Maradona signed a contract with Boca Juniors on 20 February 1981 He made his debut two days later against Talleres de Cordoba scoring twice in the club s 4 1 win On 10 April Maradona played his first Superclasico against River Plate at La Bombonera stadium Boca defeated River 3 0 with Maradona scoring a goal after dribbling past Alberto Tarantini and Fillol 27 Despite the distrustful relationship between Maradona and Boca Juniors manager Silvio Marzolini 28 Boca had a successful season winning the league title after securing a point against Racing Club 29 That would be the only title won by Maradona in the Argentine domestic league 30 Barcelona He had complete mastery of the ball When Maradona ran with the ball or dribbled through the defence he seemed to have the ball tied to his boots I remember our early training sessions with him the rest of the team were so amazed that they just stood and watched him We all thought ourselves privileged to be witnesses of his genius Barcelona teammate Lobo Carrasco 31 After the 1982 World Cup in June Maradona was transferred to Barcelona in Spain for a then world record fee of 5 million 7 6 million 32 In 1983 under coach Cesar Luis Menotti Barcelona and Maradona won the Copa del Rey Spain s annual national cup competition beating Real Madrid and the Spanish Super Cup beating Athletic Bilbao On 26 June 1983 Barcelona won away to Real Madrid in one of the world s biggest club games El Clasico a match where Maradona scored and became the first Barcelona player to be applauded by arch rival Real Madrid fans 33 Maradona dribbled past Madrid goalkeeper Agustin and as he approached the empty goal he stopped just as Madrid defender Juan Jose came sliding in an attempt to block the shot Jose ended up crashing into the post before Maradona slotted the ball into the net 34 With the manner in which the goal was scored resulting in applause from opposition fans only Ronaldinho in November 2005 and Andres Iniesta in November 2015 have since been granted such an ovation as Barcelona players from Madrid fans at the Santiago Bernabeu 33 35 The moment when Atletico de Bilbao defender Andoni Goikoetxea injured Maradona on 24 September 1983 Due to illness and injury as well as controversial incidents on the field Maradona had a difficult tenure in Barcelona 36 First a bout of hepatitis then a broken ankle in a La Liga game at the Camp Nou in September 1983 caused by a reckless tackle by Athletic Bilbao s Andoni Goikoetxea nicknamed the Butcher of Bilbao threatened to jeopardize Maradona s career but with treatment and rehabilitation it was possible for him to return to the pitch after a three month recovery period 19 37 Maradona with his fellow countryman Mario Kempes before a Barcelona match against Valencia Maradona was directly involved in a violent and chaotic fight at the 1984 Copa del Rey Final at the Santiago Bernabeu stadium in Madrid against Athletic Bilbao 38 After receiving another hard tackle by Goikoetxea as well as being taunted with racist insults related to his father s Native American ancestry throughout the match by Bilbao fans and being provoked by Bilbao s Miguel Sola at full time after Barcelona lost 1 0 Maradona snapped 38 He aggressively got up stood inches from Sola s face and the two exchanged words This started a chain reaction of emotional reactions from both teams Using expletives Sola mimicked a gesture from the crowd towards Maradona by using a xenophobic term 39 Maradona then headbutted Sola elbowed another Bilbao player in the face and kneed another player in the head knocking him out cold 38 The Bilbao squad surrounded Maradona to exact some retribution with Goikoetxea connecting with a high kick to his chest before the rest of the Barcelona squad joined in to help Maradona From this point Barcelona and Bilbao players brawled on the field with Maradona in the centre of the action kicking and punching anyone in a Bilbao shirt 38 The mass brawl was played out in front of the Spanish King Juan Carlos and an audience of 100 000 fans inside the stadium and more than half of Spain watching on television 40 After fans began throwing solid objects on the field at the players coaches and even photographers sixty people were injured with the incident effectively sealing Maradona s transfer out of the club in what was his last game in a Barcelona shirt 39 One Barcelona executive stated When I saw those scenes of Maradona fighting and the chaos that followed I realized we couldn t go any further with him 40 Maradona got into frequent disputes with FC Barcelona executives particularly club president Josep Lluis Nunez culminating with a demand to be transferred out of Camp Nou in 1984 During his two injury hit seasons at Barcelona Maradona scored 38 goals in 58 games 41 Maradona transferred to Napoli in Italy s Serie A for another world record fee 6 9 million 10 48 million 42 Napoli Maradona saluting the crowd at the Stadio San Paolo in Naples during his presentation on 5 July 1984 Maradona arrived in Naples and was presented to the world media as a Napoli player on 5 July 1984 where he was welcomed by 75 000 fans at his presentation at the Stadio San Paolo 43 Sports writer David Goldblatt commented They the fans were convinced that the saviour had arrived 44 A local newspaper stated that despite the lack of a mayor houses schools buses employment and sanitation none of this matters because we have Maradona 44 Prior to Maradona s arrival Italian football was dominated by teams from the north and centre of the country such as A C Milan Juventus Inter Milan and Roma and no team in the south of the Italian Peninsula had ever won a league title This was perhaps the perfect scenario for the Maradona and his working class sympathetic image as he joined a once great team that was facing relegation at the end of the 1983 84 Serie A season in what was the toughest and most highly regarded football league in Europe 44 45 At Napoli Maradona reached the peak of his professional career he soon inherited the captain s armband from Napoli veteran defender Giuseppe Bruscolotti 46 and quickly became an adored star among the club s fans in his time there he elevated the team to the most successful era in its history 44 Maradona played for Napoli at a period when north south tensions in Italy were at a peak due to a variety of issues notably the economic differences between the two 44 Led by Maradona Napoli won their first ever Serie A Italian Championship in 1986 87 44 Goldblatt wrote The celebrations were tumultuous A rolling series of impromptu street parties and festivities broke out contagiously across the city in a round the clock carnival which ran for over a week The world was turned upside down The Neapolitans held mock funerals for Juventus and Milan burning their coffins their death notices announcing May 1987 the other Italy has been defeated A new empire is born 44 Murals of Maradona were painted on the city s ancient buildings and newborn children were named in his honour 44 The following season the team s prolific attacking trio formed by Maradona Bruno Giordano and Careca was later dubbed the Ma Gi Ca magical front line 47 Napoli would win their second league title in 1989 90 and finish runners up in the league twice in 1987 88 and 1988 89 44 Other honours during the Maradona era at Napoli included the Coppa Italia in 1987 as well as a second place finish in the Coppa Italia in 1989 the UEFA Cup in 1989 and the Italian Supercup in 1990 44 During the 1989 UEFA Cup Final against Stuttgart Maradona scored from a penalty in a 2 1 home victory in the first leg later assisting Careca s match winning goal 48 49 while in the second leg on 17 May a 3 3 away draw he assisted Ciro Ferrara s goal with a header 50 51 Despite primarily playing in a creative role as an attacking midfielder Maradona was the top scorer in Serie A in 1987 88 with 15 goals and was the all time leading goalscorer for Napoli with 115 goals 52 until his record was broken by Marek Hamsik in 2017 30 53 54 When asked who was the toughest player he ever faced A C Milan central defender Franco Baresi stated it was Maradona a view shared by his Milan teammate Paolo Maldini 55 56 Although Maradona was successful on the field during his time in Italy his personal problems increased His cocaine use continued and he received US 70 000 in fines from his club for missing games and practices ostensibly because of stress 57 He faced a scandal there regarding an illegitimate son and he was also the object of some suspicion over an alleged friendship with the Camorra crime syndicate 58 59 60 61 He also faced intense backlash and harassment from some local fans after the 1990 World Cup in which he and Argentina beat Italy in a semi final match at the San Paolo stadium In 2000 the number 10 jersey of Napoli was officially retired 62 On 4 December 2020 nine days after Maradona s death Napoli s home stadium was renamed Stadio Diego Armando Maradona 63 Late career After serving a 15 month ban for failing a drug test for cocaine Maradona left Napoli in disgrace in 1992 Despite interest from Real Madrid and Marseille he signed for Sevilla where he stayed for one year 64 In 1993 he played for Newell s Old Boys and in 1995 returned to Boca Juniors for a two year stint 19 Maradona also appeared for Tottenham Hotspur in a testimonial match for Osvaldo Ardiles against Internazionale shortly before the 1986 World Cup 65 In 1996 he played in a friendly match alongside his brother Raul for Toronto Italia against the Canadian National Soccer League All Stars 66 In 2000 he captained Bayern Munich in a friendly against the German national team in the farewell game of Lothar Matthaus 67 Maradona was himself given a testimonial match in November 2001 played between an all star World XI and the Argentina national team 68 International careerSee also List of international goals scored by Diego Maradona Maradona on the ball against the Soviet Union in the 1979 FIFA World Youth Championship Final in Japan During his time with the Argentina national team Maradona scored 34 goals in 91 appearances He made his full international debut at age 16 against Hungary on 27 February 1977 Maradona was left off the Argentine squad for the 1978 World Cup on home soil by coach Cesar Luis Menotti who felt he was too young at age 17 69 At age 18 Maradona played the 1979 FIFA World Youth Championship in Japan and emerged as the star of the tournament shining in Argentina s 3 1 final win over the Soviet Union scoring a total of six goals in six appearances in the tournament 70 On 2 June 1979 Maradona scored his first senior international goal in a 3 1 win against Scotland at Hampden Park 71 He went on to play for Argentina in two 1979 Copa America ties during August 1979 a 2 1 loss against Brazil and a 3 0 win over Bolivia in which he scored his side s third goal 72 Speaking thirty years later on the impact of Maradona s performances in 1979 FIFA President Sepp Blatter stated Everyone has an opinion on Diego Armando Maradona and that s been the case since his playing days My most vivid recollection is of this incredibly gifted kid at the second FIFA U 20 World Cup in Japan in 1979 He left everyone open mouthed every time he got on the ball 73 Maradona and his compatriot Lionel Messi are the only players to win the Golden Ball at both the FIFA U 20 World Cup and FIFA World Cup Maradona did so in 1979 and 1986 which Messi emulated in 2005 and 2014 and again in 2022 74 75 1982 World Cup Maradona played his first World Cup tournament in 1982 in his new country of residence Spain Argentina played Belgium in the opening game of the 1982 Cup at the Camp Nou in Barcelona Maradona did not perform to expectations 76 as Argentina the defending champions lost 1 0 Although the team convincingly beat both Hungary and El Salvador in Alicante to progress to the second round there were internal tensions within the team with the younger less experienced players at odds with the older more experienced players With a team that also included such players as Mario Kempes Osvaldo Ardiles Ramon Diaz Daniel Bertoni Alberto Tarantini Ubaldo Fillol and Daniel Passarella the Argentine side was defeated in the second round by Brazil and by eventual winners Italy The Italian match is renowned for Maradona being aggressively man marked by Claudio Gentile as Italy beat Argentina at the Sarria Stadium in Barcelona 2 1 77 Maradona played in all five matches without being substituted scoring twice against Hungary He was fouled repeatedly in all five games and particularly in the last one against Brazil at the Sarria a game that was blighted by poor officiating and violent fouls With Argentina already down 3 0 to Brazil Maradona s temper eventually got the better of him and he was sent off with five minutes remaining for a serious retaliatory foul against Batista 78 77 1986 World Cup Maradona holding the World Cup in 1986 Maradona captained the Argentine national team to victory in the 1986 World Cup in Mexico winning the final in Mexico City against West Germany 79 Throughout the tournament Maradona asserted his dominance and was the most dynamic player of the competition He played every minute of every Argentina game scoring five goals and making five assists three of the assists came in the opening match against South Korea at the Olimpico Universitario Stadium in Mexico City His first goal of the tournament came against Italy in the second group game in Puebla 80 Argentina eliminated Uruguay in the first knockout round in Puebla setting up a match against England at the Azteca Stadium also in Mexico City After scoring two contrasting goals in the 2 1 quarter final win against England his legend was cemented 37 The majesty of his second goal and the notoriety of his first led to the French newspaper L Equipe describing Maradona as half angel half devil 81 This match was played with the background of the Falklands War between Argentina and the United Kingdom 82 Replays showed that the first goal was scored by striking the ball with his hand Maradona was coyly evasive describing it as a little with the head of Maradona and a little with the hand of God 79 It became known as the Hand of God Ultimately on 22 August 2005 Maradona acknowledged on his television show that he had hit the ball with his hand purposely and no contact with his head was made and that he immediately knew the goal was illegitimate This became known as an international fiasco in World Cup history The goal stood much to the wrath of the English players 83 Maradona turns like a little eel and comes away from trouble little squat man comes inside Butcher and leaves him for dead outside Fenwick and leaves him for dead and puts the ball away and that is why Maradona is the greatest player in the world Bryon Butler s BBC Radio commentary on Maradona s second goal against England 84 Maradona s second goal just four minutes after the hotly disputed hand goal was later voted by FIFA as the greatest goal in the history of the World Cup He received the ball in his own half swivelled around and with 11 touches ran more than half the length of the field dribbling past five English outfield players Peter Beardsley Steve Hodge Peter Reid Terry Butcher and Terry Fenwick before he left goalkeeper Peter Shilton on his backside with a feint and slotted the ball into the net 85 This goal was voted Goal of the Century in a 2002 online poll conducted by FIFA 86 A 2002 Channel 4 poll in the UK saw his performance ranked number 6 in the list of the 100 Greatest Sporting Moments 87 Maradona right before scoring the Goal of the Century four minutes after his Hand of God goal against England in Mexico 1986 In 2022 his shirt sold for 7 1 million 9 3 million the highest for a piece of sports memorabilia 88 Maradona followed this with two more goals in a semi final match against Belgium at the Azteca including another virtuoso dribbling display for the second goal In the final match West Germany attempted to contain him by double marking him but in the 84th minute he nevertheless found space past West German player Lothar Matthaus to give the final pass to Jorge Burruchaga for the winning goal Argentina beat West Germany 3 2 in front of 115 000 fans at the Azteca with Maradona lifting the World Cup as captain 89 During the tournament Maradona attempted or created more than half of Argentina s shots attempted a tournament best 90 dribbles three times more than any other player and was fouled a record 53 times winning his team twice as many free kicks as any player 78 Maradona scored or assisted 10 of Argentina s 14 goals 71 including the assist for the winning goal in the final ensuring that he would be remembered as one of the greatest names in football history 78 90 By the end of the World Cup Maradona went on to win the Golden Ball as the best player of the tournament by unanimous vote and was widely regarded to have won the World Cup virtually single handedly something that he later stated he did not entirely agree with 78 91 92 93 Zinedine Zidane watching the 1986 World Cup as a 14 year old stated Maradona was on another level 94 In a tribute to him Azteca Stadium authorities built a statue of him scoring the Goal of the Century and placed it at the entrance of the stadium 95 Regarding Maradona s performance at the 1986 World Cup in Mexico in 2014 Roger Bennett of ESPN FC described it as the most virtuoso performance a World Cup has ever witnessed 96 while Kevin Baxter of the Los Angeles Times called it one of the greatest individual performances in tournament history 97 with Steven Goff of The Washington Post dubbing his performance as one of the finest in tournament annals 98 In 2002 Russell Thomas of The Guardian described Maradona s second goal against England in the 1986 World Cup quarter finals as arguably the greatest individual goal ever 99 In a 2009 article for CBC Sports John Molinaro described the goal as the greatest ever scored in the tournament and maybe in soccer 100 In a 2018 article for Sportsnet he added No other player not even Pel e in 1958 nor Paolo Rossi in 1982 had dominated a single competition the way Maradona did in Mexico He also went on to say of Maradona s performance The brilliant Argentine artist single handedly delivered his country its second World Cup Regarding his two memorable goals against England in the quarter finals he commented Yes it was Maradona s hand and not God s that was responsible for the first goal against England But while the Hand of God goal remains one of the most contentious moments in World Cup history there can be no disputing that his second goal against England ranks as the greatest ever scored in the tournament It transcended mere sports his goal was pure art 101 1990 World Cup Maradona making the defence splitting pass to Claudio Caniggia top right for the winning goal against Brazil 24 June 1990 Maradona captained Argentina again in the 1990 World Cup in Italy to yet another World Cup final An ankle injury affected his overall performance and he was much less dominant than four years earlier and the team were missing three of their best players due to injury After losing their opening game to Cameroon at the San Siro in Milan Argentina were almost eliminated in the group stage only qualifying in third position from their group In the round of 16 match against Brazil in Turin Claudio Caniggia scored the only goal after being set up by Maradona 102 In the quarter final Argentina faced Yugoslavia in Florence the match ended 0 0 after 120 minutes with Argentina advancing in a penalty shootout even though Maradona s kick a weak shot to the goalkeeper s right was saved The semi final against the host nation Italy at Maradona s club stadium in Naples the Stadio San Paolo was also resolved on penalties after a 1 1 draw This time however Maradona was successful with his effort daringly rolling the ball into the net with an almost exact replica of his unsuccessful kick in the previous round At the final in Rome Argentina lost 1 0 to West Germany the only goal being a controversial penalty scored by Andreas Brehme in the 85th minute after Rudi Voller was adjudged to be fouled 102 1994 World Cup Maradona at the Foxboro Stadium in Massachusetts going to do a drug test after playing v Nigeria 25 June 1994 At the 1994 World Cup in the United States Maradona played in only two games both at the Foxboro Stadium near Boston scoring one goal against Greece before being sent home after failing a drug test for ephedrine doping 103 After scoring Argentina s third goal against Greece Maradona had one of the most remarkable World Cup goal celebrations as he ran towards one of the sideline cameras shouting with a distorted face and bulging eyes in sheer elation of his return to international football 104 This turned out to be Maradona s last international goal for Argentina 105 In the second game a 2 1 victory over Nigeria which was to be his last game for Argentina he set up both of his team s goals on free kicks the second an assist to Caniggia in what were two very strong showings by the Argentine team 106 In his autobiography Maradona argued that the test result was due to his personal trainer giving him the energy drink Rip Fuel 107 His claim was that the U S version unlike the Argentine one contained the chemical and that having run out of his Argentine dosage his trainer unwittingly bought the U S formula 107 FIFA expelled him from USA 94 and Argentina were subsequently eliminated in the round of 16 by Romania in Los Angeles having been a weaker team without Maradona even with players like Gabriel Batistuta and Caniggia on the squad 108 Maradona also separately claimed that he had an agreement with FIFA on which the organization reneged to allow him to use the drug for weight loss before the competition in order to be able to play 109 His failed drug test at the 1994 World Cup signalled the end of his international career which lasted 17 years and yielded 34 goals from 91 games including one winner s medal and one runners up medal in the World Cup 110 Alongside official internationals Maradona also played and scored for an Argentina XI against the World XI in 1978 to mark the first anniversary of their first World Cup win 111 112 scored for The Americas against the World in a UNICEF fundraiser a short time after the 1986 triumph 111 112 a year after that captained the Rest of the World against the English Football League XI to celebrate the organisation s centenary after reportedly securing a 100 000 appearance fee 113 114 and was on the scoresheet for the Argentina XI once more in his own farewell match in 2001 115 Player profileStyle of play See also Creole football Maradona exhibiting his ball control in a match against Lazio left and during a training session Michel Platini stated Diego was capable of things no one else could match The things I could do with a football he could do with an orange 11 Described as a classic number 10 in the media 116 Maradona was a traditional playmaker who usually played in a free role either as an attacking midfielder behind the forwards or as a second striker in a front two 117 118 119 although he was also deployed as an offensive minded central midfielder in a 4 4 2 formation on occasion 120 121 122 123 A precocious talent Maradona was given the nickname El Pibe de Oro The Golden Boy a name that stuck with him throughout his career 124 He was renowned for his dribbling ability vision close ball control passing and creativity and is considered to have been one of the most skilful players in the sport 93 125 126 He had a compact physique and with his strong legs low center of gravity and resulting balance he could withstand physical pressure well while running with the ball despite his small stature 96 127 128 while his acceleration quick feet and agility combined with his dribbling skills and close control at speed allowed him to change direction quickly making him difficult for opponents to defend against 129 130 131 132 Viewed as one of the best dribblers in the game Maradona pictured on the ball against Belgium in 1986 would often go on runs against the opposition On his dribbling ability former Dutch player Johan Cruyff saw similarities between Maradona and Lionel Messi with the ball seemingly attached to their boot 133 134 135 His physical strengths were illustrated by his two goals against Belgium in the 1986 World Cup Although he was known for his penchant for undertaking individual runs with the ball 136 he was also a strategist and an intelligent team player with excellent spatial awareness as well as being highly technical with the ball He was effective in limited spaces and would attract defenders only to quickly dash out of the melee as in the second goal against England in 1986 137 138 139 140 or give an assist to a free teammate Being short but strong he could hold the ball long enough with a defender on his back to wait for a teammate making a run or to find a gap for a quick shot He showed leadership qualities on the field and captained Argentina in their World Cup campaigns of 1986 1990 and 1994 141 142 While he was primarily a creative playmaker Maradona was also known for his finishing and goalscoring ability 93 143 Former Milan manager Arrigo Sacchi also praised Maradona for his defensive work rate off the ball in a 2010 interview with Il Corriere dello Sport 144 Maradona at the 1986 World Cup in Mexico The team leader on and off the field he would speak up on a range of issues on behalf of the players Maradona s ability as a player and his overpowering personality had a major positive effect on his team with his 1986 World Cup teammate Jorge Valdano stating Maradona was a technical leader a guy who resolved all difficulties that may come up on the pitch Firstly he was in charge of making the miracles happen that s something that gives team mates a lot of confidence Secondly the scope of his celebrity was such that he absorbed all the pressures on behalf of his team mates What I mean is one slept soundly the night before a game not just because you knew you were playing next to Diego and Diego did things no other player in the world could do but also because unconsciously we knew that if it was the case that we lost then Maradona would shoulder more of the burden would be blamed more than the rest of us That was the kind of influence he exercised on the team 145 Lauding the charisma of Maradona another of his Argentina teammates prolific striker Gabriel Batistuta stated Diego could command a stadium have everyone watch him I played with him and I can tell you how technically decisive he was for the team 146 Napoli s former president Corrado Ferlaino commented on Maradona s leadership qualities during his time with the club in 2008 describing him as a coach on the pitch 147 Even if I played for a million years I d never come close to Maradona Not that I d want to anyway He s the greatest there s ever been Lionel Messi the player most closely identified with the New Maradona label 73 One of Maradona s trademark moves was dribbling full speed on the right wing and on reaching the opponent s goal line delivering accurate passes to his teammates Another trademark was the rabona a reverse cross pass shot behind the leg that holds all the weight 148 This manoeuvre led to several assists such as the cross for Ramon Diaz s header against Switzerland in 1980 149 Moreover he was also a well known proponent of the roulette a feint which involved him dragging the ball back first with one foot and then the other while simultaneously performing a 360 turn due to his penchant for using this move it has even occasionally been described as the Maradona turn in the media 150 He was also a dangerous free kick and penalty kick taker who was renowned for his ability to bend the ball from corners and direct set pieces 151 152 153 Regarded as one of the best dead ball specialists of all time 154 155 156 157 his free kick technique which often saw him raise his knee at a high angle when striking the ball thus enabling him to lift it high over the wall allowed him to score free kicks even from close range within 22 to 17 yards 20 to 16 metres from the goal or even just outside the penalty area 158 His style of taking free kicks influenced several other specialists including Gianfranco Zola 156 Andrea Pirlo 159 and Lionel Messi 160 Maradona was famous for his cunning personality 161 Some critics view his controversial Hand of God goal at the 1986 World Cup as a clever manoeuvre with one of the opposition players Glenn Hoddle admitting that Maradona had disguised it by flicking his head at the same time as palming the ball 162 The goal itself has been viewed as an embodiment of the Buenos Aires shanty town Maradona was brought up in and its concept of viveza criolla cunning of the criollos 163 Although critical of the illegitimate first goal England striker Gary Lineker conceded When Diego scored that second goal against us I felt like applauding It was impossible to score such a beautiful goal He s the greatest player of all time by a long way A genuine phenomenon 11 Maradona used his hand in the 1990 World Cup again without punishment and this time on his own goal line to prevent the Soviet Union from scoring 164 A number of publications have referred to Maradona as the Artful Dodger the urchin pickpocket from Charles Dickens Oliver Twist 165 166 167 168 Maradona was dominantly left footed often using his left foot even when the ball was positioned more suitably for a right footed connection 169 His first goal against Belgium in the 1986 World Cup semi final is a worthy indicator of such he had run into the inside right channel to receive a pass but let the ball travel across to his left foot requiring more technical ability During his run past several England players in the previous round for the Goal of the Century he did not use his right foot once despite spending the whole movement on the right hand side of the pitch In the 1990 World Cup second round tie against Brazil he used his right foot to set up the winning goal for Claudio Caniggia due to two Brazilian markers forcing him into a position that made use of his left foot less practical 170 Reception Pele scored more goals Lionel Messi has won more trophies Both have lived more stable lives than the overweight former cocaine addict who tops this list whose relationship with football became increasingly strained the longer his career continued If you ve seen Diego Maradona with a football at his feet you ll understand Andrew Murray on Maradona topping FourFourTwo magazine s 100 Greatest Footballers Ever list July 2017 171 Maradona right and Lionel Messi in The Sistine Chapel of Football painting on a ceiling of a sports club in Barracas Buenos Aires Maradona is widely regarded as the best player of his generation 138 He is considered one of the greatest players of all time by pundits players and managers 73 172 173 and by some as the best player ever 171 174 175 176 Known as one of the most skillful players in the game he is regarded as one of the greatest dribblers 96 127 134 135 and free kick takers in history 154 155 156 157 A precocious talent in his youth 124 in addition to his playing ability Maradona also drew praise from his former manager Menotti for his dedication determination and the work ethic he demonstrated in order to improve the technical aspect of his game in training despite his natural gifts with the manager noting I m always cautious about using the word genius I find it hard to apply that even to Mozart The beauty of Diego s game has a hereditary element his natural ease with the ball but it also owes a lot to his ability to learn a lot of those brushstrokes those strokes of genius are in fact a product of his hard work Diego worked very hard to be the best 177 Maradona s former Napoli manager Ottavio Bianchi also praised his discipline in training commenting Diego is different to the one that they depict When you got him on his own he was a very good kid It was beautiful to watch him and coach him They all speak of the fact that he did not train but it was not true because Diego was the last person to leave the pitch it was necessary to send him away because otherwise he would stay for hours to invent free kicks 178 However although as Bianchi noted Maradona was known for making great plays and doing unimaginable and incredible things with the ball during training sessions 179 180 181 and would even go through periods of rigorous exercise he was equally known for his limited work rate in training without the ball and even gained a degree of infamy during his time in Italy for missing training sessions with Napoli while he often trained independently instead of with his team 179 182 183 184 Mural of Maradona in Buenos Aires created following his death In a 2019 documentary film on his life Diego Maradona Maradona confessed that his weekly regime consisted of playing a game on Sunday going out until Wednesday then hitting the gym on Thursday Regarding his inconsistent training regimen the film s director Asif Kapadia commented in 2020 He had a metabolism He would look so incredibly out of shape but then he d train like crazy and sweat it off by the time matchday came along His body shape just didn t look like a footballer but then he had this ability and this balance He had a way of being and that idea of talking to him honestly about how a typical week transpired was pretty amazing He also revealed that Maradona was ahead of his time in the fact that he had a personal fitness coach Fernando Signorini who trained him in a variety of areas in addition to looking after his physical conditioning adding While he Maradona was in a football team he had his own regime How many players would do that How many players would even know to think like that I m different to anyone else so I need to train at what I m good at and what I m weak at Signorini is very well read and very intelligent He would literally say This is the way I m going to train you read this book He would help him psychologically talk to him about philosophy and things like that 185 186 Moreover Maradona was notorious for his poor diet and extreme lifestyle off the pitch including his use of illicit drugs and alcohol abuse which along with personal issues his metabolism medication that he was prescribed and periods of inactivity due to injuries and suspensions led to his significant weight gain and physical decline as his career progressed his lack of discipline and difficulties in his turbulent personal life are thought by some in the sport to have negatively impacted his performances and longevity in the later years of his playing career 177 187 188 A controversial figure in the sport while he earned critical acclaim from players pundits and managers over his playing style he also drew criticism in the media for his temper and confrontational behaviour both on and off the pitch 189 190 191 However in 2005 Paolo Maldini described Maradona both as the greatest player he ever faced and also as the most honest stating He was a model of good behaviour on the pitch he was respectful of everyone from the great players down to the ordinary team member He was always getting kicked around and he never complained not like some of today s strikers 192 Franco Baresi stated when he was asked who was his greatest opponent Maradona when he was on form there was almost no way of stopping him 55 while fellow former Italy defender Giuseppe Bergomi described Maradona as the greatest player of all time in 2018 193 Zlatan Ibrahimovic said that his off field antics did not matter and that he should only be judged for the impact he made on the field For me Maradona is more than football What he did as a footballer in my opinion he will be remembered forever When you see number 10 who do you think about Maradona It is a symbol even today there are those who choose that number for him 194 Today his skills would afford him greater protection Back then they merely served as the red rag of provocation that would guarantee he would be the victim of brutal challenges wherever he played The rules changed as a direct result of some of the injuries Maradona received When I interviewed him a few years ago he told me he thought players such as Lionel Messi owed him a great deal because some of the tackles he had endured would never be allowed today Guillem Balague writing for the BBC in 2020 on the magician the cheat the god the flawed genius 37 In 1999 Maradona was placed second behind Pele by World Soccer in the magazine s list of the 100 Greatest Players of the 20th Century 195 Along with Pele Maradona was one of the two joint winners of the FIFA Player of the Century award in 2000 196 172 and also placed fifth in IFFHS Century Elections 197 In a 2014 FIFA poll Maradona was voted the second greatest number 10 of all time behind only Pele 198 and later that year was ranked second in The Guardian s list of the 100 greatest World Cup players of all time ahead of the 2014 World Cup in Brazil once again behind Pele 199 In 2017 FourFourTwo ranked him in first place in their list of 100 greatest players 171 while in 2018 he was ranked in first place by the same magazine in their list of the Greatest Football Players in World Cup History 200 in March 2020 he was also ranked first by Jack Gallagher of 90min com in their list of Top 50 Greatest Players of All Time 201 In May 2020 Sky Sports ranked Maradona as the best player never to have won the UEFA Champions League European Cup 202 Retirement and tributes Diego Maradona s blaugrana shirt on display in the FC Barcelona Museum Hounded for years by the press Maradona once fired a compressed air rifle at reporters whom he claimed were invading his privacy 203 204 This quote from former teammate Jorge Valdano summarizes the feelings of many He is someone many people want to emulate a controversial figure loved hated who stirs great upheaval especially in Argentina Stressing his personal life is a mistake Maradona has no peers inside the pitch but he has turned his life into a show and is now living a personal ordeal that should not be imitated 205 In 1990 the Konex Foundation from Argentina granted him the Diamond Konex Award one of the most prestigious culture awards in Argentina as the most important personality in Sports in the last decade in his country 206 In April 1996 Maradona had a three round exhibition boxing match with Santos Laciar for charity 207 In 2000 Maradona published his autobiography Yo Soy El Diego I am The Diego which became a bestseller in Argentina 208 Two years later Maradona donated the Cuban royalties of his book to the Cuban people and Fidel 209 Maradona at the Soccer Aid charity game at Old Trafford Manchester in May 2006 after losing weight In 2000 he won FIFA Player of the Century award which was to be decided by votes on their official website their official magazine and a grand jury Maradona won the Internet based poll garnering 53 6 of the votes against 18 53 for Pele 210 In spite of this and shortly before the ceremony FIFA added a second award and appointed a Football Family committee composed of football journalists that also gave to Pele the title of best player of the century to make it a draw Maradona also came fifth in the vote of the IFFHS International Federation of Football History and Statistics 197 In 2001 the Argentine Football Association AFA asked FIFA for authorization to retire the jersey number 10 for Maradona FIFA did not grant the request even though Argentine officials have maintained that FIFA hinted that it would 211 Maradona has topped a number of fan polls including a 2002 FIFA poll in which his second goal against England was chosen as the best goal ever scored in a World Cup he also won the most votes in a poll to determine the All Time Ultimate World Cup Team On 22 March 2010 Maradona was chosen number 1 in The Greatest 10 World Cup Players of All Time by the London based newspaper The Times 212 Argentinos Juniors named its stadium after Maradona on 26 December 2003 In 2003 Maradona was employed by the Libyan footballer Al Saadi Gaddafi the third son of Colonel Muammar Gaddafi as a technical consultant while Al Saadi was playing for the Italian club Perugia which was playing in Serie A at the time 213 Maradona in Kolkata India in December 2008 Maradona laid the foundation stone for a football academy in the eastern suburbs of the city and was greeted by over 100 000 fans in Salt Lake Stadium 214 On 22 June 2005 it was announced that Maradona would return to former club Boca Juniors as a sports vice president in charge of managing the First Division roster after a disappointing 2004 05 season which coincided with Boca s centenary 215 216 His contract began 1 August 2005 and one of his first recommendations proved to be very effective advising the club to hire Alfio Basile as the new coach 217 With Maradona fostering a close relationship with the players Boca won the 2005 Apertura the 2006 Clausura the 2005 Copa Sudamericana and the 2005 Recopa Sudamericana On 15 August 2005 Maradona made his debut as host of a talk variety show on Argentine television La Noche del 10 The Night of the no 10 His main guest on opening night was Pele the two had a friendly chat showing no signs of past differences 218 However the show also included a cartoon villain with a clear physical resemblance to Pele In subsequent evenings he led the ratings on all occasions but one Most guests were drawn from the worlds of football and show business including Ronaldo and Zinedine Zidane but also included interviews with other notable friends and personalities such as Cuban leader Fidel Castro and boxers Roberto Duran and Mike Tyson 219 Maradona gave each of his guests a signed Argentina jersey which Tyson wore when he arrived in Brazil Argentina s biggest rivals 220 In November 2005 however Maradona rejected an offer to work with Argentina s national football team 221 In May 2006 Maradona agreed to take part in UK s Soccer Aid a program to raise money for UNICEF 222 In September 2006 Maradona in his famous blue and white number 10 was the captain for Argentina in a three day World Cup of Indoor Football tournament in Spain On 26 August 2006 it was announced that Maradona was quitting his position in the club Boca Juniors because of disagreements with the AFA who selected Alfio Basile to be the new coach of the Argentina national team 223 In 2008 Serbian filmmaker Emir Kusturica made Maradona a documentary about Maradona s life 224 On 1 September 2014 Maradona along with many current and former footballing stars took part in the Match for Peace which was played at the Stadio Olimpico in Rome with the proceeds being donated entirely to charity 225 Maradona set up a goal for Roberto Baggio during the first half of the match with a chipped through ball over the defence with the outside of his left foot 226 Unusually both Baggio and Maradona wore the number 10 shirt despite playing on the same team 226 On 17 August 2015 Maradona visited Ali Bin Nasser the Tunisian referee of the Argentina England quarter final match at the 1986 World Cup where Maradona scored his Hand of God and paid tribute to him by giving him a signed Argentine jersey 227 228 Managerial careerClub management Left Maradona sitting on the bench during his debut coaching Racing Club in a preseason match against Independiente January 1995 Right greeting fans after being appointed manager of Dubai club Al Wasl of UAE in 2011 Maradona began his managerial career alongside former Argentinos Juniors midfield teammate Carlos Fren The pair led Mandiyu of Corrientes in 1994 and Racing Club in 1995 with little success 161 229 In May 2011 he became manager of Dubai club Al Wasl FC in the United Arab Emirates 230 231 Maradona was sacked on 10 July 2012 232 233 234 In August 2013 Maradona moved on to become spiritual coach at Argentine club Deportivo Riestra 235 Maradona departed this role in 2017 to become the head coach of Fujairah in the UAE second division before leaving at the end of the season upon failure to secure promotion at the club 236 237 In May 2018 Maradona was announced as the new chairman of Belarusian club Dynamo Brest 238 He arrived in Brest and was presented by the club to start his duties in July 239 In September 2018 he was appointed manager of Mexican second division side Dorados 240 He made his debut with Dorados on 17 September with a 4 1 victory over Cafetaleros de Tapachula 241 On 13 June 2019 after Dorados failed to clinch promotion to the Mexican top flight Maradona s lawyer announced that he would be stepping down from the role citing health reasons 242 On 5 September 2019 Maradona was unveiled as the new head coach of Gimnasia de La Plata signing a contract until the end of the season 243 After two months in charge he left the club on 19 November 244 However two days later Maradona rejoined the club as manager saying that we finally achieved political unity in the club 245 Maradona insisted that Gabriel Pellegrino remain club president if he were to stay with Gimnasia de La Plata 246 247 However it was still not clear if Pellegrino who declined to run for re election 246 247 would stay on as club President 246 247 Originally scheduled to be held on 23 November 246 the election was delayed 15 days 247 On 15 December Pellegrino who was encouraged by Maradona to seek re election was re elected to a three year term 248 Despite having a bad record during the 2019 20 season Gimnasia renewed Maradona s contract on 3 June 2020 for the 2020 21 season 249 In November 2020 Maradona died in post His coaching staff resigned from the club following his death 250 International management After the resignation of Argentina national team coach Alfio Basile in 2008 Maradona immediately proposed his candidacy for the vacant role 251 According to several press sources his major challengers included Diego Simeone Carlos Bianchi Miguel Angel Russo and Sergio Batista 252 On 29 October 2008 AFA chairman Julio Grondona confirmed that Maradona would be the head coach of the national team 253 On 19 November Maradona managed Argentina for the first time when they played against Scotland at Hampden Park in Glasgow which Argentina won 1 0 254 Maradona as coach of Argentina in 2009 He left the position after the 2010 FIFA World Cup in South Africa After winning his first three matches as the coach of the national team he oversaw a 6 1 defeat to Bolivia equalling the team s worst ever margin of defeat 255 256 With two matches remaining in the qualification tournament for the 2010 World Cup Argentina was in fifth place and faced the possibility of failing to qualify but victory in the last two matches secured qualification for the finals 257 258 After Argentina s qualification Maradona used abusive language at the live post game press conference telling members of the media to suck it and keep on sucking it 259 FIFA responded with a two month ban on all footballing activity which expired on 15 January 2010 and a CHF 25 000 fine with a warning as to his future conduct 260 The friendly match scheduled to take place at home to the Czech Republic on 15 December during the period of the ban was cancelled The only match Argentina played during Maradona s ban was a friendly away to Catalonia which they lost 4 2 261 At the World Cup finals in June 2010 Argentina started by winning 1 0 against Nigeria followed by a 4 1 victory over South Korea on the strength of a Gonzalo Higuain hat trick 262 263 In the final match of the group stage Argentina won 2 0 against Greece to win the group and advance to a second round meeting Mexico 264 After defeating Mexico 3 1 however Argentina was routed by Germany 4 0 in the quarter finals to go out of the competition 265 Argentina was ranked fifth in the tournament 266 After the defeat to Germany Maradona admitted that he was reconsidering his future as Argentina s coach stating I may leave tomorrow 267 On 15 July the AFA said that he would be offered a new four year deal that would keep him in charge through to the summer of 2014 when Brazil staged the World Cup 268 On 27 July however the AFA announced that its board had unanimously decided not to renew his contract 269 Afterwards on 29 July Maradona claimed that AFA president Julio Grondona and director of national teams as well as his former Argentine national team and Sevilla coach Carlos Bilardo had lied to betrayed and effectively sacked him from the role He said They wanted me to continue but seven of my staff should not go on if he told me that it meant he did not want me to keep working 270 Personal lifeFamily Having returned to his Catholic faith Maradona donated a signed Argentina jersey to Pope Francis and it is kept in one of the Vatican Museums Born to a Roman Catholic family his parents were Diego Maradona Senior and Dalma Salvadora Franco Maradona married long time fiancee Claudia Villafane on 7 November 1989 in Buenos Aires 271 and they had two daughters Dalma Nerea born 2 April 1987 and Gianinna Dinorah born 16 May 1989 by whom he became a grandfather in 2009 after she married Sergio Aguero now divorced 272 Maradona and Villafane divorced in 2004 Daughter Dalma has since asserted that the divorce was the best solution for all as her parents remained on friendly terms They travelled together to Naples for a series of homages in June 2005 and were seen together on other occasions including the Argentina games during 2006 World Cup 273 During the divorce proceedings Maradona admitted that he was the father of Diego Sinagra born in Naples on 20 September 1986 The Italian courts had already ruled so in 1993 after Maradona refused to undergo DNA tests to prove or disprove his paternity Diego Junior met Maradona for the first time in May 2003 after tricking his way onto a golf course in Italy where Maradona was playing 274 Sinagra is now a footballer playing in Italy 275 After the divorce Claudia embarked on a career as a theatre producer and Dalma sought an acting career she previously had expressed her desire to attend the Actors Studio West in Los Angeles 276 277 Maradona s relationship with his immediate family was a close one In a 1990 interview with Sports Illustrated he showed phone bills where he had spent a minimum of 15 000 US per month calling his parents and siblings 278 Maradona s mother Dalma died on 19 November 2011 He was in Dubai at the time and desperately tried to fly back in time to see her but was too late She was 81 years old His father Don Diego died on 25 June 2015 at age 87 279 In 2014 Maradona was accused of assaulting his girlfriend Rocio Oliva allegations which he denied 280 281 In 2017 he gifted her a house in Bella Vista but in December 2018 they split up 282 Maradona s great nephew Hernan Lopez is also a professional footballer 283 Drug abuse and health problems Maradona at the 2018 FIFA World Cup in Russia where he was treated by paramedics after collapsing following Argentina s victory over Nigeria 284 From the mid 1980s until 2004 Maradona was addicted to cocaine He allegedly began using the drug in Barcelona in 1983 285 By the time he was playing for Napoli he had a full blown addiction which interfered with his ability to play football 286 In the midst of his drug crisis in 1991 Maradona was asked by journalists if the hit song Mi enfermedad lit My Disease was dedicated to him 287 Maradona was banned from football in both 1991 and 1994 for abusing drugs 288 Maradona had a tendency to put on weight and suffered increasingly from obesity at one point weighing 280 lb 130 kg He was obese from the end of his playing career until undergoing gastric bypass surgery in a clinic in Cartagena de Indias Colombia on 6 March 2005 His surgeon said that Maradona would follow a liquid diet for three months in order to return to his normal weight 289 When Maradona resumed public appearances shortly thereafter he displayed a notably thinner figure 290 On 29 March 2007 Maradona was readmitted to a hospital in Buenos Aires He was treated for hepatitis and effects of alcohol abuse and was released on 11 April but readmitted two days later 291 In the following days there were constant rumours about his health including three false claims of his death within a month 292 After being transferred to a psychiatric clinic specializing in alcohol related problems Maradona was discharged on 7 May 293 On 8 May Maradona appeared on Argentine television and stated that he had quit drinking and had not used drugs in two and a half years 294 During the 2018 World Cup match between Argentina and Nigeria Maradona was shown on television cameras behaving extremely erratically with an abundance of white residue visible on the glass in front of his seat in the stands The smudges could have been fingerprints and he later blamed his behaviour on consuming lots of wine 295 In January 2019 Maradona underwent surgery after a hernia caused internal bleeding in his stomach 296 Political views Maradona right presenting a signed jersey to the former President of Argentina Nestor Kirchner in December 2007 Maradona was idelogically left wing 297 He supported the establishment of an independent Palestinian state and condemned Israel s military strikes in the Gaza Strip during the 2014 Israel Gaza conflict saying What Israel is doing to the Palestinians is shameful 298 He became friends with Cuban president Fidel Castro while receiving treatment on the island with Castro stating Diego is a great friend and very noble too There s also no question he s a wonderful athlete and has maintained a friendship with Cuba to no material gain of his own 73 Maradona had a portrait of Castro tattooed on his left leg and one of Fidel s second in command fellow Argentine Che Guevara on his right arm 299 In his autobiography El Diego he dedicated the book to various people including Castro He wrote To Fidel Castro and through him all the Cuban people 300 Maradona then president Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner and Evo Morales at the funeral of former President of Argentina Nestor Kirchner 28 October 2010 Maradona voiced support for Bolivia s president Evo Morales 301 and was also a supporter of former Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez In 2005 he came to Venezuela to meet Chavez who received him in the presidential Miraflores Palace After the meeting Maradona said that he had come to meet a great man un grande which can also mean a big man in Spanish but had instead met a gigantic man un gigante He also stated I believe in Chavez I am a Chavista Everything Fidel does everything Chavez does for me is the best 302 Maradona was Chavez s guest of honour at the opening game of the 2007 Copa America held in Venezuela 303 Many sportsmen claim to be champions of the people but Maradona s populism is underwritten by his itinerary the proletarian strongholds of Buenos Aires Naples and now Havana Martin Amis writing for The Guardian 2004 304 In 2004 Maradona participated in a protest against the U S led war in Iraq 297 Maradona declared his opposition to what he identified as imperialism particularly during the 2005 Summit of the Americas in Mar del Plata Argentina There he protested George W Bush s presence in Argentina wearing a T shirt labelled STOP BUSH with the s in Bush being replaced with a swastika and referring to Bush as human garbage 305 306 In August 2007 Maradona went further making an appearance on Chavez s weekly television show Alo Presidente and saying I hate everything that comes from the United States I hate it with all my strength 307 By December 2008 however Maradona had adopted a more pro U S attitude and expressed admiration for Bush s successor then President elect Barack Obama for whom he had great expectations 214 I asked myself Who is this man Who is this footballing magician this Sex Pistol of international football this cocaine victim who kicked the habit looked like Falstaff and was as weak as spaghetti If Andy Warhol had still been alive he would have definitely put Maradona alongside Marilyn Monroe and Mao Tse tung I m convinced that if he hadn t been a footballer he d ve become a revolutionary Emir Kusturica film director 73 With his poor shanty town villa miseria upbringing Maradona cultivated a man of the people persona 308 During a meeting with Pope John Paul II at the Vatican in 1987 they clashed on the issue of wealth disparity with Maradona stating I argued with him because I was in the Vatican and I saw all these golden ceilings and afterwards I heard the Pope say the Church was worried about the welfare of poor kids Sell your ceiling then amigo do something 308 In September 2014 Maradona met with Pope Francis in Rome crediting Francis for inspiring him to return to religion after many years away he stated We should all imitate Pope Francis If each one of us gives something to someone else no one in the world would be starving 309 In December 2007 Maradona presented a signed shirt with a message of support to the people of Iran it is displayed in the Iranian Ministry of Foreign Affairs museum 310 In April 2013 Maradona visited the tomb of Hugo Chavez and urged Venezuelans to elect the late leader s designated successor Nicolas Maduro to continue the socialist leader s legacy Continue the struggle Maradona said on television 311 Maradona attended Maduro s final campaign rally in Caracas signing footballs and kicking them to the crowd and presented Maduro with an Argentina jersey 311 Having visited Chavez s tomb with Maradona Maduro said Speaking with Diego was very emotional because comandante Chavez also loved him very much 311 Maradona participated and danced at the electoral campaign rally during the 2018 presidential elections in Venezuela 312 313 During the 2019 Venezuelan presidential crisis the Mexican Football Federation fined him for violating their code of ethics and dedicating a team victory to Nicolas Maduro 314 Maradona center visiting Argentina s new president Alberto Fernandez right in December 2019 Maradona in his 2000 autobiography Yo Soy El Diego linked the Hand of God goal against England at the 1986 World Cup to the Falklands War Although we had said before the game that football had nothing to do with the Malvinas Falklands War we knew they had killed a lot of Argentine boys there killed them like little birds And this was revenge 315 In October 2015 Maradona thanked Queen Elizabeth II and the Houses of Parliament in London for giving him the chance to provide true justice as head of an organization designed to help young children 316 In a video released on his official Facebook page Maradona confirmed he would accept their nomination for him to become Latin American director for the non governmental organization Football for Unity 316 Failure to pay tax In March 2009 Italian officials announced that Maradona still owed the Italian government 37 million in local taxes 23 5 million of which was accrued interest on his original debt They reported that at that point Maradona had paid only 42 000 two luxury watches and a set of earrings 317 318 DeathOn 2 November 2020 Maradona was admitted to a hospital in La Plata supposedly for psychological reasons A representative of the ex footballer said his condition was not serious 319 A day later he underwent emergency brain surgery to treat a subdural hematoma 320 He was released on 12 November after successful surgery and was supervised by doctors as an outpatient 321 On 25 November at the age of 60 Maradona suffered cardiac arrest and died in his sleep at his home in Dique Lujan Buenos Aires Province Argentina 322 323 Maradona s coffin draped in Argentina s national flag and three Maradona number 10 shirts Argentinos Juniors Boca Juniors and Argentina lay in state at the Presidential Palace the Casa Rosada with mourners filing past his coffin 324 On 26 November Maradona s wake which was attended by tens of thousands of people was cut short by his family as his coffin was relocated from the rotunda of the Presidential Palace after fans took over an inner courtyard and also clashed with police 325 326 The same day a private funeral service was held and Maradona was buried next to his parents at the Jardin de Bella Vista cemetery in Bella Vista Buenos Aires 327 Tributes I have lost a great friend and the world has lost a legend There s still so much to be said but for now may God give strength to his relatives One day I hope we can play football together in heaven Pele paying tribute following Maradona s death 328 In a statement on social media the Argentine Football Association expressed its deepest sorrow for the death of our legend adding You will always be in our hearts 329 President Alberto Fernandez announced three days of national mourning 330 UEFA and CONMEBOL announced that every match in the Champions League Europa League Copa Libertadores and Copa Sudamericana would hold a moment of silence prior to kickoff 331 332 Boca Juniors game was postponed in respect to Maradona 333 Subsequently other confederations around the world followed suit with every fixture observing a minute of silence starting with the 2020 AFC Champions League s fixtures 334 In addition to the minute of silence in Serie A an image of Maradona was projected on stadium screens in the 10th minute of play 335 In Naples the Stadio San Paolo officially renamed Stadio Diego Armando Maradona on 4 December 2020 was illuminated at night in honour of Maradona with numerous fans gathering outside the stadium placing murals and paintings as a tribute Both Napoli owner Aurelio De Laurentiis and the mayor of Naples Luigi de Magistris expressed their desire to rename their stadium after Maradona which was unanimously approved by Naples City Council 63 Prior to Napoli s Europa League match against Rijeka the day after Maradona s death all of the Napoli players wore shirts with Maradona 10 on the back of them before observing a minute of silence 336 Figures in the sport from every continent around the world also paid tribute to him 328 337 338 Celebrities and other sports people outside football also paid tribute to Maradona 339 340 341 342 343 On 27 November 2020 the Aditya School of Sports in Barasat Kolkata India named their cricket stadium after Maradona 344 Three years earlier Maradona had conducted a workshop with 100 kids in the stadium and played a charity match at the same venue with former Indian cricket captain Sourav Ganguly 344 The AFA announced that the 2020 Copa de la Liga Profesional which is the debut season of Copa de la Liga Profesional would be renamed Copa Diego Armando Maradona 345 On 28 November Pakistan Football Federation s main cup PFF National Challenge Cup honoured Maradona along with Wali Mohammad 346 347 In a rugby union test match between Argentina and New Zealand on 28 November as the New Zealand team lined up to perform the haka their captain Sam Cane presented a black jersey with Maradona s name and his number 10 348 349 On 29 November compatriot Lionel Messi scored in Barcelona s 4 0 home win over Osasuna in La Liga dedicating his goal to Maradona by revealing a Newell s Old Boys shirt worn by the latter under his own and subsequently pointing to the sky 350 On 30 November after Boca Juniors opened the scoring against Newell s Old Boys at La Bombonera the club s players paid an emotional tribute by laying a Maradona jersey in front of his private suite where his daughter Dalma was present 351 Aftermath In May 2021 seven medical professionals were charged with homicide over Maradona s death in violation of their duties and could face between 8 and 25 years in prison if convicted 352 On 25 June psychiatrist Agustina Cosachov was summoned by the Prosecution Office of San Isidro and faced a formal questioning where she agreed to answer more than 100 queries regarding the medical treatment given to Maradona in that medical field 353 354 After seven hours of questioning Cosachov s lawyer Vadim Mischanchuk addressed the press and denied that Cosachov s prescription medication could have worsened Maradona s heart condition and Cosachov further denied any responsibility in the death 355 On 28 June multiple arrest warrants were requested by a plaintiff lawyer against Cosachov personal doctor Leopoldo Luque psychologist Carlos Diaz and doctor Nancy Forlini in direct connection with Maradona s alleged negligent death 356 On 1 July the prosecutors in the case refused to ask a judge to issue arrest warrants against all the aforementioned professionals on the basis that they considered the request had been a media stunt incursion mediatica for the case coinciding with personal doctor Luque s interrogation 357 358 In June 2022 a judge ruled that eight medical personnel should face trial for criminal negligence and homicide in regards to Maradona s death 359 360 361 In popular culture Graffiti of Maradona His nickname D10S alludes to his playing number and the Spanish word for God 362 In Argentina Maradona is considered an icon Concerning the idolatry that exists in his country former teammate Jorge Valdano said At the time that Maradona retired from active football he left Argentina traumatized Maradona was more than just a great footballer He was a special compensation factor for a country that in a few years lived through several military dictatorships and social frustrations of all kinds Maradona offered to Argentines a way out of their collective frustration and that s why people there love him as a divine figure 363 In leading his nation to the 1986 World Cup and in particular his performance and two goals in the quarter final against England Guillem Balague writes That Sunday in Mexico City the world saw one man single handedly in more than one sense of the phrase lift the mood of a depressed and downtrodden nation into the stratosphere With two goals in the space of four minutes he allowed them to dare to dream that they like him could be the best in the world He did it first by nefarious and then spellbindingly brilliant means In those moments he went from star player to legend 37 Since 1986 it has been common for Argentines abroad to hear Maradona s name as a token of recognition even in remote places 36 The Tartan Army sing a version of the Hokey Cokey in honour of the Hand of God goal against England 364 In Argentina Maradona is often talked about in terms reserved for legends In the Argentine film El hijo de la novia Son of the Bride somebody who impersonates a Catholic priest says to a bar patron They idolized him and then crucified him When a friend scolds him for taking the prank too far the fake priest retorts But I was talking about Maradona He is the subject of the film El camino de San Diego though he himself only appears in archive footage 365 Maradona was included in many cameos in the Argentine comic book El Cazador de Aventuras After the closing of it the authors started a new short lived comic book titled El Die using Maradona as the main character Maradona has had several online Flash games that are entirely dedicated to his legacy 366 In Rosario Argentina locals organized the parody religion of the Church of Maradona The organization reformulates many elements from Christian tradition such as Christmas or prayers reflecting instead details from Maradona It had 200 founding members and tens of thousands more have become members via the church s official web site 367 Maradona middle with Queen during the rock band s 1981 South American tour Many Argentine artists performed songs in tribute to Diego such as La Mano de Dios by El Potro Rodrigo Maradona by Andres Calamaro Para siempre Diego Diego Forever by Los Ratones Paranoicos Francotirador Sniper by Attaque 77 Maradona Blues by Charly Garcia Santa Maradona Saint Maradona by Mano Negra and La Vida Tombola by Manu Chao among others There are also other films such as Maradona La Mano de Dios Maradona the Hand of God Amando a Maradona Loving Maradona and Maradona by Kusturica 224 In March 1981 Queen were introduced to Maradona backstage during their concert at the Velez Sarsfield Stadium 368 By 1982 Maradona had become one of the biggest sports stars in the world and had endorsements with many companies including Puma and Coca Cola earning him an additional 1 5 million per year on top of his club salary 369 In 1982 he featured in a World Cup commercial for Coca Cola and a Japanese commercial for Puma 369 In 1984 he earned 7m a year at Napoli and sponsorships included 5m from Hitachi 304 In 1984 a poll from IMG named Maradona the best known person in the world 304 In 2010 he appeared in a commercial for French fashion house Louis Vuitton indulging in a game of table football with fellow World Cup winners Pele and Zinedine Zidane 370 Maradona featured in the music video to the 2010 World Cup song Waka Waka by Shakira with footage shown of him celebrating Argentina winning the 1986 World Cup 371 Banners depicting Maradona such as this where he features alongside Lionel Messi at the 2018 World Cup in Russia often appear at Argentina games A 2006 television commercial for Brazilian soft drink Guarana Antarctica portrayed Maradona as a member of the Brazil national team including wearing the yellow jersey and singing the Brazilian national anthem with Brazilian players Ronaldo and Kaka 372 Later on in the commercial he wakes up realizing it was a nightmare after having too much of the drink This generated some controversy in the Argentine media after its release although the commercial was not supposed to air for the Argentine market fans could see it online Maradona replied that he had no problem wearing the Brazilian national squad jersey despite Argentina and Brazil s tense football rivalry but that he would refuse to wear the shirt of River Plate Boca Juniors traditional rival 373 There is a documented phenomenon of Brazilians being named in honour of Maradona 374 an example being footballer Diego Costa 375 In 2017 Maradona featured as a legendary player in the football video games FIFA 18 and Pro Evolution Soccer 2018 376 In 2019 a documentary film titled Diego Maradona was released by Academy Award and BAFTA Award winning filmmaker Asif Kapadia director of Amy on singer Amy Winehouse and Senna on motor racing driver Ayrton Senna Kapadia stated that Maradona is the third part of a trilogy about child geniuses and fame 377 He added I was fascinated by his journey wherever he went there were moments of incredible brilliance and drama He was a leader taking his teams to the very top but also many lows in his career He was always the little guy fighting against the system and he was willing to do anything to use all of his cunning and intelligence to win 378 Career statisticsMaradona made 680 appearances and scored 345 goals for club and country combined with a goalscoring average of 0 51 Club Appearances and goals by club season and competition Club Season League Cup Continental Other TotalDivision Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps GoalsArgentinos Juniors 52 379 1976 Argentine Primera Division 11 2 11 21977 Argentine Primera Division 49 19 49 191978 Argentine Primera Division 35 26 35 261979 Argentine Primera Division 26 26 26 261980 Argentine Primera Division 45 43 45 43Total 166 116 166 116Boca Juniors 52 379 1981 Argentine Primera Division 40 28 40 28Barcelona 52 1982 83 La Liga 20 11 5 a 3 4 b 5 6 c 4 35 231983 84 La Liga 16 11 4 d 1 3 e 3 23 15Total 36 22 9 4 7 8 6 4 58 38Napoli 52 1984 85 Serie A 30 14 6 f 3 36 171985 86 Serie A 29 11 2 g 2 31 131986 87 Serie A 29 10 10 h 7 2 i 0 41 171987 88 Serie A 28 15 9 j 6 2 k 0 39 211988 89 Serie A 26 9 12 l 7 12 m 3 50 191989 90 Serie A 28 16 3 n 2 5 o 0 36 181990 91 Serie A 18 6 3 p 2 4 q 2 1 r 0 26 10Total 188 81 45 29 25 5 1 0 259 115Sevilla 52 1992 93 La Liga 26 5 4 s 2 30 7Newell s Old Boys 52 379 1993 94 Argentine Primera Division 5 0 5 0Boca Juniors 52 379 1995 96 Argentine Primera Division 24 5 24 51996 97 Argentine Primera Division 1 0 1 t 0 2 01997 98 Argentine Primera Division 5 2 5 2Total 70 35 1 0 71 35Career total 491 259 58 35 32 13 8 4 589 311Notes Appearances in the 1982 83 Copa del Rey Appearances in the 1982 83 European Cup Winners Cup Appearances in the 1983 Copa de la Liga Appearances in the 1983 84 Copa del Rey Appearances in the 1983 84 European Cup Winners Cup Appearances in the 1984 85 Coppa Italia Appearances in the 1985 86 Coppa Italia Appearances in the 1986 87 Coppa Italia Appearances in the 1986 87 UEFA Cup Appearances in the 1987 88 Coppa Italia Appearances in the 1987 88 European Cup Appearances in the 1988 89 Coppa Italia Appearances in the 1988 89 UEFA Cup Appearances in the 1989 90 Coppa Italia Appearances in the 1989 90 UEFA Cup Appearances in the 1990 91 Coppa Italia Appearances in the 1990 91 European Cup Appearance in the 1990 Supercoppa Italiana Appearances in the 1992 93 Copa del Rey Appearance in the 1997 Supercopa Libertadores International Further information List of international goals scored by Diego Maradona Appearances and goals by national team year and competition Team Year Competitive Friendly TotalApps Goals Apps Goals Apps GoalsArgentina U20 380 1977 3 a 0 3 01978 1979 11 b 7 1 1 12 8Total 14 7 1 1 15 8Argentina 52 72 1977 3 0 3 01978 1 0 1 01979 2 c 1 6 2 8 31980 10 7 10 71981 2 d 1 2 11982 5 e 2 5 0 10 21983 1984 1985 6 f 3 4 3 10 61986 7 g 5 3 2 10 71987 4 h 3 2 1 6 41988 2 i 1 1 0 3 11989 6 j 0 1 0 7 01990 7 k 0 3 1 10 11991 1992 1993 3 l 0 1 0 4 01994 2 m 1 5 1 7 2Total 46 17 45 17 91 34Career total 60 24 46 18 106 42Notes Appearances in the 1977 South American U 20 Championship Five appearances and one goal in the 1979 South American U 20 Championship six appearances and six goals in the 1979 FIFA World Youth Championship Appearances in the 1979 Copa America Appearances in the 1980 Mundialito Appearances in the 1982 World Cup Appearances in the 1986 FIFA World Cup qualification Appearances in the 1986 World Cup Appearances in the 1987 Copa America Appearances in the Four Nations Tournament Appearances in the 1989 Copa America Appearances in the 1990 World Cup One appearance in the Artemio Franchi Trophy two appearances in the 1994 FIFA World Cup qualification Appearances in the 1994 World CupManagerial statisticsTeam Nat From To RecordG W D L Win Textil Mandiyu 381 January 1994 June 1994 12 1 6 5 00 8 33Racing Club 381 May 1995 November 1995 11 2 6 3 0 18 18Argentina 381 November 2008 July 2010 24 18 0 6 0 75 00Al Wasl 381 May 2011 July 2012 23 11 3 9 0 47 83Fujairah 381 April 2017 April 2018 11 7 3 1 0 63 64Dorados 381 September 2018 June 2019 38 20 9 9 0 52 63Gimnasia de La Plata 381 September 2019 November 2020 21 8 4 9 0 38 10Total 140 67 31 42 0 47 86HonoursBoca Juniors 382 Argentine Primera Division 1981 MetropolitanoBarcelona 382 Copa del Rey 1982 83 Copa de la Liga 1983Napoli 382 Serie A 1986 87 1989 90 Coppa Italia 1986 87 Supercoppa Italiana 1990 UEFA Cup 1988 89Argentina U20 FIFA World Youth Championship 1979 382 Argentina FIFA World Cup 1986 382 Artemio Franchi Cup 1993 383 Individual Maradona s Golden Foot award in The Champions Promenade on the seafront of the Principality of Monaco Argentine Primera Division top scorers 1978 Metropolitano 1979 Metropolitano 1979 Nacional 1980 Metropolitano 1980 Nacional 384 FIFA World Youth Championship Golden Ball 1979 70 FIFA World Youth Championship Silver Shoe 1979 70 Olimpia de Oro 1979 1986 385 Guerin Sportivo World Player of the Year 1979 1986 1987 386 387 388 Argentine Football Writers Footballer of the Year 1979 1980 1981 1986 389 El Mundo South American Footballer of the Year 1979 1980 1986 1989 1990 1992 384 390 391 392 393 El Grafico Footballer of the America s 1980 1981 394 Guerin Sportivo World All star Team 1980 1981 1982 1983 1985 386 395 396 387 Eric Batty s World XI 1984 1987 397 Guerin d Oro Serie A Footballer of the Year 1985 398 Onze de Onze 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 399 FIFA World Cup Golden Ball 1986 384 FIFA World Cup Silver Shoe 1986 400 FIFA World Cup Most Assists 1986 401 L Equipe Champion of Champions 1986 402 La Gazzetta dello Sport Athlete of the Year 1986 403 Agence France Presse Athlete of the Year 1986 403 Associated Press Athlete of the Year 1986 403 Corriere dello Sport Athlete of the Year 1986 404 Onze d Or 1986 1987 399 La Gazzetta dello Sport Footballer of the Year 1987 1988 405 406 Capocannoniere Serie A top scorer 1987 88 384 Coppa Italia top scorer 1987 88 407 UNICEF European Footballer of the Season 1989 90 408 FIFA World Cup Bronze Ball 1990 384 El Pais Ideal Team of the America s 1993 1995 409 FIFA World Cup All Time Team 1994 410 Ballon d Or for services to football France Football 1995 411 World Team of the 20th Century 1998 384 World Soccer magazine s Greatest Players of the 20th century 2 1999 195 Argentine Sports Writers Sportsman of the Century 1999 412 Marca Leyenda 1999 413 Number 10 retired by Napoli football team as a recognition to his contribution to the club 2000 414 FIFA Player of the Century 2000 384 FIFA Goal of the Century for his second goal against England in 1986 FIFA World Cup quarter final 2002 384 FIFA World Cup Dream Team 2002 415 Golden Foot 2003 as football legend 416 FIFA 100 Greatest Living Players 2004 384 Argentine Senate Domingo Faustino Sarmiento recognition for lifetime achievement 2005 417 Greatest Footballers in World Cup History No 1 by The Times 2010 418 Best Athlete in History No 1 by Corriere dello Sport Stadio 2012 419 Player of the 20th Century by Globe Soccer Awards 2012 420 421 422 World Soccer magazine s Greatest XI of All Time 2013 423 Italian Football Hall of Fame 2014 424 AFA Team of All Time 2015 425 Greatest Football Players of All Time No 1 by FourFourTwo magazine 2017 171 Greatest Football Players in World Cup History No 1 by FourFourTwo magazine 2018 200 Napoli all time Top Scorer 1991 2017 30 54 L Equipe s top 50 South American footballers in history 2 426 International Federation of Football History amp Statistics IFFHS Legends 427 Ballon d Or Dream Team 2020 428 IFFHS All time Men s Dream Team 2021 429 IFFHS South America Men s Team of All Time 2021 430 WorksMaradona Diego Armando 2000 Yo Soy el Diego I Am the Diego in Spanish Planeta Pub Corp ISBN 84 08036 74 2 Maradona Diego 2016 Mexico 86 asi ganamos la copa mi mundial mi verdad in Spanish 1st ed Barcelona Debate ISBN 978 84 9992 627 8 OCLC 953395867 See also Association football portal Argentina portalList of association football families 1989 warm up to Live Is LifeReferences Samoura Fatma 27 November 2020 A minute of silence to honour Diego Armando Maradona PDF FIFA Archived PDF from the original on 2 December 2020 Retrieved 2 December 2020 Small is beautiful FIFA 8 May 2009 Archived from the original on 13 August 2020 Retrieved 2 December 2020 Dart James Doyle Paul Hill Jon 12 April 2006 The greatest rags to riches stories ever The Guardian Archived from the original on 20 March 2022 Retrieved 10 October 2022 a b Don Diego father of Maradona dies in Argentine clinic Reuters Retrieved 25 November 2022 Hugo Maradona younger brother of Diego dies at 52 AP News 28 December 2021 Retrieved 25 November 2022 Paul Doyle 11 July 2012 Does Diego Maradona have a more famous brother The Guardian Welch Julie 25 November 2020 Diego Maradona obituary The Guardian Archived from the original on 24 May 2022 Retrieved 26 November 2020 Sinagra Maradona ha origini italiane Vi racconto cosa mi diceva Diego Messi AreaNapoli it in Italian Retrieved 22 December 2022 Los desconocidos origenes croatas de Diego Maradona www ambito com Retrieved 29 December 2022 El volcanico partido de Maradona en Croacia visita a la tumba de Petrovic 0 a 0 arreglado y amenaza de renunciar al Mundial TyC Sports www tycsports com in Spanish Retrieved 29 December 2022 a b c Diego Maradona I was there 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over the Falklands War The Independent Retrieved 13 April 2020 Germany hammers Argentina 4 0 to reach World Cup semis CTV News 3 July 2010 Retrieved 13 April 2020 Pellizzari Tommaso 29 November 2019 Diego Maradona fenomenologia del campione delle contraddizioni Corriere della Sera in Italian Retrieved 13 April 2020 Agnew Paddy 18 January 2005 Evergreen Maldini still the soul of the Rossoneri The Irish Times Retrieved 13 April 2020 Ho pianto per Radice Maradona il piu forte di sempre ma a Van Basten e stato ancora piu difficile prendere la palla Il Corriere dello Sport in Italian 22 November 2018 Retrieved 4 November 2019 Westwood James 28 November 2020 Ibrahimovic Maradona s off field antics don t matter Goal Retrieved 12 October 2022 a b World Soccer Players of the Century World Soccer Retrieved 29 August 2014 FIFA Player of the Century PDF touri com 11 December 2000 Archived from the original PDF on 26 April 2012 Retrieved 26 November 2020 a b Stokkermans Karel IFFHS Century 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Them LA Times 3 February 1994 Retrieved 10 October 2022 Interview with Jorge Valdano in Spanish El Mundo 70 facts about Argentina legend Diego Maradona Goal 28 May 2020 Retrieved 12 October 2022 ICON When Diego Maradona fought an exhibition boxing match for charity back in 1996 and jokingly attacked the referee talksport com 25 November 2020 Maradona tells all in autobiography Associated Press 20 December 2000 Garcia Anne Marie 21 February 2002 Maradona donates royalties from Cuban edition of his book Granma Archived from the original on 13 October 2006 Maradona or Pele CNN SI 10 December 2000 Archived from the original on 18 February 2014 Argentina can t retire Maradona s shirt ESPN Inc 26 May 2002 Archived from the original on 25 March 2003 Hamilton Fiona 22 March 2010 The ten greatest World Cup playersbr No 1 Diego Maradona Argentina The Times London Retrieved 1 April 2010 White Duncan 29 October 2011 Jay Bothroyd puts good times with playboy Saadi Gaddafi son of dead Libya tyrant Colonel Gaddafi behind him National Post Retrieved 31 March 2012 a b Bhaumik Subir 8 December 2008 Maradona sends Calcutta into frenzy BBC Retrieved 10 October 2022 El Diez emprende dos nuevos desafios in Spanish ESPN Deportes 28 July 2005 Retrieved 10 October 2022 Maradona joins Boca Juniors ABC News 23 June 2005 Retrieved 13 October 2022 Moore Glenn 2 September 2006 Basile s team ready for Brazil in first of many friendlies The Independent Retrieved 13 October 2022 Goni Uki 17 August 2005 Maradona reinvents himself as chatshow host The Guardian Retrieved 13 October 2022 Roberto Duran estuvo con Diego Maradona in Spanish La Prensa 21 September 2005 Archived from the original on 3 September 2014 Tyson Must Return to Brazil for Trial Washington Post 11 November 2005 Retrieved 10 October 2022 Maradona Rejects Role With Argentina Team The New York Times Reuters 10 November 2005 Retrieved 10 October 2022 Maradona scores but England win UNICEF match 28 May 2006 Archived from the original on 18 March 2007 Remembering Diego Maradona s time at Boca Juniors Overlyzer Retrieved 28 March 2022 a b Aftab Kaleem 21 May 2008 Maradona by Kusturica The Independent Retrieved 10 October 2022 Interreligious Match for Peace 1 9 2014 Archived from the original on 3 September 2014 Retrieved 1 September 2014 a b Il Papa a Maradona Ti aspettavo Diego show con Baggio poi si infuria Icardi non doveva giocare La Gazzetta dello Sport Retrieved 1 September 2014 29 Years on from the Infamous Argentina England Match Maradona holds up his hands in apology MARCA 17 August 2015 retrieved 10 October 2022 Rebossio Alejandro 18 August 2015 Maradona visits Tunisian referee who awarded him 1986 Hand of God goal El Pais retrieved 10 October 2022 Adams Rebecca 29 October 2008 Diego Maradona factfile The Guardian Retrieved 12 October 2022 Maradona hired to coach UAE club Al Wasl CBC Sports 16 May 2011 Retrieved 12 October 2022 Diego Maradona to coach Dubai club ESPN 16 May 2011 Retrieved 12 October 2022 Diego Maradona sacked as manager of Al Wasl BBC 10 July 2012 Archived from the original on 22 January 2022 Retrieved 10 October 2022 Maradona wants to hold talks to save Al Wasl job The Times of India 12 July 2012 Archived from the original on 12 July 2012 Diego Maradona sacked by new board at Al Wasl after disappointing season The Guardian 10 July 2012 Retrieved 12 October 2022 Diego Maradona I have many chances to become Fifa s new vice president The Guardian 8 June 2015 Retrieved 12 October 2022 Diego Maradona leaves job in UAE after failing to secure automatic promotion Sky Sports 6 May 2018 Diego Maradona leaves Al Fujairah after failing to secure automatic promotion BBC 27 April 2018 Retrieved 12 October 2022 Yes Diego is with us Dynamo Brest 16 May 2018 Archived from the original on 18 May 2018 Retrieved 23 July 2018 Diego Maradona presented as Dinamo Brest chairman BBC Sport 16 July 2018 Retrieved 14 October 2022 Diego Maradona s rebirth at coaching job at Mexican side Dorados BBC Retrieved 10 September 2018 Staff Angulo hat trick helps get Maradona off to winning start in Mexico Channel NewsAsia Archived from the original on 29 July 2020 Retrieved 18 September 2018 Marshall Tom 14 June 2019 Maradona out as Dorados manager cites health ESPN Retrieved 25 June 2019 Diego bienvenido al Lobo Gimnasia de La Plata in Spanish 5 September 2019 Retrieved 6 September 2019 Diego Maradona leaves Gimnasia de La Plata after just two months Sky Sports Retrieved 20 November 2019 Diego Maradona announces Gimnasia return two days after quitting BBC Retrieved 22 November 2019 a b c d Scandolo Ramiro 21 November 2019 Maradona to stay on at Gimnasia Reuters Retrieved 26 November 2019 a b c d Maradona returns as Gimnasia head coach two days after stepping down Yahoo Sports 22 November 2019 Archived from the original on 29 July 2020 Retrieved 26 November 2019 Maradona pledges future to Gimnasia after club elections Xinhua English news cn www xinhuanet com Archived from the original on 16 December 2019 span, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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