Tag: Diego Maradona

  • Goat Debate: Ancelloti names three players better than Messi

    Goat Debate: Ancelloti names three players better than Messi

    Real Madrid boss, Carlo Ancelotti, has dismissed the notion that the Argentine, Lionel Messi is the best player in the world ever.

    The Italian made this statement during a press conference on Thursday in Spain.

    According to him, there have been many greats like Diego Maradona, Alfredo Di Stefano and Johann Cruyff, who have played the game.

    He said: “Messi the best in history? He’s a great player but I can’t say who’s been the best.

    “There have been so many wonderful players… Maradona, Di Stéfano, Cruyff.. I don’t know.”

    There was speculation prior to the World Cup in Qatar that whosoever wins the trophy between  Lionel Messi and Ronaldo would put the  GOAT debate to bed.

    However, Messi reached the finals and won the trophy, he also finished as tournament’s Most Valuable Player, (MVP)

    But some football fanatics are still of the belief that Messi is not the greatest of all time despite winning the World Cup.

     

     

  • Messi will never reach my father’s level – Maradona Jr

    Messi will never reach my father’s level – Maradona Jr

    Diego Maradona Jr believes Paris Saint-Germain star, Lionel Messi will never reach his father’s level in football history.

    He insists there are no comparisons between his father and Messi.

    Both played for Barcelona and the comparison is one that has been made frequently, particularly in their home country of Argentina.

    “I have a huge appreciation for him [referring to Messi], I think he is the best of his time, not the best ever,” Diego Jr told Radio del Plata.

    “I think that nobody will ever reach my father.”

    That doesn’t mean that he isn’t a fan of Messi, and he spoke positively of his achievements.

    “I was very happy when he managed to win the Copa America with the national team, so many people shut their mouths,” he continued.

    “We are difficult because we had Messi and for a lot of years we didn’t know how to enjoy him.

    “My old man is above everyone else. Messi is the best in the history of humans, my old man wasn’t human playing football.”

  • Late Diego Maradona’s brother, Hugo dies at age 52

    Late Diego Maradona’s brother, Hugo dies at age 52

    The younger brother of late Diego Maradona, Hugo Maradona, who also played football, has died, his lawyer confirmed on Tuesday.

    Lawyer Angelo Pisani said that Hugo Maradona died of a heart attack at the age of 52.

    He died in his home in Monte di Procida near the city of Naples where Diego Maradona played in the 1980s at Napoli.

    Napoli said in a statement the thoughts of everyone at the club “are with the Maradona family after the sad passing of Hugo.”

    The younger Maradona also played at Napoli briefly before being loaned off to Ascoli.

    He then played for Rayo Vallecano and Rapid Vienna before spending six years in Japan at several clubs.

    Diego Maradona died 13 months ago, also of a heart attack in the wake of brain surgery, at age 60.

    He is an icon at Napoli whose stadium has been named after him.

  • New Diego Maradona banknote proposed in Argentina

    New Diego Maradona banknote proposed in Argentina

    An Argentine senator has proposed putting an image of the late football star Diego Maradona on new banknotes.

    Maradona, who led Argentina to the 1986 World Cup title, died two weeks ago at the age of 60.

    Senator Norma Durango presented the bill to Congress on Monday to get the late player on the 1,000-peso ($12, £9) note, the highest denomination.

    It would feature Maradona’s face on one side and a picture of one of his most famous goals on the other, she said.

    The bill suggests the notes should “carry the effigy of Diego Armando Maradona on one side and the moment of the second goal against England, scored in Mexico, on 22 June 1986, on the other”, newspaper La Nación reports.

    The senator also suggested putting his image on commemorative stamps.

    “The idea is not just to recognise our most important idol, but also to think of the economic question,” Ms Durango said. “We feel that when tourists come here they will want to take a ‘Maradona’ away with them.”

    Maradona’s two most famous goals came in the 1986 World Cup quarter-final against England.

    The player was captain when Argentina won the tournament, scoring the first “Hand of God” goal against England in the quarter-finals and then going on to score again what was dubbed as the “Goal of the Century”.

    The plan is for the banknote to feature the second goal.

    Ms Durango said the final decision would be made by lawmakers, who are expected to hear her proposal early next year.

     

  • Diego Maradona (1960-2020): Exit of a Mythical Football Hero -Osayande Ero

    Diego Maradona (1960-2020): Exit of a Mythical Football Hero -Osayande Ero

    By Osayande Ero

    The roller coaster of a year that is 2020 has struck again as the football world mourns the passing of Diego Armando Maradona, the then diminutive Argentine, considered as one of the greatest players to ever grace the sport, and easily one of the greatest athletes that ever lived. On Wednesday 25th November, Maradona passed away from confirmed heart attack at his home in Tigre, Buenos Aires at the age of 60.

    He made his professional debut for Argentinos Juniors 10 days before his 16th birthday, making him the youngest debutant in Argentine Primera Division history. He spent five successful years at the club scoring 115 goals in 167 appearances. He moved to Boca Juniors in 1981 where he scored 28 goals in 40 appearances for the club he supported as a kid and always wanted to represent. His stint at Boca lasted just a year as the Spanish club, Barcelona, paid a then world record 7.6 million dollars in the summer of 1982.

    He spent two years in Spain scoring 38 goals in 58 appearances for Barcelona. During his time in the Camp Nou, he became the first player in El Classico history ever to be applauded by opposition fans after an eye-catching display against their fiercest rivals. His time in Spain was ravaged by injuries and on-field squabbles with opponents, most notably his last match in a Barcelona shirt which ended in a violent brawl after a defeat to Athletic Bilbao.

    Maradona, who was a victim of violent tackles from Bilbao players and xenophobic chants from their fans during the game, lost his cool and viciously attacked several players after one of them started taunting him with the xenophobic chants the Bilbao fans had directed at him during the match. Both teams got into a bloody fight that was witnessed by over 100,000 fans in attendance, which included Spanish Royals, and over half of the country’s population watching on television. Over 60 people were reported to have sustained injuries as a result of the brawl.

    That incident signaled the end of his time in Spain. In the summer of 1984, Maradona moved to Napoli in Italy for another world record fee of 10.48 million dollars. Over 75,000 fans trooped into the stadium for his presentation. It was during his time in Naples that he gained legendary status. His arrival sparked the most successful era in the club’s history, winning Serie A twice. He brought Napoli their first ever Serie A title in the 1986-87 season. They dominated domestically, and in European competitions during his time in Italy, lifting the UEFA Cup, and the Coppa Italia. He became Napoli’s all-time leading goal scorer with 115 goals.

    His time in Italy ended after he failed a drug test for cocaine and served a 15-month ban from the game. In 1992, Maradona left Naples and headed back to Spain where he spent a year playing for Sevilla. He moved back to his native Argentina to play for Newell’s Old Boys and Boca Juniors before retiring from football. He had an eventful international career too. He scored 34 goals in 91 appearances. His most notable moment for Argentina came in the quarter-finals of the 1986 World Cup in Mexico. He scored two goals, the first of which was the talk of the match as he appeared to use his arm to guide the ball into the net and the goal was allowed to stand. In his post-match interview, when asked about the goal, he claimed it was “a little bit with the head of Maradona, and a little with the hand of God”. That goal, from that day onwards, is fondly remembered, not by the English fans for obvious reasons, as the ‘HAND OF GOD’. He went on to captain his country to glory and lifted the biggest price in football, beating West Germany 3-2 in the final in front of 115,000 fans.

    His international career came to an abrupt end during the 1994 world cup when he tested positive for banned substances. He had brief stints as a manager most significantly, his role as Coach of Argentina from 2008-2010. Expectedly, tributes have been pouring in from grief-stricken football fans across the world. Three days of national mourning have been announced by Argentine President, Alberto Fernandez to “honour the memory of Diego Armando Maradona”. Fernandez described him as “the best football player in the world and a person who made Argentinians immensely happy”.

    Brazil’s football legend, 80-year-old Edson Arantes de Nascimento, popularly known as Pele, penned on Twitter, a very moving tribute to fellow talented footballer, “What a sad news. I lost a great friend and the world lost a legend. There is still much to be said, but for now, may God give strength to family members. One day, I hope we can play ball together in the sky”.

    Peter Shilton, the goalkeeper who was at the receiving end of Maradon’s Hand of God goal, in a tweet, lamented that the iconic player was “taken too soon”. Shilton acknowledged him as “the greatest footballer I ever played against without question”, and expressed sadness that “In recent years, he suffered with health and addiction…”.

    Carlo Ancelotti, Everton boss, and former AC Milan player, also tweeted: “You were alwaysa genius. Today is a very sad day and a great loss. But you my friend are eternal. Ciao Diego. Rest in peace”. Marseille head coach, Andre Villas-Boas urged world football body, FIFA. In his tribute, he wrote: For Maradona, it’s a hard blow. I would like FIFA to withdraw the number 10 for all competitions, all team”. Villas-Boas believed “…it’s the best tribute that can be given to the greatest player in the history of football. It is an incredible loss for the world of football”.

    For Boca, the club where Maradona first made his name as a teenager, it was a symbolic honour. Boca Junior’s La Bombonera stadium was on Thursday night cast into darkness but for a single light of remembrance for his exploit. The only light was from Diego Maradona’s VIP box.

    He is survived by an ex- wife, Claudia Villafane, and their two daughters – Dalma and Gianinna – though it is rumored that he had a total of eight children from other relationships.

    The football world says goodbye to one of its most treasured ambassadors; a master dribbler on the field of play who could not dribble death to score a life-saving goal at the critical moment. And in honour of his passing, Napoli President, Aurelio De Laurentiis, has confirmed that their stadium – Stadio San Paolo – would be renamed after the greatest player in the club’s history. Maradona was an icon of football and sports in general, and his memory will forever be lodged in history.

  • Soccer legend Maradona buried in Buenos Aires

    Soccer legend Maradona buried in Buenos Aires

    Soccer legend Diego Maradona has been buried in a private ceremony on the outskirts of Buenos Aires.

    A small number of close family and friends were permitted into the Bella Vista cemetery, where the soccer great’s parents were also interred.

    Earlier fans had lined the streets as Maradona’s body departed Argentina’s presidential palace, Casa Rosada, in Buenos Aires, where he lay in honor for public viewing following his death, aged 60.

    Live images from Casa Rosada showed crowds of people seated on the walled perimeter and outside the gates of the palace as the dark-colored hearse emerged covered in flowers.

    As the hearse traveled through the city, people lined the streets. Many were throwing pieces of paper from their apartment buildings down to the street, a tradition that echoed the welcome soccer teams sometimes receive when entering a stadium for a game.

    Hordes of fans congregated at the palace in Buenos Aires after the doors opened for the general public at 6 a.m. local time Thursday. There were some clashes between the mourning fans and the police.

    President Alberto Fernandez has already declared three days of mourning to honor Maradona — a national hero in Argentina and widely regarded as one of the greatest football players of all time.

    Maradona died from heart failure, a source from the Argentinian Justice Ministry present at the time of the autopsy told CNN en Espanol on Wednesday.

    Earlier this month, he underwent successful surgery for a subdural hematoma, more commonly known as a blood clot on the brain.

    According to a news release from the attorney investigating the death, Maradona’s nephew Jonatan Espósito was the last person to see him alive on Tuesday.

    At 11:30 a.m. Wednesday, a personal psychologist — Carlos Díaz — and Maradona’s psychiatrist Agustina Cosachov found the former footballer unresponsive, at which point his nephew and assistant were called to try and wake him, according to the release.

    “There weren’t any vital signs, so the nurse and psychiatrist came in and tried to perform CPR, but it was unsuccessful,” added the attorney’s statement.

    “They asked for ambulances of different providers and in the meantime asked for a doctor … as well as a surgeon doctor who was a neighbor in the area.

    “This man went upstairs and tried to reanimate the victim. Later on, the ambulances arrived along with the clinical doctor of the medical provider.

    ‘’ He proceeded with resuscitation; he tried with syringes of adrenaline and atropine, finally declaring the death of the victim.”

  • ‘I thought I knew Maradona but I knew nothing’

    ‘I thought I knew Maradona but I knew nothing’

    By Guillem Balague

    It was less than a month ago that I wrote how Diego Maradona had, against all odds, reached his 60th birthday. A day, I suggested, many had doubted this most complex of men would see.

    As we mourn his passing, it seems almost irrelevant to say that we could all see this coming, that we knew his body was gradually giving up, and his mind was beginning to struggle, because somehow where Diego Armando Maradona was concerned, the normal rules never seemed to apply.

    As much as I thought I knew Maradona, I realised once I began to research my book on him that I knew virtually nothing.

    And the reason for that is because there were 100 different Maradonas. The magician, the cheat, the god, the flawed genius, the loving father, the serially unfaithful husband, the generous benefactor, the foul-mouthed oaf, the boy from the barrio with magic in his boots and the man who made it to the top of the mountain and fell down it, his body broken by cocaine.

    Diego didn’t look after himself very well, but football, to its shame, didn’t look after him either. For years while he was playing, in Argentina, Spain and Italy, he was being injected with all manner of drugs to relieve the constant pain he was in, often without having a clue what was being given to him.

    From the moment he joined Argentinos Juniors as a youngster, it was obvious that this was no normal player. 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.

    Those challenges, many unpunished, left him to deal with a host of dreadful injuries throughout his career and ensured he spent much of his life in crippling pain.

    Among them, during his time at Barcelona, was the notorious 1983 tackle by Athletic Club’s Andoni Goicoechea – nicknamed the Butcher of Bilbao in the UK. Maradona was left with a broken ankle. To this day, Goicoechea has a glass display case at home in which he keeps the boots he wore when he made that dreadful challenge, boots that to him have a more complete meaning – later in what was a terrible week for him too as he felt the pressure of having stopped Maradona’s career, he would wear them to score a European Cup goal. To Goicoechea, it is a stark reminder of the highs and lows of football.

    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.

    By the time he had arrived at Napoli in 1984, he was on course to represent more than just a team but the hopes, dreams and aspirations of a whole country. Then came that unforgettable quarter-final match against England in the 1986 World Cup.

    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, as we well know, first by nefarious and then spellbindingly brilliant means.

    In those moments, he went from star player to legend.

    One of the people closest to him said that, as he could produce goals like his second, he didn’t need to score any like his first. Maradona laughed it off, happy to represent so many frustrations and to have such a loyal following.

    Last month, I also wrote that to understand Diego properly, you have to know the enigma that is Argentina; a country that needs such figures to be its messiahs, to carry it to the level of greatness of which it considers itself worthy. It also needs to be appreciated that this was a man who lived a story of incredible paradoxes, of a host of mistakes and subsequent corrections, of epic feats, of declines and resurrections.

    Diego was a rebel. He was a rebel who had power – and not only knew it but was also prepared to use it frequently for any number of good causes or friends who needed his help.

    When he was a young superstar with Argentinos, the club would play friendlies in Argentina and abroad and use Diego as the star of the show to get payment. It was the era of the first colour televisions and all the players were desperate to receive their, until then, unpaid win bonuses so they could buy one. They only received their money, though, when the 18-year-old Diego told the Argentinos president that if they weren’t paid then he wouldn’t play.

    He was a pioneer for so many people in this sport and for so many aspects of the game that are now accepted as perfectly normal.

    He was the first player to have a full-time agent, the first to have a physical trainer, one of the first players who would stand up and be counted and fight for the rights of the players to get a fair deal.

    He was one of the first to fight for the safety of those forced to play in dangerous sweltering weather – of the sort experienced at the 1986 World Cup in Mexico. He was the first player to be prepared to shout from the rooftops his belief that Fifa was rotten to the core.

    And he did it well before FBI investigators began uncovering corruption within football’s world governing body. He did it at a time when no-one wanted to rock the boat.

    He rebelled because he believed in a sense of natural justice. He believed it was the footballers who should be the stars of the show and not the governing bodies. Throughout his career, he fought for a fairer deal, for more respect for talented players, including himself.

    Napoli would prove to be his greatest club triumph but also the scene for his saddest decline. He made Napoli and Napoli made him… and then they broke him. And he broke himself.

    In his first season, the club struggled to work with him, unwilling to take on board his obvious talent. They finished eighth.

    So it might be fair to say that Maradona’s peak started after that, in the 1985-86 season, when the team clicked. Then they began to understand how important he was to the club, and finished third the following year.

    And then on the back of Argentina’s 1986 World Cup triumph, he led Napoli to their first Scudetto. By way of proving it was no fluke, he led them to that season’s Coppa Italia as well.

    This was in 1987. Trapped in a goldfish bowl of a city where he could not move without being pursued by a mix of fans and paparazzi, he had resorted to taking cocaine in the toilet of his luxury home. He was already addicted, had started to miss training and was now surrounding himself with those sycophants happy to humour him along a dark path towards self-destruction while telling him how great he was and how much fun he was having.

    He was already decaying.

    He still managed to secure another championship with Napoli in 1989-90. But he was a shadow of the player he had been a few years earlier.

    “Just imagine,” he told me with more than a small sense of regret, “what I could have been, what I could have achieved if I had been clean.”

    It is all part of the puzzle that is Maradona and what makes researching my book about him so fascinating.

    Who was he really? Against England, he was a streetwise rewriter of rules and then a genius, all within less than 250 seconds. As a footballer and a man, he lived a life that hit the very highest of peaks before descending into the deepest, darkest troughs of despair. He was unable to cope with the god-like status bestowed upon him, yet was seemingly incapable of surviving without it.

    He was misunderstood. As a result of being misunderstood, he felt he was unloved. It is impossible to find any other player who represented so many things to so many people, who lived the dream he wanted, the one they wanted too.

    But what I will remember most is not the blunt, rude, overbearing character he could undoubtedly be but rather the man who was kind and considerate. I remember the man prepared to ignore a dozen or so Argentina shirts put out for him to sign and instead pick the top of my beloved Biggleswade United, the non-league club where I am chairman, and then ask me if I wanted him to be photographed with him holding it up.

    We will not see his like again.

    BBC

  • Retire No. 10 shirt after Maradona death – Villas-Boas

    Retire No. 10 shirt after Maradona death – Villas-Boas

    Olympique de Marseille manager, Andre Villas-Boas has called on FIFA to retire the number 10 shirt from the game to honour Argentine great Diego Maradona.

    Maradona died aged 60 on Wednesday after suffering a heart attack.

    He was regarded as one of the greatest players of all time, with fans in Argentina referring to him as ‘El Dios’ – which means ‘The God’.

    Maradona’s former club Napoli have not used the No. 10 shirt since 2000 as a mark of respect for the player who guided them to several trophies.

    “Maradona, yes it is tough news, I would like FIFA to retire the number 10 shirt in all competitions, for all teams,”

    “It would be the best homage we could do for him. He is an incredible loss for the world of football.”

    FIFA has previously said it would not allow Argentina to dispense with the number.

  • Pope Francis recalls emotional moment spent with Maradona

    Pope Francis recalls emotional moment spent with Maradona

    Pope Francis remembers soccer legend and fellow Argentine Diego Maradona with affection and is keeping him in his prayers, the Vatican said on Wednesday.

    Maradona, who died on Wednesday at his home in Argentina following a heart attack, met the pope several times at the Vatican after Francis was elected in 2013 as Latin America’s first pope.

    “The pope was informed about the death of Diego Maradona, he recalls the times he met him in these past years with affection, and he is remembering him in his prayers,” Vatican spokesman Matteo Bruni said.

    Francis is a lifelong fan of the Buenos Aires San Lorenzo soccer team.

    The official Vatican News website ran a story of Maradona’s death on its front page with a headline calling him “soccer’s poet”.

    It called Maradona “an extraordinary player but a fragile man,” a reference to his struggle with drugs.

    Maradona travelled to Rome several times to take part in several benefit games called “Matches for Peace,” whose proceeds went to a papal charity for education in developing countries.

    The proceeds were also for victims of the 2016 earthquake in central Italy.

    Maradona also gave the pope a signed jersey with a dedication that read in Spanish: “To Pope Francis, with all my affection and (wishes for) much peace in the world.”

    Before one match he told Vatican Radio: “I think we all feel something in our hearts when we see wars, when we see the dead.

    “I think this match will put to rest the notion that we soccer players don’t do anything for peace … a soccer ball is worth more than 100 rifles.”

  • BREAKING: Football legend, Diego Maradona is dead

    BREAKING: Football legend, Diego Maradona is dead

    Football legend Diego Maradona has sadly passed away at the age of 60 on Wednesday.

    The former Argentina attacking midfielder and manager had successful surgery on a brain blood clot earlier in November.

    It was then announced he was to be treated for alcohol dependency.

    One of the greatest players of all time, Maradona was captain when Argentina won the 1986 World Cup, producing a series of sublime individual performances.

    He played for Barcelona and Napoli during his club career, winning two Serie A titles with the Italian side.