RIP – what a player, inspirational for Argentina and Napoli. The documentary is great, and a great insight into the suffocation basically in Naples, links with the Mafia etc.
Pedant mode – wasn’t his second goal v England an OG? 😃
I’m guessing the Welsh folk didnae really take to Joe Jordan either but the missing front teeth giant was another hero
I wonder if var would have picked up Diego and Joe’s misdemeanours
Any keeper could be outjumped when they weren’t expecting an arm suddenly appearing above the opponent’s head and when they expected the referee / linesman would see it and disallow the resulting goal. We wuz robbed that day.
He wouldn’t have got in the Spurs team the follow year … Clive Allen scored 49 goals !!
Saw Clive at the tip last week
It may well have been Clive Allen (can’t remember) but I remember hearing a young-at-the-time Spurs player tell a story from that game, it was Ardiles’ testimonial or something, that’s why Diego was there. Anyway, Maradona arrived with no boots and Allen had the same size feet so offered him his brand new ones, Diego refused and insisted on playing in Allen’s old ones that were about to be binned as he didn’t think it was right to take a young player’s boots off him. None of them could believe what he was capable of with a ball when they saw him up close.
I went to bed in tears after the (to my 8yr old mind) injustice of the 86 QF.
But I don’t think DM was any more of a cheat than any other sportsperson who has made a deliberate foul/dive/other. Michael Owen against Argentina in 1998 and 2002, for example.
Saw this on Reddit. Young Diego in Glasgow, 1978 just before Argentina played Scotland. He’s leaning out a window of The Grand Central Hotel looking up Hope Street.
Thought this was brilliant
That June day, at Hampden, not only did 62,000 Scottish fans get to see a global superstar in the making, Maradona also scored his first international goal. It made it 3-0, after he assisted Leopoldo Luque to score the first two. Arthur Graham got a late goal for Scotland. The final score was 3-1.
Graham recalls: ‘What I remember is being in the tunnel before the game. Argentina were world champions and had some big, tough men who looked like real footballers. Then there was this little fella who looked like a ball boy.
“He looked like a mascot, just a wee boy. I kind of acknowledged him as if to say, ‘All the best, son, you’ll need it’ — the size of him. Then he started beating players as if they weren’t there.”
Come the final whistle, Graham was magnanimous in defeat.
“I wasn’t one for swapping shirts but at the end we looked at each other as we walked back to the tunnel and did it.
“The whole crowd warmed to him because of how he’d played. I haven’t got the shirt now, it went to charity.”
My first Scotland game with my mates (had been plenty with adults) was when we beat Argentina 1-0 at Hampden, Stewart McKimmie scoring a rocket! Remember being on the train on the way up and hearing Maradona was injured and wouldn’t play, was absolutely gutted.
Its an amazing documentary , loved his early coach at Napoli stating he would effectively die for Diego but not for Maradona. To which Diego states he would still be back in the slums if it wasn’t for his alter ego Maradona. The footage of him playing tennis with Claudia was pretty touching looks like a loved up young lad, Also his dad stoking the BBQ in Mexico for the national team . He seems really endearing at times even in the Netflix series about the mexican team .
Also brings back how cool world football was in the 80’s , the strips , the wild tackles , the old skool massive stadiums and the passion I feel we have lost most of that in the modern corporate game. Loved the anti Bush T shirts he wore he really new how to wind up the establishment with his love of Castro and Guevara.
His auto biography El Diego is really worth a read. He will be missed and even my 17 year old son was choked yesterday when we found out of his passing.
Speaking of wild tackles… Goikoetxea’s infamous tackle was awful.
😱😱😱
If he played today he’d still be the best by a distance. It’s all hair gel, Instagram, play acting and tattoos now. He was hard as nails and could stand up to the hatchet men.
If he played today he’d still be the best by a distance. It’s all hair gel, Instagram, play acting and tattoos now. He was hard as nails and could stand up to the hatchet men.
I don’t know if you can really say that. It’s a completely different game now, defenders stay on their feet now, players diving in was like a gift for Diego. The fitness levels are far removed, and the consistency that the likes of Messi and Ronaldo have shown over a very long period is something that he may have struggled to match. Messi can take a two footer as well as anyone ever has.
It’s very difficult to compare, I’m not disagreeing with you, I just think comparisons are unfair.
It is difficult to directly compare but don’t forget that Maradona’s well documented off-field excesses seem to have started during long periods of being injured by horrendous tackles. He was as fit as anyone until he started falling apart. Once on the slippery slope of injuries, pain and addictions he was never the same but still better than everyone else at that time.
The level of protection he would enjoy today would certainly have given him a much longer career.
Another thing to note that at that time there weren’t many other superstars in Football so he was huge. Enzo Francescoli was probably the nearest thing to him. Players like Zico we’re towards the end of their career, others players were a little bit younger or less experienced on the world stage, like Lothar Matthaus, Prosinecki etc.
Diego Maradona was so nervous when he paid a visit to the Vatican that he had to be escorted to a side room to have a cheeky nose-up before meeting John Paul II.
If you’re wondering whether it was a smart idea for him to hoof a quick sharpener ahead of his introduction to JP2, this is how Maradona later described the encounter in his autobiography:
“So, yes, I fell out with the Pope. I went to the Vatican and I saw that the ceilings were made of gold. And I heard the Pope saying he would take care of the children, but if so, sell the ceiling, tiger! You’ve got nothing going for you. You were only a goalkeeper!”
And…
When Maradona played for Napoli he would always arrive back from Argentina carrying two footballs, which he would hold up as he got off the plane for a photo opp. Each ball contained a kilo of cocaine.
“So, yes, I fell out with the Pope. I went to the Vatican and I saw that the ceilings were made of gold. And I heard the Pope saying he would take care of the children, but if so, sell the ceiling, tiger! You’ve got nothing going for you. You were only a goalkeeper!”