Personal details
Full name Diego Armando Maradona
Date of birth 30/10/1960
Place of birth Buenos Aires, Argentina
You
hear the name Maradona and what do you think of? Number 10 shirt?
Cocaine? The best player ever? Or ‘that’ goal? Diego Maradona is one of,
if not, the greatest footballer the world has ever seen. His
skill is completely unfathomable and the way he controlled every single
game in which he played, had never been seen before and hasn’t been seen
since. Whatever you think of when you hear the name, you can rest
assured that the word "legend" is never far from your thoughts.
From the streets to the stadiums
Diego
Armando Maradona sounds like a stage name to us now but to those in the
shantytowns on the outskirts of Buenos Aires, Diego was one boy in
thousands, using football as an escape from poverty. It wasn’t long
before he was spotted at his local club and he was asked to play for
junior team, Argentinos Juniors, when he was only 12. He remained at
this club for five years, before being snapped up by the biggest club in
Argentina, Boca Juniors, for the princely sum, at the time, of £1
million. He helped them to become league winners and was starting to
attract the attention of the rest of the world.
He was quick,
he was strong and he was more skilful than anyone in the whole league.
His height wasn’t that great but he made it work to his advantage. It
meant he could stop and start with sudden bursts of strength and speed.
He was a nightmare for defenders at such a young age and with very
little top-flight experience, he was a rapidly growing talent.
Europe called and Diego answered
Barcelona
waved a record-breaking £5 million in Boca’s direction and the
Argentines released Diego in 1982. Although he helped Barcelona to win
their national cup competition, he didn’t get on too well there and
repeating bouts of sickness meant it was time to move on again and
sooner than expected.
In 1984, southern Italian club Napoli
made Barcelona an offer they couldn’t refuse. It was another record
breaker: £6.9 million for the star, but he was worth every single penny.
With Maradona leading the charge, Napoli finally over-took their
northern rivals and were crowned Serie A league winners twice, Coppa
Italia winners once and UEFA and Italian Supercup winners. However,
Maradona started to fall from grace during the late eighties in Naples,
and it would sadly become the beginning of the end for the legend.
His beloved Argentina
Maradona
is much more famous for playing for his country than for a club team.
He made Argentina one of the greatest teams ever, during the 1980s and
no team looked forward to playing against the likes of Diego.
He
began his international playing career at only 18 and made an immediate
impression during the Football World Youth Championships. When he was
22, he played in all of the World Cup matches, showing the world what he
was capable of, even though one of those things was being sent off.
The
next World Cup in 1986 was to be Maradona’s defining moment though. He
captained his country in every minute of every game and finally they
defeated West Germany in the final. Maradona scored five goals in the
campaign.
His two most famous moments ever, came against
England in their 2-1 win in the quarter-finals. Maradona’s two goals
couldn’t have been more different. They perfectly represent the man’s
entire career. The first was that famous ‘Hand of God’, where he seemed
to head the ball into the net using his hand. The second was a
masterpiece of football and was voted Best Goal of the Century in 2002
by Fifa. Here is the first one and here is the second.
In
the next World Cup in 1990, Maradona was by no means at his best. He
was carrying an ankle injury, yet he rallied his team and they still
made it to the final, but lost to their previous finalists West Germany.
Although Maradona did play in World Cup 94 in USA, he was
kicked out of the tournament after playing in two games, for failing a
drugs test. He professed his innocence but the world knew by now that
the legend was dependent on drugs. His retirement beckoned.
Cocaine on the Brain
No
one knows when cocaine started to become a real problem for Diego
Maradona, but it’s thought he dabbled whilst in Argentina, then a bit
more in Spain and finally, with the organised crime outfits in Naples in
the eighties, it really became an issue. On top of drugs, Maradona was
also at the centre of a row over an illegitimate son he had in Italy. He
married the “love of his life” Claudia Villafane in 1989 and they had
two daughters together. However, the scandal surrounding the
illegitimate son, as well as many other alleged affairs, meant the pair
divorced in 2004, but remained amicable friends afterwards.
When
Maradona stopped playing, he tried his God-like hand at coaching and
returned to his beloved home club, Boca Juniors. However that also ended
in upset and in him having to leave earlier than he had hoped, due to
disagreements between himself and the other staff.
So what has become of him now?
Maradona
spent most the 2000s fighting his cocaine addiction. He spent many
months in rehab clinics in Cuba amongst other places. In 2004 he
suffered a severe heart-attack at only 44. He survived the attack, but
then drink problems began too. He was in and out of hospital for the
next few years. In May 2007 he went in front of Argentine TV claiming he
had kicked every drug and he was completely clean.
A
tortured genius is common in many areas of the arts but not always
associated with sport. Diego Maradona is an exception in more ways than
one. He was one of the greatest men to have ever put a football to his
feet and he will forever remain that way, no matter what he did or did
not do off the pitch.
Years | Club |
---|---|
1969-1976 | Argentinos Juniors |
Years | Club | Appearances | Goals |
---|---|---|---|
1976-1981 | Argentinos Juniors | 166 | 116 |
1981-1982 | Boca Juniors | 40 | 28 |
1982-1984 | Barcelona | 58 | 38 |
1984-1991 | Napoli | 159 | 115 |
1992-1993 | Sevilla | 29 | 7 |
1993 | Newell’s Old Boys | 7 | 0 |
1995-1997 | Boca Juniors | 31 | 7 |
Years | Club | Appearances | Goals |
---|---|---|---|
1977-1994 | Argentina | 91 | 34 |
Years | Club |
---|---|
1994 | Mandiyu de Corrientes |
1995 | Racing Club de Avellaneda |
Individual Awards and Honours
- 1979 Golden Ball for Best Player of the FIFA Under-20 World Cup
- 1979 Argentine Football Writers’ Footballer of the Year
- 1979 South American Footballer of the Year
- 1979 Argentine League Top Scorer
- 1980 Argentine Football Writers’ Footballer of the Year
- 1980 Argentine League Top Scorer
- 1981 Argentine Football Writers’ Footballer of the Year
- 1981 Argentine League Top Scorer
- 1986 Argentine Football Writers’ Footballer of the Year
- 1986 South American Footballer of the Year
- 1986 Argentine Sports Writers’ Sportsman of the Year
- 1986 Golden Ball
- 1986 World Player of the Year
- 1987 Best Football in the World
- 1987 Serie A Top Scorer
- 1989 South American Footballer of the Year
- 1990 South American Footballer of the Year
- 1992 South American Footballer of the Year
- 1996 Golden Ball, services to football
- 1999 Argentine Sports Writers’ Sportsman of the Century
- 2000 People’s Choice Best Footballer of the Century
- 2002 FIFA Goal of the Century
- 2005 Argentine Senate Lifetime Achievement
Team Awards
- 1979 FIFA World Youth Championship
- 1979 75th Anniversary FIFA Cup
- 1986 FIFA World Cup
- 1993 Artemio Franchi Trophy
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar