

Argentine football player and manager
Jardín Bella Vista
Diego Maradona (born 30 October 1960 in Lanús, Buenos Aires Province; died 25 November 2020 in Tigre, Buenos Aires Province) was an Argentine footballer and coach. He led Argentina to the 1986 World Cup title, turned SSC Napoli into a power in Italian football and became a figure in which sport, origin, pride, contradiction and public pressure were tightly connected. Maradona was not a smooth hero. That is part of why he remained so close to many people: an extraordinary player from modest beginnings whose greatness and vulnerability were always visible at the same time.

Maradona grew up in Villa Fiorito on the edge of Buenos Aires. Football there was not only a game, but a possibility: a ball, a pitch, a talent that could be seen. As a child he played for Las Cebollitas, the youth team of Argentinos Juniors. In 1976 he made his first-division debut shortly before his 16th birthday. Even then, the qualities that would later make him unique were visible: ball control in tight spaces, balance despite fouls, a low centre of gravity and an eye for the moment when a match changes.
In 1981 Maradona joined Boca Juniors and became a projection figure in Buenos Aires. A year later he moved to FC Barcelona. There he won the Copa del Rey in 1983, but injuries, conflicts and the physical hardness of European football made the period difficult. Barcelona mattered, but it was not the place where Maradona's legend took its final shape. That place was Naples.

When Maradona was presented by SSC Napoli in 1984, it was more than a transfer. Naples saw in him a player who could make southern Italy visible against the rich and powerful clubs of the north. With Maradona, Napoli won Serie A for the first time in 1987, along with the Coppa Italia. The UEFA Cup followed in 1989 and another Scudetto in 1990. His importance lay not only in goals and assists. He gave a club and a city the feeling that they could stand against the order of Italian football.
The 1986 World Cup became Maradona's greatest tournament. He was captain, playmaker and centre of an Argentine team that was strong, but without him would not have spoken the same football language. Against England in the quarter-final, two goals came within minutes and still cannot be separated from one another: first the illegal handball goal, then a solo run from inside his own half in which Maradona beat several opponents and the goalkeeper. One goal remains a breach of the rules; the other a moment of almost unreal bodily control. Together they show why Maradona is so difficult to classify.

Argentina won the final against West Germany 3-2, and Maradona received the Golden Ball as the tournament's best player. The title reached far beyond sport. For Argentina, only a few years after military dictatorship and the Falklands War, Maradona became a figure of national relief and self-assertion. That significance made him great, but it also made him heavily burdened. Wherever Maradona played, football quickly became politics, class, myth and personal expectation at once.
Maradona's career had deep breaks. In 1991 his time at Napoli ended after a positive cocaine test and a 15-month suspension. At the 1994 World Cup he was excluded after a positive test for ephedrine. These episodes do not belong as a footnote, but as part of the truth of his story. They show a player who suffered under fame, pressure, addictions and public appropriation. Maradona later played for Sevilla, Newell's Old Boys and Boca Juniors, ended his professional career in 1997 and remained present afterward as a coach, commentator and public figure. From 2008 to 2010 he coached the Argentine national team.
Diego Maradona died in Tigre on 25 November 2020, a few weeks after surgery for a blood clot on his brain. He was 60 years old. His death brought mourning in Argentina, Naples and far beyond; questions about his medical care were later examined in court. Maradona's legacy is therefore not simple celebration. It is the memory of a player of rare ability, of a body that translated football into motion, and of a person who was also damaged by the myth he had created.
until 2003