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Diego Maradona RIP

SlotBadger

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Jul 24, 2013
14,010
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Ally Gold mentioned Poch posted something on his sons IG so I went and found it. Im now crying.

For anyone who can’t be arsed to click Instagram links...
(Please give @yankspurs‘s original post the like)
435AB9F6-F220-4908-8838-ABF3155514B0.jpeg
 

Spartan Spurs

MOLLON LAVEH
May 20, 2015
279
905
I would put Pele, Messi, Ronaldo, Best, Cruyff, Maradona, Beckenbauer all in the same group. It depends on the era
Winning world cups is one thing so Pele is the greatest but some players like Best could only win certain honours yet he was as good as if not better than than all on my choices. Even up to a few years ago Greaves held the record for the amount of goals scored in the major leagues in the world. Its all subjective and what makes a player great.

Yes, it's all subjective.
I recall Best replying to being compared to Pele. To paraphrase Best: "if I had been born ugly, the world would not had heard of Pele".

It speaks to his ability & the allure of fame
 

SlotBadger

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Jul 24, 2013
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Strangely, although he was a few years above me, Tom lived nearby and we went to the same school, so a load of us would walk home together, but the only time I‘ve heard about him in the last ten years is when someone posts his tweets or articles on Spurs Community (where I’ll inevitably come in to repeat the same story about knowing him. So, until next time...). :D
 

Gassin's finest

C'est diabolique
May 12, 2010
37,631
88,599
Lengthy excerpt from Soccer in Sun and Shadow, by the seminal Eduardo Galeano:

He played, he won; he peed, he lost. Ephedrine turned up in his urinalysis and Maradona was booted out of the 1994 World Cup. Ephedrine, though not considered a stimulant by professional sports in the United States or many other countries, is prohibited in international competitions.

There was stupefaction and scandal, a blast of moral condemnation that left the whole world deaf. But somehow a few voices of support for the fallen idol managed to squeak through, not only in his wounded and dumbfounded Argentina, but in places as far away as Bangladesh, where a sizable demonstration repudiating FIFA and demanding Maradona’s return shook the streets. After all, to judge and condemn was easy. It was not so easy to forget that for many years Maradona had committed the sin of being the best, the crime of speaking out about things the powerful wanted kept quiet, and the felony of playing lefthanded, which according to the Oxford English Dictionary means not only “of or pertaining to the left hand” but also “sinister or questionable.”

Diego Armando Maradona never used stimulants before matches to stretch the limits of his body. It is true that he was into cocaine, but only at sad parties where he wanted to forget or be forgotten because he was cornered by glory and could not live without the fame that would not allow him to live in peace. He played better than anyone else in spite of the cocaine, not because of it.

He was overwhelmed by the weight of his own personality. Ever since that day long ago when fans first chanted his name, his spinal column caused him grief. Maradona carried a burden named Maradona that bent his back out of shape. The body as metaphor: his legs ached, he couldn’t sleep without pills. It did not take him long to realize it was impossible to live with the responsibility of being a god on the field, but from the beginning he knew that stopping was out of the question. “I need them to need me,” he confessed after many years of living under the tyrannical halo of superhuman performance, swollen with cortisone and analgesics and praise, harassed by the demands of his devotees and by the hatred of those he offended.

The pleasure of demolishing idols is directly proportional to the need to erect them. In Spain, when Goicoechea hit him from behind — even though he didn’t have the ball — and sidelined him for several months, some fanatics carried the author of this premeditated homicide on their shoulders. And all over the world plenty of people were ready to celebrate the fall of that arrogant interloper, that parvenu fugitive from hunger, that greaser who had the insolent audacity to swagger and boast.

Later on in Naples, Maradona was Santa Maradonna, and the patron saint San Gennaro became San Gennarmando. In the streets they sold pictures of this divinity in shorts illuminated by the halo of the Virgin or wrapped in the sacred mantle of the saint who bleeds every six months. And they even sold coffins for the clubs of northern Italy and tiny bottles filled with the tears of Silvio Berlusconi. Kids and dogs wore Maradona wigs. Somebody placed a ball under the foot of the statue of Dante, and in the famous fountain Triton wore the blue shirt of Napoli. It had been more than half a century since this city, condemned to suffer the furies of Vesuvius and eternal defeat on the soccer field, had last won a championship, and thanks to Maradona the dark south finally managed to humiliate the white north that scorned it. In the stadiums of Italy and all Europe, Napoli kept on winning, cup after cup, and each goal constituted a desecration of the established order and a revenge against history. In Milan they hated the man responsible for this affront by the uppity poor: they called him “ham with curls.” And not only in Milan: at the 1990 World Cup most of the spectators punished Maradona with furious whistles every time he touched the ball, and celebrated Argentina’s defeat by Germany as a victory for Italy.

When Maradona said he wanted to leave Napoli, some people tossed wax dolls stuck with pins through his window. Prisoner of the city that adored him, and of the Camorra, the Mafia that owns it, he was playing against his heart, against his feet. That’s when the cocaine scandal erupted, and Maradona suddenly became Maracoca, a delinquent who had fooled people into thinking he was a hero.

Later on in Buenos Aires the media gave a further twist to the knife: live coverage of his arrest, as if it were a match, to the delight of those who love the spectacle of a king disrobed and carted off by the police.

“He’s sick,” they said. They said, “He’s done for.” The Messiah who came to redeem southern Italians from their eternal damnation was also the avenger of Argentina’s defeat in the Falklands by means of one sneaky goal and another fabulous one that left the English spinning like tops for several years. But when he fell, the Golden Boy was nothing but a numb-nosed, whoring phony. Maradona had betrayed the children who adored him and brought dishonor on the sport. They gave him up for dead.

But the body sat up. Once he had served his cocaine sentence, Maradona became the fireman of the Argentine squad, which was burning up its last chances to reach the ’94 World Cup. Thanks to Maradona, they made it. And at the Cup once again, as in the old days, Maradona was the best of the best until the ephedrine scandal hit.

The machinery of power had sworn to get him. He spoke truth to power and you pay a price for that, a price paid in cash with no discount. And Maradona himself gave them the excuse, with his suicidal tendency to serve himself up on a platter to his many enemies and that childish irresponsibility that makes him step in every trap laid in his path.

The same reporters who harass him with their microphones, reproach him for his arrogance and his tantrums, and accuse him of talking too much. They aren’t wrong, but that’s not why they can’t forgive him: what they really do not like are the things he sometimes says. This hot-tempered little wiseacre has the habit of throwing uppercuts. In ’86 and ’94, in Mexico and the United States, he complained about the omnipotent dictatorship of television, which forced the players to work themselves to the bone at noon, roasting under the sun. And on a thousand and one other occasions, throughout the ups and downs of his career, Maradona said things that stirred up the hornet’s nest. He wasn’t the only disobedient player, but his was the voice that made the most offensive questions ring out loud and clear: Why aren’t the international standards for labor rights applied to soccer? If it’s standard practice for performers to know how much money their shows bring in, why can’t the players have access to the books of the opulent multinational of soccer? Havelange, busy with other duties, kept his mouth shut, while Joseph Blatter, a FIFA bureaucrat who never once kicked a ball but goes about in a twenty-five-foot limousine driven by a black chauffeur, had but one comment: “The last star from Argentina was Di Stéfano.”

When Maradona was finally thrown out of the ’94 World Cup, soccer lost its most strident rebel. And also a fantastic player. Maradona is uncontrollable when he speaks, but much more so when he plays. No one can predict the devilish tricks this inventor of surprises will dream up for the simple joy of throwing the computers off track, tricks he never repeats. He’s not quick, more like a short-legged bull, but he carries the ball sewn to his foot and he has eyes all over his body. His acrobatics light up the field. He can win a match with a thundering blast when his back is to the goal, or with an impossible pass from afar when he is corralled by thousands of enemy legs. And no one can stop him when he decides to dribble upfield.

In the frigid soccer of today’s world, which detests defeat and forbids all fun, that man was one of the few who proved that fantasy too can be effective.
 

gavspur

Well-Known Member
Jun 24, 2004
5,308
8,821
Simply the best footballer ever. My first actual memories tie in with my first football memories, and that’s the ‘86 World Cup. We lived in Telford at the time, my dad and older brother weren’t big footy fans, but I was football mad. Had the England kit etc. My mum and brother went out, my dad had the game on, I was a full kit wanker, soon as they walked out I was gutted.. They had light blue shorts instead of my dark blue. I was told to shut up moaning. Then, Maradona. I’d never seen a player like him. I was running around thinking I was Lineker, with a fake bandage on my wrist. But Maradona, wow. Just wow. He floored me, like he did all of England that day. I was 5, I’ve been a fan of his ever since. It’s also why I was such a fan of Gazza. He’s our Maradona. And that will be a sad day too, when it happens. RIP DIEGO. ?
 

nferno

Waiting for England to finally win the Euros-2024?
Jan 7, 2007
7,080
10,170
RIP to the greatest footballer to have lived.

Proud that he donned our shirt, even though it was only for an exhibition game.
 

Archibald&Crooks

Aegina Expat
Admin
Feb 1, 2005
55,630
205,450
When the hand of god happened, I hated him with a passion, that lasted a few years but as is the way of things, that dimmed with time. What I still don't have time for is the utter bollocks about Shilton should have done this or that and that he's somehow to blame. The bloke cheated, it's as simple as that and for some, it taints his legacy, for others, it's added to his allure.............I sort of agree because look at us right now, we're all talking about it. Anyway, RIP Diego, one of the greatest footballers ever.

I just wish you hadn't done that.
 

olliec

Well-Known Member
Jun 20, 2012
3,600
11,817
When the hand of god happened, I hated him with a passion, that lasted a few years but as is the way of things, that dimmed with time. What I still don't have time for is the utter bollocks about Shilton should have done this or that and that he's somehow to blame. The bloke cheated, it's as simple as that and for some, it taints his legacy, for others, it's added to his allure.............I sort of agree because look at us right now, we're all talking about it. Anyway, RIP Diego, one of the greatest footballers ever.

I just wish you hadn't done that.
Let’s be honest if one of our players did that in the World Cup and got away with it we wouldn’t be pissed they cheated. I don’t hate him for doing it all. It’s upto the ref to spot it which they didn’t and he just got away with one. It just happens to be against us in a crucial tournament, but look how many players in the PL today try and get away with crap like diving, handballs etc. Even Gabriel Jesus last week but var spotted it. It doesn’t taint his legacy at all in my opinion. RIP!
 

Archibald&Crooks

Aegina Expat
Admin
Feb 1, 2005
55,630
205,450
Let’s be honest if one of our players did that in the World Cup and got away with it we wouldn’t be pissed they cheated. I don’t hate him for doing it all. It’s upto the ref to spot it which they didn’t and he just got away with one. It just happens to be against us in a crucial tournament, but look how many players in the PL today try and get away with crap like diving, handballs etc. Even Gabriel Jesus last week but var spotted it. It doesn’t taint his legacy at all in my opinion. RIP!
Yeah, well for sure, if an England player did it against Germany he'd be celebrated as a hero. But both that and what today's footballers try to get away with has absolutely nothing to do with how I felt about it thirty odd years ago :D
 
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