The Hand of God
The Author
Jimmy Burns
was born in Madrid in 1953 and educated at Stonyhurst College Lancashire, and the London School of Economics . His
early days in journalism were with Yorkshire Television and the BBC and as a
correspondent for the Economist and the Observer . He
has worked as a foreign correspondent for the Financial Times and on the
newspaper´s labour staff , winning the "Industrial
Reporter of the Year Award" in 1990. He is currently social affairs and
employment correspondent at the Financial Times. His previous books are "The
Land That Lost Its Heroes winner of the Somerset
Maugham prize for non - fiction ;
"Beyond
the Silver River" Spain: A Literary Companion"; and the internationally acclaimed "Barca
: A People´s Passion" .
Some Facts and Statistics about Diego Maradona
Name: Diego Armando Maradona
Position: Forward
Birthdate: 30/10/1960
Birthplace: Buenos Aires - Argentina
Height: 168cm
Weight: 78kg
CLUBS:
Cebollitas
Argentinos Juniors - Argentina (76/80) 166 matches (116 goals)
Boca Juniors - Argentina
( 81, 95/97) 71 matches (35 goals)
Barcelona - Spain (82/83) 58 matches (38 goals)
Napoli - Italy
(84/91) 259 matches (115 goals)
Sevilla - Spain
(92/93) 29 matches (7 goals)
Newell's Old Boys - Argentina (93) 5 matches
1978 Top
Goalscorer of the Campeonato Metropolitano.
* 1979: Top Goalscorer of the Campeonato Metropolitano.
* 1979: Top Goalscorer of the Campeonato Nacional.
* 1979: World Champion with Argentina in the Youth World Cup.
* 1979: 'Olimpia de Oro' to the Best Argentine Footballer of
the year.
* 1979: Chosen by FIFA as the Best Player of the year in South America.
* 1979: Receives the Gold Ball as the best player of the moment.
* 1980: Top Goalscorer of the Campeonato Metropolitano.
* 1980: Top Goalscorer of the Campeonato Nacional.
* 1980: Chosen by FIFA as the Best Player of the year in South America.
* 1981: Top Goalscorer of the Campeonato Nacional.
* 1981: Receives the Trofeo Gandulla as Best Footballer of the year.
* 1981: Champion of Argentina
with Boca Juniors.
* 1983: Wins the Copa del Rey with Barcelona.
* 1985: Named Ambassador of the UNICEF.
* 1986: World Champion with Argentina.
* 1986: Wins his second 'Olimpia de Oro' to the Best Argentine
Footballer of the year.
* 1986: Named 'Distinguished Citizen' by the City of Buenos Aires.
* 1986: Receives the Golden Shoe assigned by Adidas to the Best
Footballer of the year.
* 1986: Gets the Golden Pen as Best Player in Europe.
* 1987: Italian Serie A Champion with Napoli.
* 1987: Wins the Italian Cup with Napoli.
* 1988: Top goalscorer of the Serie A with Napoli.
* 1989: Wins the UEFA Cup with Napoli.
* 1990: Italian Serie A Champion with Napoli.
* 1990: Receives the Premio Konex di Brillante for his sport skill.
* 1990: Second place in the World Cup.
* 1990: Named 'Ambassador of Sport' by the President of Argentina.
* 1990: Wins the Supercoppa Italiana with Napoli.
* 1993: Awarded as Best Argentine Footballer of all time.
* 1993: Wins the Artemio Franchi Cup with Argentina.
* 1995: Receives the Golden Ball for his career.
* 1995: Awarded as 'Master Inspirer of Dreams' by the University of Oxford.
* 1999: 'Olimpia de Platino' as Best Footballer of the
century.
* 1999: Receives from the AFA the award as best sportsman of the century
in Argentina.
* 1999: His goal of 1986 against England is chosen as the best goal
ever in the history of football.
* 2000: Elected 'FIFA best football player of the century' in
a gala ceremony in Rome
after a worldwide poll on the internet.
The life of Diego Armando
Maradona
The early steps of his Career
Diego
Armando Maradona was born in Buenos
Aires in 1960. He was
the fifth of the eight children of Diego Maradona, who is his father and a
native Indian, and Dalma Salvadora Franco. He was nicknamed 'El pibe de
oro' (the golden boy). Diego lived in Villa Fiorito, a small village
outside Buenos Aires. His uncle Cirilo gave him his first football at the age
of three! The story
says that Diego slept with the football next to him in the bed and you could notice
his skills early.
At
the age of eight was he the big star in Estrella Roja Red Star (Cebollitas). In this team, Argentina Juniors scout, Francisco Cornejo discovered
him. He said that Diego came from another planet, that he could do anything he
wanted with the ball and that he had better skills than the others. He could
also keep the ball still on his head or on the left foot as long as he wanted
to! It wasn´t only Cornejo who had seen
the art that Diego could do . The media started to record his tricks when he
was ten . During the half time in the matches in the Argentinean League , was
Diego the Half Time attraction .
At the age of nine
Diego and his friends founded the team Little Onions which was soon taken over
by Argentinos Juniors because of the fact they played so well. Ten days before
his sixteenth birthday Diego played his first match as a professional for
Argentinos Juniors. He was the youngest player in the premier division and Scored his first goal against Lucangioli, goalkeeper of San
Lorenzo de Mar del Plata.
The timing of this momentous occasion seemed to have
exceeded even his ambitions as years on he was to say 'I always knew I would
become great one day, but not so quickly'.
The first experience with the National Team and Boca Juniors
By now Maradona's reputation is growing rapidly, and in
February of 1977 he plays his first match for Argentina
against Hungary.
However, despite his enormous talent, Argentine coach Cesar Menotti does not
include him in his final squad of 22 players for the 1978 World Cup in
Argentina - saying that Maradona is too young to handle the pressures of the
world's greatest soccer tournament. A decision that was to be a wise one as
Argentina lift the famous trophy after beating Holland in the final, with Mario
Kempes being the hero of the Argentine fans - but Maradona was to have his day.
In
June of 1979, he scores his first goal for his country, in Glasgow
against Scotland, and in
September that year he leads the Argentine youth side to victory in the Youth
World Cup in Japan - beating
the USSR
3-1 in the final. In February 1981 he joins Boca Juniors.
To
avoid mistakes, let's make something clear from the beginning: Boca is
Maradona, Maradona is Boca. That story that came out from its main character,
about his sympathy to Independiente is supported by his own words: his
fascination for the skills of Bochini and Bertoni. But the truth is that in his
humble house at Azamor and Mario Bravo, in Villa Fiorito, in his family's heart
and in his own, there was only one flag that flapped coloured blue and gold. He
was raised up loving Boca, he felt, since he was young that something special
was growing between him and the people that supported Boca.They were the first
ones who made an ovation to him at a field, crying out 'Let him stay! /
Let him stay!' as an anthem during the recess between the two halves of a
match in First Division between Argentinos and. Boca.
He was only 12 years old. Years later (not many, though), with Argentinos
t-shirt on, he 'hit' a symbol of Boca, Hugo Orlando Gatti, scoring
four goals. In a single match, four moments that caused other unanimous
ovations: that of Argentinos supporters, of course. but also, that of the
people of Boca.
That's why he insisted so much until he finally got to wear that t-shirt. He
was so involved that he himself helped deal the pass. It was as follows: River
Plate was very interested in counting on Maradona for its team, giving away
whatever was needed. He only had to mention that Boca was just as enthusiast
about him (.when this was not true. Boca was not interested, and had no money
at all) to change the upcoming story.
His dream definitely came true, in an economic deal, which could easily be
considered as a legend of world economics. Millions of
dollars, bank guarantees, chilling fees.
But nothing of that was enough to pay for what he did, ever since his debut
against Talleres de Córdoba, the 22nd February, 1981. Two penalty
goals inside Boca's crowded Stadium (La Bombonera) that helped him become more
self-assured regarding his body, cause he knew he
couldn't give everything he could straight away. You could say his Boca debut with a 4-1 was brilliant.
Boca go on to win the Argentine championship later that year.
At the beginning of the match he let Miguel Angel Brindisi, his ideal partner,
be the center of attention. All the same, so that no one could doubt it, he
showed his distinction in the different games. It is the case of a match
against River, in Boca's Stadium during a rainy night the 10th of
April. When the tournament was coming to an end, the best Maradona showed up.
He defeated Ferro, a team that directed by Carlos Timoteo Griguol, wisely
managed to shift between football, basketball and chess, being a big rival. But
Boca, with Silvio Marzolini as a guide struggled, fought. He then faced the
National Tournament, with lots of trips and friendly matches. All the teams
were so tired that the way was free for the team of Kempes in River Plate.
It was never going to be long before the world sat up and
took notice of the diminutive genius, and Barcelona
were the team that got their man - signing Maradona in June 1982.So Diego left
Boca the summer of 1982, almost a year had past since he had arrived. But he
didn't leave forever.
His
time in Barcelona
At the young age of 22 in 1982 to be worth $7.2 million , Diego left at last, his destiny being Spain. Firstly,
to play in World Cup '82 and secondly, to stay in one of the wealthiest
football clubs of the world: Barcelona Football Club. It was not simple for
him. They did not make it simple indeed.
Apart from Catalan being the official language of that
beautiful Spanish region called Catlunya, outside the stadium. everyone spoke
the same dialect. Inside the field, Diego found out that for the great majority
of his team partners, running was more important than playing. More rage, less
talent. And although the rest could not learn what he knew since he was born,
he sensed that he should incorporate what everyone considered a virtue- 'Put
everything inside the field', according to the ironic definition of César
Luis Menotti- in order to transmit some of his intact magic.
It was of no help the presence of his first manager, the
German Udo Lattek. This man was more worried about the players to carry huge
medicine balls than playing with the real ones -football ones- in the matches.
Nevertheless, he succeeded. He again lighted up the spark of a fantastic and
positive discussion: many people say that what Maradona made with a ball -the
real football- in Barcelona,
could never be repeated. For example, that marvelous goal against the Real
Madrid, forever lasting: with a dribble he managed to crack the opposing
defense, that was pressing in the midfield; he ran and ran with the ball stuck
to his left foot, till he faced the goalkeeper, who looked for him far from the
goal line; with another dribble he did not let the goalkeeper touch them, nor
him nor the ball; he therefore headed towards the empty goal, his foot and the
ball being friends forever. When he was about to reach the goal line, and the
posts made shadows over him, he looked through one of the eyes he had on his
neck, just when Juan José, a long haired, heavily bearded defender of the Real
Madrid was decided to terminate with all the parts involved in that
relationship. Then, the magic: he made a sudden stop, took his foot. and his
ball out of reach for the rival and let him pass by, like a torero with a bull.
Poor Juan José he crashed against the post; and great Diego finally pushed the ball
towards the goal.
No man on earth could stop such a football player, but a
terrible illness would. Hepatitis caught him by surprise, just when he had been
showing off his magic for about three months.
He played for the first time on September 4th, 1982, being defeated
by Valencia,
at Mestalla Stadium, by 2-1. He had played 13 games and had conquered 6 goals
when he had to keep absolute rest. He returned to the fields three months
later, on March 12th, against the Betis. The team manager had
changed, as well as his possibilities to have dreams: Menotti and the League
were waiting with open arms. They could not go for all, but they got something
as a reward: the mostly desired King's Cup.
It was just a matter of starting all over again, for there
was no one who could break such a strong determination.
Yes, there was one. And it had name and surname: Andoni Goikoetxea, the
executioner of the best left foot in football history. Many people thought that
his career had come to an end on that September 24th of 1983, while
some thought that it was going to take a long time to see him again inside a
football field. Both were wrong, as his prompt return in just 106 days can be
considered as the last miracle that took place in Spain.
One thing was for sure: to keep a good relationship with president
Joseph Luis Núñez, who pretended more starring than he should, much more than
divine help was needed. And that had no possible solution. At the end of
season, in the middle of a royal battle that took place during the final match
of the King's Cup, against archrival Athletic Bilbao, on May 5th of
1984 in Madrid, everything reached to an end.After two seasons playing for Barca , Diego Maradona joined the Italian Club Napoli which
was one of the worst in the Serie A .
The
number 10 became a legend
What indeed caught his attention from that populous,
southern region he had arrived to, was the
discrimination it suffered from the rest of Italy. He felt that since the
beginning. When he traveled north with his team to play his
first game in Italian League, in the wealthy calcio, against Verona. That took place in September
16th, 1984; the adverse 3-1 score, along with the flags showed by
the rival fans, caused the mixture of both pain and eagerness inside Maradona's
blood. 'Lavatevi! have a shower, could be
read on them.
Along Diego's hand, promotion was now an insult even in
southern Italy's
dialect.
Change of mentality was so evident that, in the second season, in 1985/86, and
in association with Bruno Giordano, a forward he himself recommended,
Maradona's Napoli threatened and scared the
powerful northern teams: it ended in the third position, and between the new
number nine and Diego conquered 21 goals. Juventus, who that year resulted the
winner of the Scudetto trophy, trembled.
The final explosion occurred in the third season, in
1986/87. After being made an ambassador by UNICEF, Maradona leads Argentina to
victory in the 1986 World Cup in Mexico, beating West Germany 3-2 in the final,
but not before scoring one of the most talked about 'goals' in the history of
the game: the famous 'Hand of God' goal against England( He scored the goal
with his hand , but the referee did not notice ; After the match a journalist
interviewed him and he just said that was the hand of god which scored the
goal).
But no one can argue
with the sheer brilliance that followed it. If his first goal was questionable,
his second was the greatest goal ever scored - without question. After
collecting the ball on the halfway line, Maradona then proceeded to dance
around the entire England
team, before slotting the ball past England 'keeper Peter Shilton. A moment of magic, from a player with a magical left foot. A
factor rarely considered when talking about this goal is the state of the
playing surface in this match; to say it was uneven is an understatement - yet
Maradona had the ball under perfect control throughout his mazy run towards the
England
goal. His dream became reality and he was the World Champion with the
Argentinean A-National team .
With the help of Diego, Napoli won his first Scudetto after
a long wait that lasted for 60 years, leaving the powerful Milan behind, and setting the carnival in
Napoles free. Consecration took place in the San Paolo Stadium, on May 10th,
1987: a tie in the result was enough for it: 1-1. Since that same day, and
having no fear of heresy, the people of Napoles enthroned a new Saint: along
with San Gennaro patron saint of the city, now there was Diego. Or even better, Diecó.
Napoles, city of extremes, lived joy and frustration with a
unique passion in Maradona's fourth season, the one of 1987/88. That was
probably the best start of Diego and of the team as a whole in its lifetime.
But everything collapsed in the end, in such a way that no one could believe
it. The thing was that the Napoli started like
an unstoppable machine, breaking all sorts of records and statistics, things
that Italians are very fond of, but when the final goal appeared at hand, the
engine broke down. The Ma-Gi-Ca formula, composed by Maradona, Giordano and
Careca, the Brazilian that had just joined the club, was not enough to avoid
disaster: from the last seven matches, Napoli
lost five and ended in a tie in two. The key game that was lost was the one
against Milan,
with a result of 3-2, on May 1st, and in the very own San Paolo. The
reputation of an exceptional group was soon darkened. While many of the players
were removed from the team, Maradona- upset by the suspicion- doubled his
bet.
During his fifth season, in 1988/89, the Napoli
demonstrated that its good performance was not casual. Although it lost the
battle against the great Inter, Napoli went beyond Italian frontiers: with
Maradona, they won the first UEFA Cup in its history, making an extraordinary
campaign and defeating the German team Stuttgart.
The game of his final return was played in Germany, on May 17th,
1989. A tie in three awarded Napoli. The championship.
At that point, Diego thought that his time in the club had
reached to an end. Nevertheless, none of the team managers dared to open the
door for him to fly away. That is why he faced his sixth season in Napoli during 1989/90 with great resentment. It is known
that many times this resentment has been Maradona's fuel. And this was not
precisely the exception. Head to head with Milan, they made the decisive difference in
the end. When everyone talked about that great Napoli of Maradona, the great
Maradona of Napoli answered in his own way: winning the second scudetto in the
history of the club. Consecration took place once again in San Paolo stadium,
after defeating the Lazio by a score of 1-0, on April 29th, 1990.
From that time on the career of Diego Maradona had a change.
He led Argentina to the 1990 World Cup final but Argentina
lose 1-0 to West Germany, with Andreas Brehme scoring from the spot late on.
Loosing the World Cup- Italy
90 was like the end of the world for Maradona, he cried inside the field when
everything was over. The people in the stadium did not understand his sadness
and booed him. He said about that, I would have never imagined that there could
be so many people happy with my own sadness! .
Dark days were to follow this for
Maradona, when in 1991, he was proved positive in a dope test, and is banned
from football for 15 months.
Upon completion of his ban in 1992, he refusesd to return
to Napoli, and asked for a transfer - and
joined Spanish side Sevilla.
Nevertheless, Diego's history in Napoli
is so great, that still continues nowadays. And will continue forever.
Sevilla , a new start?
He was suspended, it was like an
Italian vendetta that forbid him to play football for fifteen months. It was
too much time for such a talent. He needed to run, he needed to shout a goal, he needed to be happy.
World Champion with Argentina,
he won everything down in Italy.
He had reached the top, heaven. He was God. He tried to become earthly again. Sevilla was the ideal destiny for that. The
idea was to play and have fun.
The 28th September, 1992 he stepped on a field
again. Sevilla welcomed him with a party. Thirty thousand people expected him
at Ramón Sánchez Pizjuán Stadium. The guest, the partenaire was Bayern Munich,
with his friend Lotthar Matthaus. A free shoot to the crossbeam showed his
talent remained untouched.
His debut in the Spanish League he made with Sevilla,
losing 2-1 against Athletic Bilbao. After about a year of Depressions he left
Sevilla in October 1993 and joins Newell's old boys in Argentina.
Back to
the roots and the end
He leaves Sevilla in October 1993 and joins Newell's old
boys in Argentina,
losing 3-1 in his first appearance against Independiente. Later that month he
makes his international comeback, playing in Sydney
against Australia in the
playoffs to qualify for the USA
1994-world cup. The match is a 1-1 draw, with the Argentine goal being credited
to inspirational play by Maradona. In November that same year, Argentina - captained by Maradona - win 1-0
against Australia
and qualify for the USA World Cup.
The idea belonged to Gringo Giusti, but anyone could have
come up with it. With his manager suit on, this Diego's former national
team-mate was in the stadium watching a Newell's match. The game was boring and
not at all transcendental, when he looked at Tota Rodriguez and said:
'This club needs an effective strike and I know the only person capable of
doing it.' That same person was, of course, football's very own surname:
Maradona. That seemed to be the best destiny. A city that
breaths and lives for football was waiting for him. Everyone in Rosario was following his
steps, even the fans of Rosario Central, Newell's archrival, forgave him for
playing in that team. 'Let's save Maradona, leprosy can heal', they
would say ironically.
Enthusiastic as a beginner, he began one of the most strict diets in his life. He lost 12 kilograms, thanks
to a Chinese man whose name is very hard to remember: Liu Guo Cheng.
On Monday September 13th, 1993, Independence Park
burst with life. Anxiety was everywhere. It was an unrepeatable evening.
Thirty thousand people were about to witness a miracle.
Maradona dressed in red and black. His small body appeared in the field, and he
felt that he could not coordinate his movements. He received an incredible
ovation that encouraged him to shyly raise up his
arms. A ball slid towards him, inviting him to do with it what no one else
could imitate. Not even that made him react. His team-mates approached him with
great admiration and threw him up high in the sky. His smile was everlasting,
like that time, nearly a decade ago in the San Paolo. People had gone just to
see him juggling with the ball.
Indio Solari gave him all the comforts he needed. Eight years, ten months and
eight days had passed for his return to Argentina to play for an Argentine
team. That took place on October 10th, 1993 at Independiente's
Stadium, the very same place where he had watched his first matches and had
been delighted with players such as Bochini and Bertoni.
He showed his enthusiasm and quality in some of his trade marked plays. No one
will forget that marvelous kick that the goalkeeper Islas saved miraculously.
That one won't be his last.
Even when his time in the club was very short and that the story seemed to be
unfinished, not a single Newell's fan could ever regret having him amongst
them, even though it was for just five games.
In 1994, when after playing well in two of Argentina's
World Cup matches - scoring a great goal against Greece in one of them - he
receives a ban for using ephedrine, a substance not allowed by FIFA. In October
1994 he takes up his first coaching job with Deportivo Mandiyú of Corrientes, resigning
just two months later.
In May 1995 he takes up his second coaching position, this
time with Racing - resigning four months later!! Obviously not content with
sitting on the sidelines, he comes back to play for Boca Juniors, with the fans
of Boca preparing a special party for him - complete with firework display -
which was held in the stadium of the 'Bombonera'. He continues to
play for Boca until August 1997, when he started the 1997/98 season in great
shape, but was once again found to be positive after yet another dope test, but
there are suspicions of a plot against him.
In October 1997 he plays his last match for Boca, winning
1-2 away against River Plate. Then later that month he decides to retire from
football on the day of his 37th birthday. In 1998 he does not play in the World
Cup, but travels to France
to commentate on the match for an Argentine TV channel. In November 1998 he
goes back to Italy
after more than 7 years. Then in 1999 he agrees to a movie about his life and
takes part in the Italian movie 'Tifosi'. Also in 1999, he received
an award from the Argentine Football Association naming him 'Best sportsman of
the century in Argentina'; his goal against England was chosen as the best goal
ever in the history of football, and the following year he was named as: 'FIFA
best footballer of the century' at a gala ceremony in Rome, after a worldwide
poll on the internet.
In May 2000, Maradona was
released from a Cuban hospital after undergoing treatment for heart
complications, as a result of drug and alcohol abuse. This highlighted the sad
fact, which as is usually the case, where there is genius, there is always a
flaw - and Diego Armando Maradona was no different. Fortunately for him, he just
happened to be one of the greatest players of all time. This website is all
about footballing talent, and Maradona had it in abundance. If you forget about
his flaws, and concentrate on what this man did on the pitch, you are left with
the one redeeming quality that set him apart from most of his peers - GENIUS.
Personal
Opinion
Usally
I hate reading , but this book was a book I really
enjoyed because of the fact that it is written about soccer . It shows very
well how Maradona lived and what he felt and I can absolutely recommend that book . At certain times it was difficult to read but all in
all it was very good to understand . About Diego Maradona , I have to say that his life was like a roller
coaster ride but what is clear is that his addiction is that of football. In a
country like Argentina
a poor kid who made it from the slums is more representative than the president
as he put it. His originating from the slums was what shaped his life and
aspirations and his main criticism has always been that many famous footballers
did not speak enough for or represented the poor. In fact many of them like him
had risen from the slums. Many hope that he recovers so that the world does not
miss its greatest footballer. For me he is one of the best
!!!