Diego Armando Maradona (Spanish pronunciation: [ˈðjeɣo maɾaˈðona]; born 30 October 1960) is a former Argentine  football player. He is widely regarded as one of the greatest football  players of all time. Over the course of his professional club career  Maradona played for Argentinos Juniors, Boca Juniors, Barcelona, Napoli,  Sevilla and Newell's Old Boys, setting world-record contract fees. In  his international career, playing for Argentina, he earned 91 caps and  scored 34 goals.
His  parents are Diego Maradona Snr and Dalma Salvadore Franco. His father  is of Mestizo extraction. His maternal great-grandfather Mateo Kariolić  was born in Korčula, Dalmatia, today's Croatia (possibly then in the  Austrian Empire), and emigrated to Argentina, where Maradona's  grandmother Salvadora was born. Salvadora named her daughter Dalma after  the Croatian region, after whom Maradona named his eldest daughter.
Maradona  married long-time fiancée Claudia Villafañe on 7 November 1989 in  Buenos Aires, after the birth of their daughters, Dalma Nerea (born on 2  April 1987) and Giannina Dinorah (born on 16 May 1989), by whom he  became a grandfather in 2009. In his autobiography, Maradona admits he  was not always faithful to Claudia, even though he refers to her as the  love of his life.
Maradona  and Villafañe divorced in 2004. Daughter Dalma has since asserted that  the divorce was the best solution for all, as her parents remained on  friendly terms. They traveled together to Napoli for a series of homages  in June 2005 and were seen together on many other occasions, including  the Argentina matches during 2006 FIFA World Cup.
During  the divorce proceedings, Maradona admitted he was the father of Diego  Sinagra (born in Naples on 20 September 1986). The Italian courts had  already so ruled in 1993, after Maradona refused to undergo DNA tests  for proving or disproving his paternity. Diego Jr. met Maradona for the  first time in May 2003 after tricking his way onto a golf course in  Italy where Maradona was playing. After the divorce, Claudia embarked on  a career as a theatre producer, and Dalma is seeking an acting career;  she has expressed her desire to attend the Actor's Studio in Los  Angeles. His younger daughter, Giannina, is now engaged to Atletico  Madrid striker Sergio Agüero, with whom she has a son, Benjamin, born in  Madrid on 19 February 2009. His son Diego Sinagra is a footballer in  Italy.
He  played in four FIFA World Cup tournaments, including the 1986  tournament, where he captained Argentina and led them to their victory  over West Germany in the final, winning the Golden Ball award as the  tournament's best player. In that same tournament's quarterfinal round,  he scored both goals in a 2–1 victory over England that entered football  history, though for two different reasons. The first goal was via an  unpenalized handball known as the "Hand of God", while the second goal  was a 60 m (66 yd) goal through six England players, voted "The Goal of  the Century".
Maradona  is considered one of the sport's most controversial and newsworthy  figures. He was suspended from football for 15 months in 1991 after  failing a drug test, for cocaine, in Italy, and he was sent home from  the 1994 World Cup in the USA after testing positive for ephedrine.  After retiring from playing on his 37th birthday in 1997, he gained  weight, suffered ill health and the effects of cocaine use. In 2005, a  stomach stapling operation helped control his weight gain, and he  overcame his cocaine addiction. His outspoken manners have sometimes put  him at odds with journalists and sport executives. Although he had  little managerial experience, he became head coach of the Argentina  national team in November 2008, and held the job for eighteen months,  until his contract expired after the 2010 World Cup.
Maradona  was born in Lanús, but raised in Villa Fiorito, a shantytown on the  southern outskirts of Buenos Aires, to a poor family that had moved from  Corrientes Province. He was the first son after three daughters. He has  two younger brothers, Hugo (el Turco) and Eduardo (Lalo), both  of whom were also professional football players. At age 10, Maradona was  spotted by a talent scout while he was playing in his neighborhood club  Estrella Roja. He became a staple of Los Cebollitas (The  Little Onions), the junior team of Buenos Aires's Argentinos Juniors. As  a 12-year-old ball boy, he amused spectators by showing his wizardry  with the ball during the halftime intermissions of first division games.
Maradona  played his first World Cup tournament in 1982. In the first round,  Argentina, the defending champions, lost to Belgium. Although the team  convincingly beat Hungary and El Salvador to progress to the second  round, they were defeated in the second round by Brazil and by eventual  winners Italy. Maradona played in all five matches without being  substituted, scoring twice against Hungary, but was sent off with 5  minutes remaining in the game against Brazil for serious foul play.
Maradona  captained the Argentine national team to victory in the 1986 FIFA World  Cup, winning the final in Mexico against West Germany. Throughout the  1986 World Cup Maradona asserted his dominance and was the most dynamic  player of the tournament. He played every minute of every Argentina  game, scored 5 goals and made 5 assists. After scoring two goals in the  2–1 quarter-final win against England his legend was cemented.
Maradona  captained Argentina again in the 1990 FIFA World Cup. An ankle injury  affected his overall performance, and he was much less dominant than  four years earlier. Argentina was almost eliminated in the first round,  only qualifying in third position from their group. In the round of 16  match against Brazil, Claudio Caniggia scored the only goal after being  set up by Maradona. 
In  the quarter final, Argentina faced Yugoslavia, the match ending 0–0  after 120 minutes, and Argentina advancing on penalty kicks, despite  Maradona missing one of the penalties in the shootout with a weak shot  at the centre of the goal. The semifinal against the host nation Italy  was also resolved on penalties after a 1–1 draw; this time, Maradona was  successful with his effort, daringly placing the ball at exactly the  same spot as his missed penalty in the previous round. In the final,  Argentina lost 1–0 to West Germany, the only goal being a penalty by  Andreas Brehme in the 85th minute after a controversial foul on Rudi  Völler.
At  the 1994 FIFA World Cup Maradona played in only two games, scoring one  goal against Greece, before being sent home after failing a drug test  for ephedrine doping. In his autobiography, Maradona argued that the  test result was due to his personal trainer giving him the power drink  Rip Fuel. His claim was that the U.S. version, unlike the Argentine one,  contained the chemical and that, having run out of his Argentine  dosage, his trainer unwittingly bought the U.S. formula. FIFA expelled  him from USA '94 and Argentina were subsequently eliminated in the  second round. Maradona has also separately claimed that he had an  agreement with FIFA, on which the organization reneged, to allow him to  use the drug for weight loss before the competition in order to be able  to play. According to Maradona, this was so that the World Cup would not  lose prestige because of his absence. This allegation has never been  proven.
























No comments:
Post a Comment