Diego Maradona: The Extremes of Footballing Morality & the Greatest of All Time
By 90min
Diego Maradona is Number 1 in 90min's Top 50 Greatest Players of All Time Series
Deified. Detested. Tremendous. Terrible. Loved. Loathed.
Hero. Villain.
These are the extremes of Diego Armando Maradona.
The extremes of emotions that his name evokes in you, the reader, the football fan who Maradona cheated but also did unimaginably brilliant things for.
The extremes of footballing morality he tussled with both on and off the pitch.
The extremes of the highs and lows of the life of a working class Argentine, thrust into the limelight too soon with the weight of the world on his shoulders too early, expected to take a country into an orgiastic future.
"It was a heavy weight to be so famous." (Diego Maradona's sister)
It's the aforementioned that made Maradona what he was/is/will always be.
A deified hero - the greatest footballer of all time.
A detested villain - the cheat who bastardised the sport which gave him everything.
And all of this, all of Maradona's moral complexities, Maradona's tremendous footballing artistry, the terrible cheating - the absolute everything of Diego Maradona - can be found in five short minutes of a 22nd June 1986 World Cup quarter final game between in England and Argentina.
You know the game.
During these five short minutes - between the 50th and 55th of the game - Maradona scored the two most significant goals in the history of the sport. Goals which came to define Maradona the hero, and Maradona the villain.
The short increment of time itself played out like your classic redemption movie.
Think the Marlon Brando classic 'On the Waterfront', in which Brando's character (Terry Malloy) begins the film as an amoral bum, cheating his way through life in the docklands, and ends it as a redeemed hero who fought against the crooked mob-run workers' unions to uplift his fellow man.
Think that arc, but condensed down from 147 minutes to five...and think football, not dockland workers' rights too, obviously.
As in those five minutes, Maradona went from footballing cheat, one who'd conned the fans and his fellow professionals, to a redeemed hero who uplifted the sport to new, previously unthinkable, heights.
Like Terry Malloy in 'On the Waterfront', at first, Maradona was the villain.
In the 51st minute of the game in Estadio Azteca, 'El Diego' cheated football and its fans by committing a cardinal sin of football.
The later named 'Hand of God' by the Argentine himself (in jest), Maradona leaped with Peter Shilton and, knowing he wouldn't connect with the ball any other way, punched the ball over the England number one and into the back of the net - breaking the most obvious black and white rule of the sport.
In doing so, yes, Maradona had given his nation a 1-0 lead. But he'd also thrown away his morality, his dignity, and any ounce of respect people had for him - essentially, tarnishing the beautiful game.
"I always say he’s the greatest player in history but I don’t respect him as a sportsman and I never will." (Peter Shilton)
Just as Terry Malloy did in the 147 minutes of 'On the Waterfront' though, when he righted his wrongs of not 'snitching' on mob leaders controlling the docklands for killing his friend Joey, in just five minutes, Diego Armando Maradona would right the wrongs of his footballing sin.
And he'd do so by scoring the single greatest goal of all time.
In the 55th minute, Maradona went from being irrefutably loathed - a footballer who had stolen a goal like a pickpocket and broken fans' trust in the sport and its athletes - to being irrefutably loved for giving fans the gift of the impossible - giving the world the most astonishing 12 seconds in footballing history.
Honestly, I could try and describe every feint, every shimmy, every infinitesimal detail of this goal, but no matter what I write it would pale in comparison to Victor Hugo Morales commentary of the goal. So instead, here is that, in full:
"...Maradona has the ball, two mark him. Maradona touches the ball, the genius of world soccer, dashes to the right, leaves the third, is going to pass to Burruchaga.
"It's still Maradona!
"Genius! Genius! Genius!
"Ta-ta-ta-ta-ta-ta-ta...and goooooaaaal!
"Gooooooaaaaal!
"I want to cry! Dear God! Long live soccer! Gooooooaaaaalllllll! Diegoal! Maradona!
"It's enough to make you cry, forgive me. Maradona, in an unforgettable run, the play of all time.
"Cosmic kite! What planet are you from?
"To leave in your wake so many Englishmen? So that the whole country is a clenched fist shouting for Argentina?
"Argentina 2, England 0. Diegoal, Diegoal, Diego Armando Maradona.
"Thank you God for soccer...for Maradona...for these tears...for this."
On that bone-dry Azteca pitch, in front of 114,580 spectators, in the sport's biggest and most prestigious competition, and in just five minutes, Maradona manifested himself.
He'd manifested the deified Maradona.
The detested Maradona.
The tremendous Maradona.
The terrible Maradona.
The loved Maradona.
The loathed Maradona.
The hero. The villain.
The Diego Armando Maradona.
90min's 'Top 50 Greatest Footballers of All Time' can be found here.
Number 50: Luka Modric
Number 49: John Charles
Number 48: Hugo Sanchez
Number 47: Jairzinho
Number 46: Omar Sivori
Number 45: Paolo Rossi
Number 44: Paul Breitner
Number 43: George Weah
Number 42: Kaka
Number 41: Lev Yashin
Number 40: Gunnar Nordahl
Number 39: Kevin Keegan
Number 38: Hristo Stoichkov
Number 37: Gianluigi Buffon
Number 36: Johan Neeskens
Number 35: Xavi Hernandez
Number 34: Luis Suarez
Number 33: Karl-Heinz Rummenigge
Number 32: Andres Iniesta
Number 31: Rivelino
Number 30: Bobby Moore
Number 29: Socrates
Number 28: Sandor Kocsis
Number 27: Lothar Matthaus
Number 26: Ronaldinho
Number 25: Ruud Gullit
Number 24: Bobby Charlton
Number 23: Giuseppe Meazza
Number 22: Raymond Kopa
Number 21: Romario
Number 20: Eusebio
Number 19: Marco van Basten
Number 18: George Best
Number 17: Zico
Number 16: Franco Baresi
Number 15: Cristiano Ronaldo
Number 14: Ferenc Puskas
Number 13: Paolo Maldini
Number 12: Gerd Müller
Number 11: Mané Garrincha
Number 10: Alfredo Di Stefano
Number 9: Roberto Baggio
Number 8: Michel Platini
Number 7: Ronaldo
Number 6: Zinedine Zidane
Number 5: Johan Cruyff
Number 4: Franz Beckenbauer
Number 3: Lionel Messi
Number 2: Pele