Diego Maradona Hospitalized in Argentina

Diego
Maradona has been hospitalized, his doctor confirmed on Monday.
The former
Argentine international, who turned 60 on Friday, was admitted to a clinic in
the city of La Plata, about 60 kilometers from Buenos Aires, according to his
personal doctor Leopoldo Luque.
Luque ruled
out that Maradona, who is currently the head
coach of Gimnasia y Esgrima de La Plata is suffering from Covid-19 or a
respiratory problem and clarified that he willingly was admitted for a general
check-up.
The doctor
also confirmed that Maradona will spend Monday night at the Ipensa private
clinic.
In terms of
memorable moments, not many footballers have delivered like 'The Golden Boy'
Maradona.
There was
his "Hand of God" goal against England at the 1986 World Cup. Quickly
followed by his mazy, mesmerizing, weaving goal in the same game, that's viewed
as one of the greatest ever scored.
Perhaps no
wonder then that when he returned as a manager of a club against a team he had
previously played for, Maradona was presented with a throne to sit
on during the game.
Widely
considered one of the best players of all time, where his highs resulted in
World Cup victories and a remarkable Serie A title for Napoli, but the colorful
life Maradona has lived off the field has led to extreme lows, notably with
issues with addiction, substance abuse, illegitimate children, and feuds over
money.
An
unacknowledged son, photo ops with the mafia, and cocaine binges were all
documented in British Oscar-winning film-maker Asif Kapadia's documentary on
Maradona's time at Napoli, arguably the period of his footballing career where
he had the most success.
But before
the diminutive Argentine became one of the most recognizable people in the
world, he was just a "little Black kid from the slum," in the words of
his former fitness coach Fernando Signorini.
Born 1960 in
the Villa Fiorito area of Buenos Aires, Maradona says football was his
"salvation" which helped him to raise his family out of poverty
before leaving for a world record transfer fee to Barcelona in 1982.
After being
ravaged by injuries at the Catalan club, he was signed by Napoli, or, as one
newsreader put it: "The poorest city in Italy buys the most expensive
player in the world."
During his
time at Napoli, he almost singlehandedly won the club it's first-ever Serie A
title followed that up with its second a year later, won the UEFA Cup, and won
the World Cup with Argentina in 1986.
And while he
is just one of many world-class Argentine forwards he shot to prominence after
Real Madrid great Alfredo Di Stefano and before Barcelona supremo Lionel Messi
it is Maradona's chutzpah which separates him from the rest.
"If he
hosts a TV show, it's the most amazing and surreal TV show anybody has ever
seen," Argentine journalist Marcela Mora y Araujo wrote for CNN.
"If he
enters a room, people stand in ceremony and tell the tale for years after of
how they were in the room when he entered it. Power. Charm. Talent. And the
ability to be seen to be frail, vulnerable, and imperfect with it."
He was a
household name before it, but the 1986 World Cup in Mexico was where Maradona
shot to stardom.
A
26-year-old at the peak of his powers, Maradona scored twice en route to the
quarterfinals. And it was in that iconic game against England where he took
center stage.
As Mora y
Araujo wrote, "As shocking as it was unfair, the tension only rises as the
fans inside the stadium and watching on TV wonder if the goal will stand."
And if his
first goal showed his impish, cheeky side, Maradona's "Goal of the
Century" that followed just four minutes later showed the brilliance of
the man.
Receiving
the ball on the halfway line, Maradona dribbled past seven English defenders
before slotting past Shilton
"Each
one 'left for dead' as the English commentator said at the time. Each one with
a stunned look in their face, a mixture of horror that this was being done
against them and admiration that they had such exclusive access to witness this
marvel," Mora y Araujo said.
While he was
playing the best football of his life in Mexico, Maradona's personal life was
not going so well.
His mistress
Cristiana Sinagra was back in Italy, heavily pregnant with Diego Armando
Maradona Sinagra. For years he refused to acknowledge paternity and did not
meet his son until 2003.
Kapadia's
film shows occasions when Maradona came into contact with the Camorra the
Neapolitan mafia with the documentary flashing up photographs of the
footballer smiling alongside members of the crime syndicate.
As a Napoli
player at the height of his addiction he would party from Sunday to Wednesday,
Maradona describing how he would return home and lock himself in the bathroom
to hide from his infant daughters.
Following a
failed drug test in 1991 and a 15-month ban from football, his career on the
pitch fizzled out. While he had stints in Spain and back in Argentina, he
failed to reclaim that form which dazzled fans and opponents.
A nomadic
managerial career has followed his playing career. It has taken him from the
Argentina and Mexico to the United Arab Emirates, with each club laying out the
red carpet or the throne in Newell's Old Boys' case for the footballing legend.
FROM edition.cnn.com/2020/11/03/football/diego-maradona-hospitalized-spt
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