Diego Maradona, World Cup winner and football icon, dies aged 60

Diego Maradona, one of the greatest and most colourful footballers of all times, has died, according to reports.
Diego MaradonaDiego Maradona
Diego Maradona

He was 60 years old.

Maradona won the World Cup as captain of Argentina in 1986.

The Argentina World Cup winner and the national team’s former manager had been in hospital in Buenos Aires after surgery to remove a blood clot on the brain earlier this month.

Diego Maradona holds up the World Cup after Argentina beat West Germany in the World Cup Final in Mexico. Former Argentina player and manager Diego Maradona has died aged 60, the Argentinian Football Association has announced. (Picture: PA)Diego Maradona holds up the World Cup after Argentina beat West Germany in the World Cup Final in Mexico. Former Argentina player and manager Diego Maradona has died aged 60, the Argentinian Football Association has announced. (Picture: PA)
Diego Maradona holds up the World Cup after Argentina beat West Germany in the World Cup Final in Mexico. Former Argentina player and manager Diego Maradona has died aged 60, the Argentinian Football Association has announced. (Picture: PA)

The AFA said on Twitter: “The Argentine Football Association, through its president Claudio Tapia, expresses its deepest sorrow for the death of our legend, Diego Armando Maradona. You will always be in our hearts.”

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Maradona is widely regarded as one of the greatest footballers of all time and was the inspiration for Argentina’s World Cup success in Mexico in 1986. He also led the country to the final of the 1990 tournament in Italy and managed them in South Africa in 2010.

Maradona’s successes made him a global star and a national hero in Argentina but his career was also blighted by controversies on and off the field.

His ‘Hand of God’ goal against England in the 1986 quarter-finals, when he pushed the ball into the net with his hand, earned him infamy - although he followed up by scoring the ‘goal of the century’, a remarkable solo effort, in the same game.

His international playing career ended in shame when he failed a drugs test at the 1994 World Cup in the United States and he was notorious for a wayward lifestyle. He was also banned from football in 1991 after testing positive for cocaine while playing for Napoli.

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However, he remained a revered figure at the Italian club, where he won two Serie A titles.

He also played for Barcelona, Sevilla, Boca Juniors and Newell’s Old Boys and was most recently manager of Gimnasia y Esgrima in La Plata, Argentina.

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