1986 Maradona 10 Home Jersey Argentina | maillots Vintage,Retro Football Shirts,MARADONA shirt,RONALDO vintage shirt

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Diego Maradona, in full Diego Armando Maradona, (born October 30, 1960, Lanus, Buenos Aires, Argentina"died November 25, 2020, Tigre, Buenos Aires), Argentine football (soccer) player who is generally regarded as the top footballer of the 1980s and one of the greatest of all time. Renowned for his ability to control the ball and create scoring opportunities for himself and others, he led club teams to championships in Argentina, Italy, and Spain, and he starred on the Argentine national team that won the 1986 World Cup.

Maradona displayed football talent early, and at age eight he joined Las Cebollitas (※The Little Onions§), a boys' team that went on to win 136 consecutive games and a national championship. He signed with Argentinos Juniors at age 14 and made his first-division debut in 1976, 10 days before his 16th birthday. Only four months later he made his debut with the national team, becoming the youngest Argentine ever to do so. Although he was excluded from the 1978 World Cup-winning squad because it was felt that he was still too young, the next year he led the national under-20 team to a Junior World Cup championship.

Let’s just say that without Maradona, Argentina would have no chance of winning the 1986 World Cup. That’s how great he is.” Yet, Maradona hadn’t even shown his best form in the tournament at that point.

In a career littered with highlights, Diego Maradona's genius stood out more than ever during four glorious weeks in the searing heat of Mexico's 1986 summer.

10 - Diego Maradona was involved in 10 goals at the 1986 World Cup (5 goals, 5 assists), no player has been involved in as many goals in a single men's World Cup since. Greatest

At the beating heart of Argentina's national team, Maradona captained his country to victory in the 13th World Cup, scoring five goals and assisting as many. No player has contributed more at the sharp end of the pitch in the tournament since.

It's become almost a reflex among a litany of football fans to dispel suggestions that the triumphant Argentina of 1986 were more than a one-man team. While there were certainly talented players who didn't don the number ten shirt, Maradona's influence is borne out in the numbers.

Alongside scoring or assisting ten of the teams 14 goals that summer, Maradona either took or created 57 of the 101 shots Argentina racked up across their seven matches in the tournament (via Opta).

Going into the World Cup, doubts about Maradona’s fitness loomed. The then 25-year-old was thought to have needed an operation on his right knee or risk breaking down mid-game. Argentina then lost the fierce, combative Daniel Passarella - captain of the 1978 World Cup winning side - on the eve of the tournament to illness and injury, heaping even more of the spotlight on Maradona.

Expectations back in Argentina weren't high. Or rather, that's the picture Maradona painted. The nation's captain described how fans watched Argentina's opening game against South Korea 'with their eyes half-closed' in his autobiography. Had they been able to sneak a peak, onlookers would have been treated to the glorious sight of an imperious display from their number ten, as Maradona laid on all three goals in a comfortable victory.

El Diego failed to either score or assist in just one of Argentina's seven games that summer. Yet, he could scarcely have come closer. Maradona started the move in the build up to the only goal in the round of 16 clash against Uruguay with a classic dribble. In the same match, he struck the crossbar, teed Jorge Valdano up for a golden chance the striker squandered and even had a goal for himself dubiously ruled out.

Before England’s quarter-final meeting with Argentina, their manager Sir Bobby Robson laid out the rather daunting task he was faced with: “I’ve got 24 hours to devise a way to stop Maradona," as quoted by Brain Glanville's The Story of the World Cup. "It won’t be easy. Other teams have already tried everything. They’ve assigned one man to mark him, they’ve closed down space, they’ve let him go while attempting to cut off his service. To no avail…

Maradona’s talent was so great Argentina’s manager essentially created a new formation just to get the best out of his incredible number ten. Like most things in football (and life) there isn’t one, true creator of the 3-5-2 system, however, Carlos Bilardo’s Argentina were certainly one of the first to play and thrive in this formation.

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