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  • Maradona

    Cleaning up my email I found this article...
    ===================================

    Twenty years ago today the hand of God smote England

    Jorge Valdano
    Thursday June 22, 2006
    The Guardian


    My entire qualification for writing this column is that on that day, at that
    time, I was there. And I must say that I was bored stiff because we couldn't
    get a grip on the match. When we wanted to play fast we were inaccurate,
    when we wanted to be accurate we were tedious. Eleven functionaries on each
    side trying not to make a mistake.

    On a day like that nobody expects a visit from history, but in that office
    full of bureaucrats there was one crazy man capable of anything. A crazy
    Argentinian, to boot. It is important to consider the nature of that person
    because, from that day on, Maradona and Argentina became synonymous. We are
    talking about a country with a clearly extravagant relationship with
    football, a country which made a deity of a footballer with a decidedly
    extravagant relationship with football. And that afternoon, which began so
    boringly, Maradona made extravagant through football and through Argentinian
    character.


    It all began with a long slalom, which was Maradona's natural way of running
    with a ball. Just before he reached the area, he found only opposition legs
    in his way and, seeing no way forward, knocked the ball up to me and looked
    for the return.

    The problem I had playing with Diego as a team-mate was that he turned you
    into a spectator and, when he passed you the ball, it took a moment to
    remember that you were like him - a footballer. Well, perhaps not like him,
    but a footballer none the less.

    The fact is that when I woke up, I shook a leg to try to play the one-two
    but did it so unskilfully that the ball was knocked forward by my marker.
    Looking at it in perspective, it was a smart move on my part because if I
    had touched it Maradona would have been offside. The fact is that nobody
    recognised my singular contribution, partly because I fell to the ground so
    clumsily that it embarrasses me to remember.

    Fortunately, the eyes of the people were not on me. Because from the ground
    myself, and the rest of the world, from wherever they were, saw that ball
    rise in slow motion and then begin to come down on the edge of the six-yard
    box where Peter Shilton and Maradona went to challenge for it in the air.
    There something happened which I couldn't understand but which was called a
    goal and had to be celebrated as wildly as such an unpleasant match, a World
    Cup, England deserved. Maradona ran and celebrated without much conviction,
    as if his cry contained a doubt within. Strange goal, strange cry - I still
    didn't understand much until I got to the huddle and found out why.

    From my position I suspected that Diego could not have reached up there with
    his head but at no point did I see his hand, nor God's. Any ethical
    scruples? Twenty years on we can have them, but at that moment we only felt
    joy, relief, perhaps a forced sense of justice. It was England, let's not
    forget, and the Malvinas were fresh in the memory.

    In the days before the game I said that we had "a good opportunity to
    confound the idiots" but that was just playing the intellectual. When
    emotions come into the equation, nearly all of us are idiots. Also we
    shouldn't forget that we were Argentinians, representatives of a country
    that rationalises with the word "exuberance" what in other places is called
    cheating.

    The other goal

    The office was now turned upside down but the crazy man had only just begun.
    Shortly afterwards he received a very difficult ball in the middle of the
    pitch with his back to goal. He turned, took off and got into a series of
    tight scrapes from which he escaped perfectly.

    I was accompanying him level with the far post as if I were a television
    camera tracking him. Diego assures me that he meant to pass to me several
    times but there was always some obstacle that forced him to change plans.
    Just as well. I was dazzled and I thought it was impossible (it still seems
    that way to me) that in the middle of all those problems he would have had
    me in mind.

    If he had passed me the ball as it seems Plan A called for, I would have
    grabbed it in my hand and applauded. Can you imagine? But let's not deceive
    ourselves, I am convinced that Diego was never going to release that ball.
    Throughout those 10 seconds and 10 touches, he changed his mind hundreds of
    times because that's how the mind of genius in action works.

    That celebration that put intelligence, the body and the ball in tune was an
    act of genius - but also in the most profound way, in footballing terms, of
    being Argentinian. What Maradona was doing was making Argentinians' football
    dream a reality: we love the ball more than the game and, for that reason,
    the dribble more than the pass.

    When the ball went into the net I knew, in that instant, we were present at
    a moment of great significance: Maradona had just put on Pele's crown. Aware
    of the historical moment in which I was living, I did something that
    humanity has still not recognised. I, ladies and gentlemen, took the ball
    out of the net where Maradona had put it. The focus, fortunately, was still
    elsewhere. In fact, 20 years on, the ball keeps going into the net time and
    again in the memories of those who love football . . . and there was me
    thinking I'd taken it out.
    Peter R


  • #2
    This is good!
    "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."

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    • #3
      Not put on Nascimento crown, more like borrow it fi a minute. Diego do weh Nascimento duh tree times suh him fall short ah di said accolades. Kyaan tek weh nutten from pigeon chess still wickedes lef touch a ball an John di 'Teacha' Barnes secon
      Last edited by myYout; December 3, 2008, 01:55 PM.

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      • #4
        Does anybody even remember who Pele is?

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        • #5
          Nobady need fi membah, when him duh inna di history books fi years widout tears

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