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[VIDEO] Diego Maradona documentary: official trailer released

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Brit filmmaker Asif Kapadia is responsible for two of the most acclaimed documentaries of recent memory – Senna, his brilliant delve into the life and death of Forumla One’s Ayrton Senna, and Amy, the unflinching and incisive film about Amy Winehouse. Now he’s back with Diego Maradona – a documentary constructed from 500 hours of previously unseen footage to tell the story of the footballing icon. Watch the first trailer below.

“Diego Maradona is about an uneducated streetwise kid from a shantytown, thrust into the height of worldwide fame, earning huge amounts of money, given a Godlike status, all because of his magical left foot,” says Kapadia.

Like Senna and Amy, it seems like this one won’t require viewers to have much prior knowledge going in. “It was vital to make a film about Diego which appeals to people who love football but also those who have little interest in sport or who see Maradona as a cheat. I wanted to challenge these preconceptions and to understand this complex, brilliant character – enabling him to tell his story in his own words, revealing his struggles for success but also the devastating effects of fame and fortune.”

Kapadia has once again teamed up with producer James Gay-Rees, editor Chris King, and musician Antonio Pinto to bring this one to the big screen – and it’ll end up there on 14 June.

https://www.empireonline.com/movies/news/diego-maradona-trailer-new-documentary-senna-amy-team/
 
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Diego deserves a proper feature movie on his career. An amazing yet controversial player's life like his should be shown on the big screen.
 
BUENOS AIRES - Diego Maradona decided to stay on as coach of Argentine club Gimnasia y Esgrima in a surprising about-turn on Thursday, two days after saying he was leaving his job at the struggling first division side.

“He’s going to continue at Gimnasia,” Maradona’s agent Christian Bragarnik told an Argentine radio station.

His lawyer Matias Morla told a news conference the former World Cup winner changed his mind after the candidates for club president agree to put their differences aside ahead of Saturday’s election.

Maradona took the job in September on the condition Gabriel Pellegrino stay on as club president and Pellegrino’s decision not to run caused Maradona’s surprise resignation.

The announcement prompted an outpouring of emotion from fans, many of whom turned up at the club to call on Maradona to stay.

It is not clear if Pellegrino will be the consensus candidate in the upcoming ballot.

Maradona, who won the World Cup in 1986 and is widely regarded as one of the greatest players of all time, took over the club from La Plata, just outside Buenos Aires, charged with helping them avoid relegation.

He lost his first three games in charge and although he has won three of five since, the team are still third-bottom of the league and in danger of going down.

https://ewn.co.za/2019/11/22/maradona-to-stay-on-at-gimnasia?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=twitter
 
Started watching this.

It is absolutely brilliant.

Brings back some great memories of the legend, but also some very sad times.

He was simply the greatest footballer ever.
 
great documentary, man was a total legend, to paraphrase the popular joke going around italy during his spell with napoli, after extensive drug testing doctors have claimed to havae found blood in maradonas cocaine supply.
 
Finished this today.

Fantastic viewing. Highly recommend it.

It was only going to be a matter of time before he got in the wrong hands in Naples. But, what a footballer, strength, skill and the ability to win matches on his own.
 
I am a big fan of this guy but he could've achieved more in life with more discipline.

Great trailer nonetheless.
 
Talent wise, he was the real GOAT. Messi and Ronaldo do not even come near him when it comes to natural ability and impact on matches. Its a pity that he played in a time when professionalism was not much valued and as a result he went astray.
 
Worth watching Maradona in Mexico.

Set in 2018 it shows what happened when Maradona became manager of a struggling Mexican 2nd division team.
 
Argentine football legend Maradona says he hopes the "Hand of God" can beat the coronavirus pandemic after fate helped the club he coaches avoid relegation.

Maradona's La Plata-based Gimnasia side were saved from dropping out of the Argentine top-flight after the league was restructured because of the pandemic.

The 59-year-old famously used his hand to score against England in the 1986 World Cup, labelling the act as the Hand of God.

"This happened to us [Gimnasia] and many people are calling it a new Hand of God," he said.

"I am asking for that hand to do away with the pandemic so people can get back to living their lives, with health and happiness."
 
Happy 60th Birthday to the footballing maverick and genius that is Diego Maradona!

==


The footballing maverick, genius and contradiction that is Diego Maradona celebrates his 60th birthday on Friday, a day many of us doubted this most complex of men would ever see.

His has been a life that has hit the very highest of peaks before descending into the deepest, darkest troughs of despair, unable to cope with the adulation that came with stardom and the god-like status bestowed upon him, yet seemingly incapable of surviving without it.

To understand Diego properly you have to know the enigma that is Argentina; a country that needs the Diegos of this world to be the Messiahs that can carry it to the level of greatness of which it considers itself worthy. And to appreciate that this is a man who has lived a story replete with incredible paradoxes, a host of mistakes and subsequent corrections, epic feats and anecdotes about declines and resurrections.

Which one is the real Maradona?

Diego the boy from the Buenos Aires shanty town of Villa Fiorito, a prodigiously talented street urchin and man of the people?

Or maybe Maradona the god, the myth, the great avenger and the embodiment of the people's dreams, aspirations and ultimate confirmation that Argentina is the best country in the world?

Maybe both are.

In 1968 Francis Cornejo, the coach of a youth side affiliated to Argentinos Juniors that he called Cebollitas (little onions) had to travel to Villa Fiorito to check the kid's age on his ID. "He's tiny, there's no way he's eight," was his stunned reaction as he watched him play in a trial.

His mother Dalma Salvadora Franco confirmed his age by showing them Diego's birth certificate from Evita Hospital. Francis had just performed the footballing equivalent of striking oil. He had found a gem that could slot into his side. From March 1969 onwards, the team did not tire of winning, recording a 136-game unbeaten run.

In his youth, Maradona's dad, or as his friends called him Chitoro, piloted a ferry that moved cattle from village to village and later on he went on to work in a chemical factory, where he barely earned enough to make ends meet for his large family in the shanty town where they lived.

The success of his son, the fifth of eight children, meant that apart from becoming the "king of the barbecue", he would never work again. By the time Diego was 15 he had already become the head of the family and told his dad to be by his side.

From an early age Diego learned that leadership was a natural step forward, particularly when there was a vacuum to fill, no matter what your age. "We went to play in Brazil," recalls team-mate Ruben Favret who, like the rest of the squad, played midweek friendlies in Argentina and abroad to take advantage of Maradona's pull.

"It was the era of the colour television and we all wanted to bring one back. But we had not been paid our bonuses. Diego, who was 18, stood up for everyone and told Consoli [the president of Argentinos] that if they didn't pay us, he wouldn't play."

A complicated, convoluted move to Boca Juniors followed, mostly orchestrated by Maradona himself who revealed - incorrectly - to a friendly journalist that talks to sign him from Argentinos were at an advanced stage.

It kick-started the first great media-led transfer in history, for what was then a still fairly green 20-year-old. The deal morphed into the surreal. What began as a straight purchase for the not inconsiderable sum of $10m became a last-minute loan using six Boca players, some cash and dodgy cheques as collateral. Nothing was simple or straightforward when it concerned Maradona.

Barcelona, where he went next, never saw the best of him. Of the two years he spent there he was out ill or injured for about half of that. He suffered an appalling ankle injury after a dreadful tackle from Athletic Club's Andoni Goicoechea and then, when he became the main protagonist in a massive brawl played out in front of the Spanish king in the Copa del Rey final which led to a five-month ban from domestic competition, his fate was all but sealed.

In fact, he was close to bankruptcy at that point and a move, with new financial incentives, was a necessity. Also, he never adapted to life in Catalonia, where he was made to feel an outsider.

Two months later he signed for Napoli, where he would enjoy his most successful and ultimately most punishing times. The move to this noisy, crowded, overheated goldfish bowl of an existence - in which the Neapolitan criminal organisation, the ever-present Camorra, were involved from the start - was the moment Diego the kid from Fiorito became Maradona the brand.

Suddenly he was more the character than the kid, falling in love with the notion of being Maradona, lapping up the glory and adulation yet always fully aware of just how asphyxiating the whole situation was.

Cocaine became his new reality, a place of excitement higher than he had ever been before; his drug of choice removed him from the demanding realities of having to constantly demonstrate that you are the best player in the world.

And in between it all came the moment that confirmed his status as something much more than merely a great footballer. How would things have transpired if Argentina had failed to beat England in the "Hand of God" match in the 1986 World Cup in Mexico, the "revenge" four years on of the defeat in the Falklands War?

That match served to grant him immortality in the eyes of his country.

My latest project is a biography on Diego, up until his retirement as a footballer. The rest is too personal and unsavoury. In order to write it, I had to go back to where it all started, to Villa Fiorito. No-one would take me. It was my last day in Buenos Aires in early 2020, and eventually I managed to persuade a very nervous taxi driver who had picked me up on my arrival to drive there.

We travelled in a nervous silence. The houses started to be small boxes, surrounded by uneven paving with half-finished fences or filled with neglected plants. Rubbish bins were parked outside the tired small gardens and children were kicking a ball about barefoot.

The street narrowed and it became an uneven dirt road. I guessed possibly not much had changed since that first trip Cornejo had done with Diego to find out his age.

We turned right. A man was walking down the middle of the narrow road to avoid the mountains of rubble that had piled up on the pavement. Without stopping and having barely wound down his window, the taxi driver asked with an apologetic tone for Diego's house. "Over there, 200 metres away." He stopped the car outside Maradona's first home, but kept the engine running.

All the plants were overgrown. It was halfway through the afternoon. Towards the back, you could make out a shabby bungalow that had a shadow cast over it. A man in a white vest swiftly got off his rocking chair. "What are you looking for?" "Nothing, sir. My friend here just wanted to see..." responded the taxi driver while putting the car in gear and driving off at speed. On the left I saw a dirt pitch with a single goal.

There is not one sign en route to that spot that signals the history of the area and its most famous inhabitant. And there is absolutely no intention to turn it into a tourist attraction. Nobody likes to showcase its miseries.

In reality this was Diego's home; Maradona, the man the boy grew into, never lived there 60 years ago.

In fact, it is difficult to find what is left of that kid these days. Now manager of Argentine Primera Division side Gimansia de la Plata, he has never been able to abandon the big stage.

His life after he retired as a footballer is complex to say the least - it is common knowledge that he has at least 11 children, and his relationship with his former wife, Claudia Villafane, ended up in court, as happened with his agent and close friend Guillermo Coppola.

He has managed a few clubs (he is adored in Sinaloa, the Mexican team he led between 2018 and 2019) after failing to impress in charge of his nation from 2008 to 2010. But he has never come close to reaching the same heights as a manager that he did as a player.

He says he stopped consuming cocaine three years ago but the medication he takes leaves him in a state of sedation. That, his excessive weight from liking the high life, and the numerous operations from having played at a time when football artists were neither respected nor protected, explain his physical difficulties.

Maradona, who admits he feels no remorse for his actions, always understood that life had to be lived to the full. That is why, now at 60, with an accumulation of experiences of someone much older, he can consider himself lucky to be alive. And he will celebrate daily that he is.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/54737750
 
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Argentina legend Diego Maradona is recovering well after being admitted to hospital, his doctor has said.

Maradona, 60, is still having tests and was anaemic and dehydrated but his condition is not related to Covid-19.

He was admitted to hospital in Argentina on Monday - doctor Leopoldo Luque said at the time that Maradona's physical health was impacted because he was "not well psychologically".

"He is evolving as we wanted," Luque said on Tuesday.

"I hope he will want to stay until tomorrow. He will have to do long-term treatment."

Maradona, who won the World Cup with Argentina in 1986, is expected to be under observation for at least three days.

He now coaches Gimnasia y Esgrima in Argentina's top flight and attended the side's game against Patronato on Friday, his 60th birthday.

https://www.bbc.com/sport/football/54799618
 
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Diego Maradona will undergo surgery for a subdural hematoma within hours, a source with knowledge of the situation and local media said on Tuesday.

The former Argentina football star had been hospitalised since Monday night for anaemia and dehydration, though his condition had been improving, his personal doctor said earlier in the day.
 
Argentina legend Diego Maradona has undergone successful brain surgery, his doctor has said.

The 1986 World Cup winner, 60, was admitted to Ipensa clinic in Buenos Aires on Monday, suffering from anaemia and dehydration.
 
Legendary World Cup winner Diego Maradona is showing signs of improvement only a day after having brain surgery in his native Argentina.

The 60-year-old, who captained his country to World Cup triumph in Mexico in 1986, required an operation for possible bleeding on his brain.

His physician Dr Leopoldo Luque said: "Diego has been responding very well.

"When we removed the drain he laughed, looked at me, grabbed my hand, and the first impression is it is favourable."

Maradona was admitted to the Ipensa clinic in Buenos Aires on Monday, suffering from anaemia and dehydration.

The former Barcelona and Napoli midfielder is set to remain in a clinic in La Plata, south of Buenos Aires, for at least 48 hours as he recovers.

"Diego is without any type of neurological deficit, without any type of complication associated with surgery. He has an excellent post-operative period, the laboratory parameters even improved," Luque told reporters at the clinic.

"He is in a post-operative period and the moods are difficult to assess.

"The first impression is it is favourable, but it is difficult to evaluate. Diego's evolution is day by day and in principle today he will be in intensive care as well."

Argentina's all-time leading scorer Lionel Messi wished his compatriot well on social media.

Alongside a picture of the pair together, the Barcelona forward wrote in Spanish: "Diego, all the strength in the world. My family and I want to see you well as soon as possible. A hug from the heart!"

https://www.bbc.com/sport/football/54815870
 
Argentina legend Diego Maradona will be discharged from hospital on Wednesday and taken to a recovery clinic to be treated for alcohol dependency.

Maradona, who led his country to World Cup triumph in 1986, had a successful operation for possible bleeding on his brain earlier in November.

However, withdrawal symptoms kept him in hospital for longer.

"The good thing is that Diego is together, Diego is solid," his lawyer, Matias Morla, said.

Maradona was admitted to the Ipensa clinic in Buenos Aires last week with anaemia and dehydration.

Only a few close friends will be allowed to visit the 60-year-old at the rehabilitation clinic.

"Diego has gone through maybe the most difficult moment of his life and I think it was a miracle that they found this bleeding in his brain that could have cost him his life," his lawyer added.

https://www.bbc.com/sport/football/54907487
 
My fav footballer.

Maradona is who I think of when people talk about sporting geniuses - watching him play football in 80s and early 90s, and dribble past players left, right and centre was just magic.

Get well soon.
 
The greatest footballer I have ever seen.

He had the ability to win a match on his own and lift average teams to glory.
 
If true this is a shame, he wasn’t very old at all.

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Shocking news coming out of my native <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Argentina?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#Argentina</a> of <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Maradona?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#Maradona</a>'s passing. Regardless of what you though of him in retirement, as a player he was larger than life, a giant among men, and perhaps the best footballer ever. R.I.P. <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Diego?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#Diego</a>.</p>— Gabriel Gabor (@MLSGabor) <a href="https://twitter.com/MLSGabor/status/1331634831755763715?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">November 25, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Amazing documentary this.

Highly recommend it to those who haven't seen it yet.
 
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