Wed | Nov 29, 2023

Maradona’s World Cup absence ‘strange’ for Messi, Argentina

Published:Saturday | November 26, 2022 | 12:10 AM
Children pose for a picture with a statue of the late football star Diego Maradona during a commemoration in his honour in Doha, Qatar yesterday.
Children pose for a picture with a statue of the late football star Diego Maradona during a commemoration in his honour in Doha, Qatar yesterday.

DOHA, Qatar (AP):

For the first time since the 1978 World Cup, Argentina are without Diego Maradona on football’s biggest stage.

The team could use him more than ever as the South American team is off to a rocky start at the tournament.

Yesterday marked the second anniversary of Maradona’s death, and both Argentina and FIFA commemorated the day in Qatar.

A few thousand Argentina fans gathered at Doha’s historic Souq Waqif market to honour Maradona and show their support to the national team. They filled the streets with the blue-and-white Argentina flag and constantly chanted Maradona songs.

“We miss him too much. He was always there for us,” 64-year-old Julio Valsi said. “But we can still feel him. I’m sure he will be looking over the national team from wherever he is. We need him to help us right now.”

It’s already a strange World Cup for Argentina even without Maradona.

Lionel Messi is making what is expected to be his final appearance at the World Cup and the team lost 2-1 to Saudi Arabia in one of the tournament’s biggest upsets.

“We hope that some of Maradona’s bravery will somehow help our team in this difficult moment,” said 56-year-old Claudio Martin.

Argentina coach Lionel Scaloni said before today’s decisive match against Mexico that he hoped to “bring some joy to Maradona if he is looking down at us from the sky.”

“Every time we see images of him, it’s unbelievable he is not here with us,” he said.

Maradona, his nation’s beloved football “God”, had been a presence for Argentina at every World Cup since 1982 as a player, coach and elder statesman.

Maradona died at age 60 on November 25, 2020, a date most Argentines will never forget. He passed away while under hospital care in his home following brain surgery, and judicial authorities continue to investigate if medical negligence was involved.

Several tributes were dedicated to Maradona before the 2022 World Cup, both in Argentina and in Qatar.

“Diego is immortal, he is still with us,” FIFA president Gianni Infantino said yesterday in front of a real-size statue of Maradona unveiled at an event in Qatar organised by South American football confederation CONMEBOL.

Several former Argentina teammates of Maradona were at the event in Qatar.

In Buenos Aires, a huge mural had already emerged of Maradona wearing a national team jersey and holding his right hand in a fist, a defiant expression on his face. The massive piece of artwork climbs 148 feet high and 131 feet wide and was painted on the side of a 14-storey building in the Argentine capital.

Messi, playing in his fifth World Cup, had told FIFA ahead of the Qatar tournament that it was “strange, different” not to see Maradona in the tribunes or the “people going crazy when he appears”. He said he felt Maradona would always “be present somewhere”.

Maradona played in four World Cups from 1982 to 1994, and was the coach of the national team in 2010.

Some of his best, and worst, moments came at the World Cup, from the “Hand-of-God” goal against England in 1986 to his failed doping test that got him expelled from the tournament in 1994.

Maradona led Argentina to the title in 1986, when his hand goal in the quarterfinals against England became one of the greatest, and most controversial ones, in tournament history. In that same match, he also scored one of the best World Cup goals ever after a run past opponents that began on Argentina’s own field.