On this day 20 years ago Diego Maradona made three indelible marks on the
World Cup, scoring its most infamous and then its most brilliant goal before
providing its most memorable quote, writes Rex Gowar.
Maradona's two goals in the space of four minutes for Argentina against
England in the quarter-finals of the 1986 World Cup in Mexico and his "Hand of
God" quote are the stuff of legend.
Yet few people know the true story of that famous quote. I was doubly lucky
to be one of them fortunate to be there reporting the game and lucky to get to
the stadium at all.
That day 20 years ago started for me with a nasty slip in the hotel bathroom
that could have deprived me of seeing the "Hand of God" goal, let alone
reporting on it.
Did we Argentines believe then that England would be just another hurdle
easily overcome on the way to what was to be their second World Cup title? It is
easy to think that now, but Maradona had a trick up his sleeve just in case.
England had struggled in the group stage in Monterrey and nearly failed to
make it into the knockout stage. Argentina had found neighbours and arch-rivals
Uruguay a hard nut to crack in their second round.
The quarter-final was preceded by jingoistic reports on both sides of the
Atlantic implying that the Falklands/Malvinas war would be fought again on the
Azteca pitch that afternoon.
In 1986, a packed Azteca including pockets of hard core fans from both sides
was watching an evenly balanced match when Maradona leapt to a poor, high
clearance and beat England keeper Peter Shilton to the ball, surreptitiously
punching it into the net with his fist.
Many people were shocked when Maradona, pretending to have headed the opening
goal, ran off celebrating. The referee, pointing to the centre spot, was
surrounded by England players demanding a hand ball decision.
The press tribune high up in the third tier of the giant stadium and a long
way from the goal where Maradona scored immediately buzzed, hardly believing the
referee had missed the trick.
The Argentina captain described the goal afterwards to reporters as "un poco
con la cabeza de Maradona y otro poco con la mano de Dios" (a little with the
head of Maradona and a little with the hand of God), coining one of the most
famous quotes in sport.
As there was no official translation of it, the "Hand of God" quote was
missed by non-Spanish reporters, some of whom later questioned that Maradona had
really said it.
England manager Bobby Robson, visibly upset in the post-match conference,
tried to temper his disillusion in defeat with his admiration for Maradona's
second, brilliant and ultimately decisive second goal in a 2-1 Argentina win.
Maradona's explanation has gone through endless
mutations over the years and is often misquoted. His original quote had him
audaciously sharing the goal with the source of his God-given
talent.