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Blwe_torch

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I will run naked if Argentina win: Maradona
« on: May 27, 2010, 05:07:36 AM »
I will run naked if Argentina win: Maradona
AP, May 27, 2010, 12.29am IST

BUENOS AIRES: Diego Maradona has promised to run naked through the center of Buenos Aires if Argentina wins the football World Cup.

The Argentina coach made the promise during a radio show. The unpredictable Maradona was speaking a day after Argentina defeated Canada 5-0 Monday in its final warm-up match before the World Cup.

"If we win the World Cup, I'll get naked and run around the Obelisk," he said, referring to the tall monument that marks the center of the city and serves as its most famous landmark.

Maradona's response came after a reporter asked him in the interview what he would do if his team returned to Argentina with its third World Cup title.

In the same interview, Maradona said he had to explain to Lionel Messi why he did not play against Canada. Messi is the reigning FIFA player of the year, but sat out the match to protect him against any possible injury.

"If something would have happened to you in that match, I'd have been kicked _ you can imagine where," Maradona said.

Maradona has the luxury of choosing between some of the world's best forwards. In addition to Messi, he can use Carlos Tevez, Gonzalo Higuain, Diego Milito, Sergio Aguero and Martin Palermo.

Argentina plays in Group B, opening against Nigeria on June 12. The team also faces Greece and South Korea.
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/sports/events-tournaments/fifa-world-cup/top-stories/I-will-run-naked-if-Argentina-win-Maradona/articleshow/5978651.cms
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Blwe_torch

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Re: I will run naked if Argentina win: Maradona
« Reply #1 on: June 06, 2010, 09:37:20 AM »
This team is better than 1986 champions: Maradona
TNN, Jun 6, 2010, 01.48am IST

Diego Maradona has fired another salvo. With less than a week to go to the World Cup kick-off in South Africa, the Argentine manager ruffled feathers by insisting his current squad is better than the one he captained to victory in the Mexican World Cup in 1986.

"I have no hesitation in saying that the team has better quality than what we had in Mexico," the left-footed genius who almost single-handedly carried Argentina to victory in Mexico, told The Times of India in a candid interview.

"I do not want to hurt any of my world champion teammates," he added. "They were there to celebrate the win and played their part to perfection. Those 30 days were the best in my life as well as of everybody in that squad. At the same time, as I have the experience of working with extremely talented footballers of this generation, I have no doubt that this team is better in quality," he said, pressing the point home. "We do have Lio (Messi), but we have some very good footballers to support him as well," said Maradona.

Controversially appointed manager in 2008, Maradona led Argentina through a poor qualification campaign - almost facing elimination at one stage.

They kick off against Nigeria onJune 12 in Johannesburg Ellis Park Stadium.
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Sports/Events-Tournaments/FIFA-World-Cup/Top-stories/This-team-is-better-than-1986-champions-Maradona/wcarticleshow/6016325.cms
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Flamingo

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Re: I will run naked if Argentina win: Maradona
« Reply #2 on: June 11, 2010, 03:05:37 PM »
let's all hope and pray that they don't win then. 
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vincent

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Re: I will run naked if Argentina win: Maradona
« Reply #3 on: June 11, 2010, 04:20:00 PM »
They have couple of great players Messi and that guy who beat Bayern in the European final recently. But just because of Maradona,I do not want them to win,though it would be interesting to see if he really would run naked through Buenos Aires.
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dhruvdeepak

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Re: I will run naked if Argentina win: Maradona
« Reply #4 on: June 11, 2010, 04:39:07 PM »
They have couple of great players Messi and that guy who beat Bayern in the European final recently. But just because of Maradona,I do not want them to win,though it would be interesting to see if he really would run naked through Buenos Aires.

hahah personally it might be a bit more interesting to see a star packed argentina squad play good football
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justforkix

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Re: I will run naked if Argentina win: Maradona
« Reply #5 on: June 14, 2010, 07:27:37 AM »
their defense seems quite weak, Nigeria couldn't take advantage of it.
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dextrous

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Re: I will run naked if Argentina win: Maradona
« Reply #6 on: June 16, 2010, 06:41:18 PM »
I like Maradona but not naked
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feverpitch

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Re: I will run naked if Argentina win: Maradona
« Reply #7 on: June 16, 2010, 10:09:16 PM »
Yukkkkkk
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Blwe_torch

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Re: I will run naked if Argentina win: Maradona
« Reply #8 on: June 18, 2010, 03:40:26 AM »
In shorts or suit, Diego Maradona still Argentina's star
AP, Jun 18, 2010, 06.03am IST



JOHANNESBURG: Diego Maradona strutted onto the field at Soccer City an hour before the match and took a long look around, a king surveying his realm.

The beard is graying, he's carrying more than a few extra pounds and his expensive gray suit strains at the seams across his broad back. Make no mistake, though. Even with the likes of Lionel Messi, Carlos Tevez and Javier Mascherano, Maradona is the undisputed star of Argentina's show.

"I'm giving my everything for the Argentine team," he said after a 4-1 World Cup victory over South Korea on Thursday that all but assured the Albiceleste of advancing to the round of 16.

Whether Maradona can be as gifted a coach as he was a player remains to be seen. But his theatrics on the sidelines are already Oscar-worthy, commanding the spotlight as only "Pibe de Oro" - the Golden Kid - can.

A magnet for attention, Maradona does his best to oblige. As his players warmed up before the game, he chatted with someone at the edge of the field - a few feet from a gaggle of photographers, of course. Wearing only a thin track suit on a cold, blustery day, his assistant was quick to drape a warm coat over his shoulders.

As the team ducked back into the tunnel, he made eye-contact with someone in Argentina's cheering section, smiled, blew kisses and pounded his chest with his fist. When the team returned for the national anthems, as many cameras were focused on Maradona as the players.

But just as he did two decades ago, he saved his best performance for the game itself.

With diamond studs as big as mints gleaming in each ear, he embraced each of his players and sent them off. He tried mightily to restrain himself when play began, jamming his hands deep in his pockets or clasping them behind his back, fiddling with the rosary wrapped tight around the fingers of his left hand.

He has as much trouble containing himself these days as befuddled defenses did 20 years ago.

While South Korea's Huh Jung-moo didn't venture out of a small corner at the top of the coach's box, Maradona wore out a path on the grass with his pacing. Any time an Argentine player was knocked down or penalized, he threw up his arms in dismay - as if someone had attacked one of his children. After one foul too many for his liking, he began shouting at his old foe Huh.

The last time Argentina and South Korea met in the World Cup, in 1986, Huh made what many would consider a reckless tackle on Maradona. The two insist all that is ancient history, but it sure didn't look that way. They shouted back and forth, Maradona punctuating his angry roars with hand gestures that would make the folks in Napoli proud.

Finally, both coaches were told to simmer down. It wouldn't be the last time Maradona would be hushed. That dotted line designed to keep coaches in their boxes is merely a suggestion for him. He roamed up to the touchline, and all the way over to midfield on more than one occasion. Trying to corral a bull would have been easier than keeping him in place.

At one point, unhappy with what he considered rough treatment of the Argentine players, he went to the side of the box to plead his case, standing quietly with his hands clasped as if in prayer. But the official was wise to his antics and never even glanced Maradona's way.

Though beloved as a player, he's taken plenty of criticism since becoming coach, including his lack of experience and some tactical decisions.

No one questions his passion. When one of Messi's shots sailed wide, Maradona gestured in frustration and gave the ground a vicious kick. He pulled at his hair after a miss by Tevez, his yelp so loud it almost drowned out the vuvuzelas. However, his joy after any one of his players scored was as heartfelt as the emotion he showed for his own years ago.

Take, for example, Gonzalo Higuain. He scored three goals. Maradona wasn't sure the first one counted. When it did, he turned to the bench, a look of pure jubilation on his face, and doled out hugs and high-fives to everyone before holding his arms up in Rocky-like triumph.

After Higuain's second goal, he practically skipped to midfield before jumping into the arms of one of his assistants. Then he turned toward the delirious Argentine fans and waved his right arm as if throwing a lasso, revving them up even more.

With the game well in hand, Maradona's exuberance wasn't about to be contained. He deflected an errant ball with an effortless back volley, drawing a roar of delight from the crowd. He bear-hugged Higuain so tightly he almost lifted the striker clear off the ground, and he protested a late foul by Messi so vociferously you'd think the refs were Italian tax collectors.

When the final whistle sounded, Maradona marched out to the center circle and, while Huh watched quietly from a distance, hugged every player and shook hands with the referees.

The game may have passed to a new generation of Argentine stars. The spotlight, though, will always belong to Maradona.
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/wcarticleshow/6061282.cms
« Last Edit: June 18, 2010, 03:46:00 AM by Blwe_torch »
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Blwe_torch

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Re: I will run naked if Argentina win: Maradona
« Reply #9 on: June 18, 2010, 03:44:32 AM »
From Maradona with love: Argentina gelling

JOHANNESBURG(AP) Expect Maradona to turn up at Argentina's next match in a tie-dye T-shirt, waving incense sticks and singing ''Kumbayah.'' Because his masterplan for winning the World Cup is now crystal clear: He'll do it by smothering his players in lashings of love.

Just a few months back, Maradona was in the doghouse, banned by FIFA, for a foul-mouthed rant. Now he's donning a suit for games and talking like a New Age guru of the ''good vibes'' in the Argentine camp, of the ''very beautiful'' experience of living another World Cup and about how footballers respond better to heart-to-heart talks than to big sticks.

Most striking of all, Maradona showers his players with kisses and hugs both before and after games. Tough taskmasters like England coach Fabio Capello wouldn't be caught dead doling out so much as pecks on the cheek. But Maradona grabs hold and won't let go, nuzzling players affectionately with his graying beard. No one gets left out.

''All the love is just being grateful for their effort,'' says the cuddly one.

Bizarrely, the softly-softly approach seems to be working. The very difficult birth of Maradona's team - he looked at more than 100 players before deciding on his 23 for South Africa and came within a whisker of not qualifying - is slowly being forgotten with each, progressively more convincing World Cup performance. Argentina is still a work in progress but is gelling before our eyes.

Few would have bet on that happening before the World Cup. With Maradona in charge, there seemed to be a huge risk of it simply imploding. Now, it already has one foot and four toes in the next round, after humbling South Korea 4-1 to give it six points at the top of Group B.

Lionel Messi, the player Maradona will most need if Argentina is to reach the final on July 11, is starting to look genuinely comfortable. That has been a long time coming but was so worth the wait.

Messi used to wear the No.10 shirt that Maradona made famous as a player like a lead-weight, bowed by the huge burden of Argentine expectations. Now radiating confidence in South Africa just when it counts the most, Messi is beginning to fully express his absurd abundance and array of talents, making if not yet scoring goals. He played a role in three of the four Argentine goals against the South Koreans.

Although as unassuming as a turtle in its shell off the field, Messi is growing as a leader on it. That was clear from the way he ticked off Gabriel Heinze for drifting out of position as the Koreans were looking to equalize after Park Chu Young's own goal gave Argentina the lead after 17 minutes. Messi jabbed a finger at the spot on the field where he wanted the defender far older and more experienced than him to go.

Messi will have better days than he did against the South Koreans, which was a seven or an eight out of 10 performance by his stratospheric standards.

But even when not scoring himself, Messi tears open holes in opposing teams by drawing defenders to him - two or three at a time in the case of the South Koreans. His rattlesnake runs, when not capped with a goal, panic defenders into making rash tackles, producing free kicks. Carlos Tevez fizzed one of those over the Korean crossbar. On other days, they will go in.

The Argentine frontline combination of Tevez, Messi and Gonzalo Higuain looks like it could score goals by the bucket-load. They each bring different weapons to the fight. Tevez wins and keeps balls with his sheepdog-like energy and bulldog-like tenacity. Messi cuts through sides with his sudden accelerations and ball glued to his laces. Higuain brings strength and height - he scored two of his three goals Thursday with his head.

The three of them are not always finding and linking up with other. Tevez howled when Higuain took a wasteful shot at goal instead of passing to him on the penalty spot, where he was unmarked. But at other times, they looked overwhelmingly threatening. In Sergio Aguero, Maradona also has a substitute attacker with fierce speed and delicate touch. The last two Argentine goals that put victory beyond reach for the Koreans came within the first five minutes of Aguero coming off the bench.

The Argentine defense still looks vulnerable, with Martin Demichelis especially unconvincing against the Koreans. He gifted them their goal. But he still got one of the biggest hugs of all from Maradona.

Clearly, Maradona's love alone won't win the World Cup for Argentina. But it certainly helps.

---

John Leicester is an international sports columnist for The Associated Press. Write to him at jleicester(at)ap.org.
http://ndtv.footballindia.com/news/From_Maradona_with_love_Argentina_gelling/news-2010-june-news_20100617_1639/news_article.aspx
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