Chattanooga Times Free Press

Brazilians mourn death of archrival Diego Maradona

- BY MAURICIO SAVARESE

SAO PAULO — Brazil and Argentina are long rivals for soccer supremacy in South America, and Brazilians naturally think of their own Pelé as the best footballer in history. But they are putting aside the argument to mourn the death of Argentine superstar Diego Maradona.

Ex-presidents, author Paulo Coelho and former competitor­s were among Brazilians paying tribute to Maradona for his influence on the game and charisma off the field. Brazilian newspapers that only put sports in their top headline when the national team wins a World Cup had Maradona’s death in that position Thursday.

A mural of Maradona was even painted on a wall in the Vila Cruzeiro favela in Rio de Janeiro, an honor that proud and soccer-crazy Brazilians rarely, if ever, give to foreigners.

“He was an example of persistenc­e and perseveran­ce because he grew in life as a human being,” said graffiti artist Angelo Campos, who painted an energic Maradona in a blue shirt under an inscriptio­n with his nickname, “El Pibe de Oro” [the Golden Kid]. “He finished his life as a human being because he fought to overcome his problems.”

Maradona suffered from drug and alcohol addiction, which for many years led Brazilian fans to make chants to mock the Argentinia­n hero and his hardcore fans. But not now.

The Neo Quimica Arena in Sao Paulo displayed a triumphant Maradona image on a giant screen by its main entrance. That is the same stadium where most Brazilian fans cheered against Argentina in the 2014 World Cup semifinal against Holland. Argentina won on penalties but went on to lose the final to Germany 1-0.

All top-tier Brazilian clubs paid tributes, including Santos, where Pelé played nearly all of his career.

Brazilians’ respect for Maradona also shows up in a curious statistic — the Spanish name Diego was one of the most picked names for boys in this Portuguese­speaking nation in 1990, the year that Argentina beat Brazil 1-0 at the World Cup. More than 180,000 Brazilian children were named after Maradona that year.

The 1990 win was Maradona’s only victory over Brazil in six matches. He lost three times to Argentina’s archrival, with the most bitter coming in the 1982 World Cup. The young Maradona, who was already seen by many as one of the best players in the world, was sent off in the last minutes of the match after a foul and the Argentine later confessed he also had wanted to punch Brazilian player Paulo Roberto Falcão because of the rivalry.

Falcão said Thursday he didn’t remember Maradona saying that.

“With the ball, he was a God. Without the ball, he was human,” Falcão said in his social media.

 ?? AP PHOTO/ SILVIA IZQUIERDO ?? Marcio Pereira, 57, who likes to go by the nickname “Pele” juggles a soccer ball Thursday next to a monument adorned with a national Argentine flag bearing the No. 10. It was placed there by a mourner as a tribute to Diego Maradona outside the Maracana stadium in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Maradona died on Wednesday at the age of 60 of a heart attack in a house outside Buenos Aires where he recovered from a brain operation.
AP PHOTO/ SILVIA IZQUIERDO Marcio Pereira, 57, who likes to go by the nickname “Pele” juggles a soccer ball Thursday next to a monument adorned with a national Argentine flag bearing the No. 10. It was placed there by a mourner as a tribute to Diego Maradona outside the Maracana stadium in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Maradona died on Wednesday at the age of 60 of a heart attack in a house outside Buenos Aires where he recovered from a brain operation.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States