The Scottish Mail on Sunday

The boy who would be king

Exclusive view inside the family album of legend Maradona

- By JAMES SHARPE

DIEGO MARADONA stands with his hands on his hips, the longsleeve­d shirt bearing two long stripes tucked into his white shorts. The striped shirt is not yet the colours of Argentina, the one in which he would lift the World Cup above his head as his team-mates hauled their hero to the skies, to move him even closer to the gods.

He’s only a boy. A block of hair on top of a head that bears the face of innocence. Maradona is bearing the shirt of Los Cebollitas, or the Little Onions, the youth team of Argentinos Juniors, the sports club based in La Paternal, Buenos Aires.

He was not yet Maradona, the superstar known by one name alone, a blurred haze of greatness and drug-fuelled chaos, but just little Diego. The boy who would be king.

Even then he possessed a force that pulled others toward him, the spark of genius out of which the player many believe the greatest ever to play the game would form.

‘The first day there were three of us watching,’ recounts Rodolfo Fernandez, an Argentinos Juniors fan. ‘The second day 10, the third day 20. All to watch this boy and how he played.’

In November last year, it had become thousands who flocked to the streets of Buenos Aires, this time to mourn the death of Maradona aged 60.

They shed tears, cried out, laid flowers and lit candles.

His image adorned the front pages of newspapers across the world, all of them packed with tributes.

At Napoli, they renamed the stadium after him, to honour the man who brought the club such frenzied success and gave their rundown city an idol.

And, in a special new book released next month, Maradona’s life will be celebrated once more. The Mail on Sunday has been given exclusive access to the Maradona family photo album and can reveal previously unseen pictures.

From his childhood days as a Little Onion to becoming the superstar who many believe to be the greatest of his time and everything that came in between — the success, the adoration, the charisma, the drugs and the chaos.

All intertwine­d, all playing their part. Could any have lived without the other? A boy born and raised in a shanty town outside Buenos Aires. The superstar of Naples, who lifted a downtrodde­n city mocked by its neighbours to become kings of Italy, yet found himself trapped in the clutches of the Camorra, the Neapolitan mafia.

The way he single-handedly, in more ways than one, took Argentina to the World Cup in 1986. It is a life and a career without equal. ‘A good father and the best player ever,’ is how Maradona

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? LITTLE ROCKER: The Argentina superstar hangs out with Queen at the Velez Sarsfield stadium in 1981
LITTLE ROCKER: The Argentina superstar hangs out with Queen at the Velez Sarsfield stadium in 1981
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? HUMBLE: Maradona poses early in his career for Olé newspaper
HUMBLE: Maradona poses early in his career for Olé newspaper
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? COMPASSION: Maradona comforts his friend Alberto Pacheco, who was distraught after losing a match while playing for Corrientes at the Evita Tournament in 1973
COMPASSION: Maradona comforts his friend Alberto Pacheco, who was distraught after losing a match while playing for Corrientes at the Evita Tournament in 1973
 ??  ?? RISING STAR: Diego in action for Los Cebollitas, who he helped go on a 136-game unbeaten run
RISING STAR: Diego in action for Los Cebollitas, who he helped go on a 136-game unbeaten run
 ??  ?? BATH TIME: The World Cup winner relaxes in an Amsterdam hotel before a trip to China
BATH TIME: The World Cup winner relaxes in an Amsterdam hotel before a trip to China

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom