Football legend Diego Maradona dies aged 60

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The Argentinian football legend died at home from a heart attack, his lawyer said, just three weeks after having surgery on a blood clot in his brain.

Maradona won the World Cup with Argentina in 1986, having knocked England out of the tournament in a match that saw him score the infamous 'Hand of God' goal and another - widely considered to be one of the greatest goals of all time. Regarded as one of the greatest players of all-time on the pitch, his life off the pitch was equally notorious - amid battles with drug and alcohol addiction.

 

During his time with Italian side Napoli he won the Serie A title in 1987 and 1990, along with an Italian Cup in 1987 and a Uefa Cup in 1991. But it was also during these years that his addiction to cocaine took hold. In 1991, the year he left the club, he was given a 15-month suspension for drug violations. In 1994 he was thrown out of the World Cup in America after failing a drug test, before retiring from football in 1997. In 1999 and 2000 he was taken to hospital suffering heart problems, the second time requiring a respirator to breathe. In 2004, he was again treated in hospital for severe heart and respiratory problems linked to his drug abuse.

 

He has undergone two gastric bypass operations to control his weight and received treatment for alcohol abuse. In January, he had surgery to stem bleeding in his stomach, and in July he underwent a knee operation. Three weeks ago he was admitted to the hospital for surgery on a blood clot in his brain, before being discharged to recover at home. It was there that he died on Wednesday. His footballing career also included turns on the pitch for Barcelona, Sevilla, Boca Juniors, and Newell's Old Boys and he was most recently manager of Gimnasia y Esgrima in La Plata, Argentina. He also managed the Argentinian national team at the South Africa World Cup in 2010.

 

The Argentine news outlet Clarin broke the news on Wednesday afternoon UK time, describing the news of Maradona's passing as having a 'worldwide impact'. The sad news was confirmed by Maradona's lawyer. Soon, tributes were pouring in from all over the world of football. Maradona left the hospital on November 11 just eight days after being admitted for emergency brain surgery. The iconic former Argentinian footballer was driven away from the private Olivos Clinic just before 6pm on November 11 as hundreds of fans of photographers tried to get a glimpse of him. Maradona was hospitalized the previous week and had to have an emergency operation to remove a blood clot from his brain.

 

Argentinian TV reporters travelling on motorbikes filmed the ambulance carrying him leaving before following the vehicle to transmit every inch of his journey. His lawyer, Matias Morlahas said that the 60-year-old would continue to receive treatment for alcohol dependency. Maradona, who was the coach of Gimnasia y Esgrima in his home country, had been admitted to hospital on several occasions since his retirement. He almost died of cocaine-induced heart failure in 2000 and underwent years of rehabilitation.

 

Diego Maradona, who was well known for having a wild lifestyle during and after his playing days, had a gastric bypass operation to lose weight in 2005 and was once more hospitalised two years later for alcohol-induced hepatitis. He also fell ill at the last World Cup in Russia, where he was filmed passing out in an executive box when Argentina took on and beat Nigeria in Group D.

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