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2020-11-26 20:04
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The television commentator Nerijus Kesminas recalled on the social network the best moments of the late Argentine legendary Diego Maradona.
“After Napoli won the Italian soccer championship for the first time in 1987, an inscription appeared on the fence of one of the city’s cemeteries: ‘You don’t even get what you lose.’
Basically, the reason for the victory was one: Diego Maradona.
I never thought I would write an obituary. Especially for the person I was in the mood for before him, I still had my favorite players and teams back then.
But … Now that Diego left Anapililin, I mean, he was a soccer genius.
I smile, remembering the times when we would sit on the couch and watch soccer with a wonderful person: my brother. Two World Cup finals in Germany against Argentina. The brother is sick for Argentina and D. Maradona.
I … to the Germans and … I know this name means nothing to you … Pierre Littbarski. My brother rejoiced in 1986, I rejoiced four years later. Don’t get me wrong: after the end of the era of P. Littbarski, Karl Heinz Rummenigge and other Germans of that generation, I’m sick just because of the Lithuanian team.
You know: it’s not easy. But this text is not about Lithuania.
It is for the Argentine Golden Boy. Yes, there was a vile hand of God in the 1986 World Cup quarter-final duel with England.
But after a few minutes in the same match, there was a fantastic slalom from D. Maradona through six rival players and boom!
I can’t describe it, look at the post.
He smelled cocaine. There were whores, bandits in Naples and friendships with dictators and leaders of Latin American communist regimes in his life.
I don’t want to judge that now, he was just a soccer genius.
They beat him in the square, he got up. It broke it, it healed. When he wasn’t playing, we missed him, even like me: those who didn’t like him. I did not see the Mouse play, I was born late. I saw Maradon.
“You can’t imagine what you missed,” read the inscriptions on the walls of the Naples cemetery.
I say to the younger generation of football fans: I’m sorry you didn’t see Mr. Maradona’s football. He was divine. Rest in peace, Diego. Many of us will always remember you, “wrote N. Kesmin.