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MARADONA: A VERDADE VEIO À TONA

Who was this person?  What did he take from Maradona’s room that night? And above all, who told her to go there? We will arrive.  Don’t go anywhere.  Because to understand what happened in that tiger’s house, you have to go back much further, 60 years.  There is a slum south of Buenos Aires.  There’s a boy who kicked a rag ball down a dirt street and a mother who lied for 12 years so that no one would know the truth.

Vila Fiorito, province of Buenos Aires. October 30, 1960. Diego Armando Maradona, the fifth of eight children, was born there.  The father, Dom Diego Senior, known as Shitoro, was a fisherman and laborer.  I worked in a factory that processed animal remains.  He was returning home smelling of blood.

  The mother, Dona Tota, was a housewife.  She cooked for 10 people with what she could feed four.  When she couldn’t, she would say that she had already eaten; she would lie.   She would sit in a corner of the kitchen and watch her children eat without touching anything. When Diego was 6 years old, Dona Tota lost 10 kg in 4 months, 6 kg in the first month, and four in the following months.

The neighborhood doctor, a certain Dr. Kan, treated her for free. Diagnosis: severe malnutrition. He asked what was happening.  Dona Tota did not respond.  The doctor insisted, and the mother of the future best player in the world spoke only five words to him.  Five words that would stay with Diego until his last day.

  My children eat first, doctor.  My children eat first, doctor.  That phrase, that invisible sacrifice, was the first pillar of the guilt that Maradona would carry for the rest of his life.  Diego only found out 12 years later, at 18, when he was already playing for Argentinos Juniors and earning more money than his entire family had ever seen combined.

  That afternoon, in the kitchen of the house he had bought for his parents in a decent neighborhood of Buenos Aires, Diego asked his mother why she didn’t eat with them when he was a child. Dona Tota looked at him for a moment and replied with seven words. Mom, you’re never hungry, my love.  Mom, you’re never hungry, my love.  Diego left the kitchen without finishing his dish, walked to the bathroom, locked the door, and cried.  She cried for 40 minutes.

Diego Armando Maradona, who in a few years would become the best player on the planet, was crying in his mother’s bathroom because he had just discovered that the woman who had given birth to him had gone hungry for years to feed him.  And from that afternoon on, he started bringing gifts to Dona Tuta whenever he could.

  Food, jewelry, house, car— as if they could be returned.  Even on the last day of his life, he never stopped trying.  The ball came into his life when he was 3 years old.  It was Uncle Cirilo who gave him a leather ball as a birthday present. Diego slept hugging that ball for three years straight.  The mother had to wait until he fell asleep to take the ball away and wash his hand, which was covered in dirt.

  At seven, he was already playing better than the neighborhood kids who were 13. At eight, he was discovered by a scout named Francisco Cornejo.  I would control him for 40 years.  A man whose name appeared more often in Maradona’s final months than those of professionals. 5,000, 10,000, 15,000 touches without letting the ball drop.

  The Argentinians couldn’t believe a boy would do that, but Diego wasn’t playing for money, he was playing to get his mother out of Vila Fiorito.  And that obsession, that debt to a woman who had lost 10 kg for him, was the driving force behind his career and also the beginning of his downfall. At age 15, he made his debut for Argentinos Juniors 10 days before turning 16, in a match against Taleres de Córdoba.

He came on in the second half, touched the ball five times, five dribbles past three defenders 10 years older than him, a perfect assist, and a free kick. The critics didn’t know what to write. César Luis Menotti, the coach of the Argentine national team at the time, uttered a phrase two weeks later that became historic.

  “That kid,” Menot said, ” is going to be the best player the world will ever see.”  He was right, and without knowing it, he was also predicting a tragedy. At 17, he reached [amount missing] of dollars, a fortune in 1982. His father, Don Diego, couldn’t read. Dona Tota didn’t understand the legal clause either .

  And then he appeared, Guilhermo Copola.  Coppola was 40 years old when he entered Maradona’s life.  He was a former banker, had worked in finance, had connections with European clubs, and offered Diego a simple deal. You play, I take care of everything else: press, [music], travel, houses, women, you just play. Maradona accepted without reading, and from that day in 1982 until the last day of his life, Diego signed the entire document without reading it.

  Just like Garrincha 49 years earlier, just like Adriano, just like Ronaldinho.  Four poor men from the world of football who trusted another man for everything except playing football and [music]—the four of them ended up destroyed.  Did Coppola steal from Maradona? Yes, we’re not going to argue otherwise here, but the dome is just one piece, a large, important, central piece, not the only one.

  And the person who entered  Tigre’s house in the early morning of November 25, 2020, was not Copola, it was someone else. A person who, for 38 years, had access to Diego Armando Maradona’s body , a person who was present at every important moment of his career, without anyone knowing who he was. Stay with me.

  Before Coppola, there was something else, something that happened at a Boca Juniors training camp in 1982 that would mark Maradona’s body for the next 40 years. A syringe, a white substance, and a teammate whose name appears in no official investigation. There is a 47-minute interview, conducted by an Argentinian journalist named Jorge Lanata.

  In 2015, five years before Maradona died, Diego was in Cuba, in a house that Fidel Castro had lent him, recovering from an overdose.  Lanata interviewed him with permission.  Part of the recording was broadcast on the channel where the journalist worked, but 60% of the content never made it to television.  Lanata died in August  2024, 3 months before the start of the trial against Maradona’s doctors .

And the journalist’s family still keeps the complete tape to this day.  In that recording, Maradona confesses four things.  We ‘ll get to four, but not yet. The first time Maradona used cocaine was in 1982, in Buenos Aires, at the home of a Boca Juniors teammate, whose name Diego never wanted to reveal.

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