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The Estadio Diego Armando Maradona is a football stadium located in the district of Villa General Mitre, Buenos Aires, Argentina. It is the home venue of club Argentinos Juniors , and has a capacity of 22,023 spectators.
Diego Maradona stadium can refer to: Estadio Diego Armando Maradona, home stadium of Argentinos Juniors in Buenos Aires, Argentina;
Stadio Diego Armando Maradona, formerly known as Stadio San Paolo, [1] [2] is a stadium in the western Fuorigrotta suburb of Naples, Italy. It is the fourth largest football stadium in Italy, [ 3 ] after Milan 's San Siro , Rome 's Stadio Olimpico and Bari 's San Nicola .
The Estadio Único Diego Armando Maradona [2] [3] (English: Unique Diego Armando Maradona Stadium, formerly Estadio Ciudad de La Plata) is a multi-purpose stadium located in Tolosa, La Plata Partido, next to the city of La Plata, Argentina.
Maradona and Brindisi were highly regarded as the most notable players of the squad. [61] The following year, Boca lost the young Maradona, who moved to Europe to play for FC Barcelona, owing also to Argentina's political problems. In 1984 Boca was near to a financial collapse, almost going bankrupt.
The campaign is best remembered by the high-expected return to the club of 1986 World Cup champion Diego Maradona after 14 seasons. [1] Several players were transferred in included Rosario Central left winger Kily González almost signed by Real Madrid, [2] Darío Scotto, Claudio Paul Caniggia, [3] Arturo Yorno and loans out ended for Raul Peralta, Roberto Cabañas y Blas Giunta.
Diego Armando Maradona Franco (Spanish: [ˈdjeɣo maɾaˈðona]; 30 October 1960 – 25 November 2020) was an Argentine professional football player and manager. Widely regarded as one of the greatest players in the history of the sport, he was one of the two joint winners of the FIFA Player of the 20th Century award, alongside Pelé.
Maradona then began his 60-yard, 10-second dash towards the English goal, passing four English outfield players: Peter Beardsley, Peter Reid, Terry Butcher (twice) and Terry Fenwick. Maradona finished the move with a feint that left goalkeeper Peter Shilton on his bottom, before slotting the ball into the empty net to make the score 2–0 to ...