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Men's Football Argentina and Napoli mourn Maradona's death

ARGENTINA’S stunned football fans sought each other out Wednesday to mourn the death of Diego Maradona, gathering by the hundreds in spots linked to the life of the legendary player.

They gathered outside the humble home where he was born and raised in the Villa Fiorito neighbourhood. They went to the stadium of Argentinos Juniors, where he started as a professional footballer in 1976. They stood at the historic La Bombonera stadium of his beloved Boca Juniors. More were at the headquarters of Gimnasia La Plata, the team he was coaching.

“I am touched. I can’t understand it, I can’t see the reality. Diego will never die, today is the birth of the Maradona myth,” said Dante Lopez, a physician who went to the Argentinos Juniors stadium, which carries the beloved player’s name.

Fans put candles and flowers along the wall around the field.

“Diego was Argentina in the world. He gave us joy and we will never be able to repay him for so much joy,” said Argentine President Alberto Fernandez, who issued a decree for three days of national mourning and offered the presidential palace for the funeral.

Mariano Jeijer sat with his wife and their baby in a small car near the Boca Juniors stadium. He said he didn’t want to be sad at home.

“Diego is a symbol of being Argentinian. He is someone that made us very happy,” Jeijer said.

Jejier said his devotion to Maradona is justified by the two goals he scored against England in Argentina's 2-1 victory in the quarterfinals of the 1986 World Cup. That game was seen by many Argentine fans as pay back for the Falklands/Malvinas war four years earlier.

“The happiest moment was the first goal against the English. I was 12. I screamed as if I was crazy. I don’t even remember the second,” he said.

Nearby, Patricia Sanchez said Maradona “was like a father, and we were his children.” She stood with her son Angel, who wore a blue and yellow Boca Juniors coat. Maradona played for Boca Juniors in 1981 before he moved to Barcelona, then returned there to retire as a player in 1997.

There were no tears, only celebration in Villa Fiorito, where Maradona learned how to play soccer on muddy fields.

“Olé, olé, Diego, Diego,” the neighbours sang in front of the house on Azamor Street where Maradona lived until Argentinos Juniors bought him a better one. “Diego is the greatest, he is a national pride,” the fans chanted.

Although the property no longer belongs to Maradona’s family, neighbours began painting a mural of their idol on a wall.

Mariela Cordoba said she didn’t finish lunch after learning of his death from a heart attack.

“The hunger was gone and we all came here," she said. “We came to help with the wall because we are neighbors of Maradona's life. People here are proud. They can say Maradona lived here.”

At the headquarters of Gimnasia La Plata, where Maradona became coach in September 2019, many fans cried in the stands. He made his last appearance there at a game on October 30, which was his 60th birthday.

“We will keep that smile, and the most beautiful crest on your chest,” the club said on Twitter. “We lived an unforgettable story.”

Meanwhile the Italian city of Naples, where Maradona led Napoli to its only two Serie A titles in 1987 and 1990, is in mourning for the football great.

The city’s mayor started the formal process yesterday to rename the San Paolo stadium after Maradona.

“We are already putting it together this morning, taking the first steps to dedicate Naples’ stadium to Maradona,” Luigi De Magistris said.

“It’s a process but it will be a quick process, because when there is such a strong desire there’s nothing that will hold us up.

“We’re hoping to make it coincide with the resumption of games with fans,” the mayor added.

Fans gathered outside the stadium late on Wednesday and into yesterday morning waving banners, singing songs and lighting flares in Maradona’s honour — even though gatherings are technically banned in the city, which is located in a coronavirus “red zone.”

“Maradona is like a father, like a brother, a family member for us,” said one fan outside the stadium, Raffaele Cuomo.

“Unfortunately it’s like someone from the family died, and it’s like a part of Naples has died.”

Added Anna Carpi, another Naples resident: “It broke my heart. But Diego will always be with us, in our heart.”

When Maradona joined Napoli in 1984, the southern club had won virtually nothing and was far removed both geographically and socio-economically from the country’s football capitals of Milan and Turin.

“It sparked the revival of a people,” De Magistris said. “He loves Naples and so he wanted to — via football — make the world know about a city full of humanity, affection, energy and fantasy.

“Even today I see young kids who didn’t (see him play), like my kids, who still have Maradona in their minds and in their hearts.”

Il Mattino, a newspaper in Naples, had a front-page headline Thursday that said simply, “Grazie” — “Thank You.”

The Gazzetta dello Sport, the country’s leading sports newspaper, dedicated its first 23 pages to Maradona.

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