His heroics amounted to the most spectacular individual performance in the history of football tournaments, and at the World Cup to boot. It was insane, a top gear / peak no one ever reached before or since. It's not nostalgia but first hand experience.
What probably made it even better was the next best was probably Platini at Euro '84. I've mentioned before how before that World Cup every kid wanted to be Platini, and a month later nobody did. It was an entire tournament of one "wtf?" after another.
Nobody will argue against Messi being at the very top of the game for almost 15 years, winning everything in sight and quite probably being the
greatest footballer of all time. Personally, I'd say it's him or Pelé and gun to my head Pelé for taking the game global and so popular.
The
best though? I can't see anyone reproducing that, more so given the
expectations. If I had to think about a 2022 parallel it would be Kevin de Bruyne playing out of his mind and beyond anything we've seen to make Belgium win the World Cup.
Belgium, good side, well ranked but favourites? Nah. KDB, great player, would transfer for gazillions if City had ever needed to sell. BPITW? GOAT? Not quite, keep competing.
Now imagine KDB actually was a Villarreal player and went back to Spain now and won La Liga and Copa del Rey. Four years on the trot: 1st, 2nd, 2nd, 1st with a UEFA Cup to boot, with Villarreal.
It's not nostalgia, if you saw that happen and spent four year scratching your head at it, any time anyone asks "GOAT?" you can't drop that guy.
Maradona didn't score at that World Cup, he played it out infiltrated because his ankle was the size of a melon. Nobody remembers if he scored or didn't, what people remember is he put himself through that, unrelenting, and in doing that almost managed to get Argentina over the line and fluking an entirely undeserved/unwarranted World Cup win.
THAT is where you are not getting it. Maradona wasn't about scoring but leading, inspiring, orchestrating and making others perform at their best levels.
In a way, what he did best was precisely what bogged down Messi until Rodrigo de Paul showed up. OK, no one will get this, I know
Loads on the caf laughed at de Paul throughout that difficult group stage and referred to him as barely a footballer, but look at the stats (I don't) and you will surely find de Paul is one of the players Argentina passed the ball the most to.
Again, the average cafite will laugh and think McTominay is the last guy they want to give the ball the most to. Yeah, sure, but it results from a quality of
always being there which ultimately makes teams work.
Now, Maradona was always there. Everyone knew if they ran into trouble, Diego would be available to play you out of trouble. Everyone also knew if they made this or that run, Diego would find them, just watch Caniggia against Brazil. Imagine how easy it is to play football like that, playing football
with Diego.
For some reason I can't put my finger on, the dynamic in Argentina for a decade was "give it to Messi". That was
not the same dynamic and it's hardly Messi's fault to begin with, but that's why Argentina was largely a dysfunctional team.
At Barca it was never "give it to Messi". Xavi wanted ball, Iniesta wanted ball, and you couldn't "just" nullify Messi. With Argentina you could. They've had sensational players, better squads on paper than those from the 80s, but they never played as a team. I don't think that
discredits Messi, but it certainly is a credit for Maradona.
The single most important thing Argentina got out of de Paul was splitting the "give it to" role. Nobody will man mark de Paul, how much damage could he possibly do? So he makes himself available, is available, unmarked, and in doing all that removed the bottleneck of
everything going through Messi. That comes from the top, from Scaloni and it's why de Paul was undroppable (and also why they suffered Lo Celso's loss so badly as he did the same on the left).
Guess what? Suddenly by not channeling everything through him we got a much more effective Messi, who would have thunk it? Took them 15 years to work it out. Not Messi's fault, but you can see he now finally actually enjoys playing for the NT. Maradona always did and the difference in impact and
relative outcomes is significant.
Nah, there have been some massive Messi eulogisers, particularly of the way him being in Spain for so long hasn't made him lose accent, slang, anything. It's very much the opposite
these days.
Doesn't have Diego's charisma, that's all.