Football legend Diego Maradona passes away at 60

The player was suffering from confusion caused by "abstinence", said  Maradona's personal doctor Leopoldo Luque, after he underwent surgery on November 3. However, he recovered enough to leave the hospital and was taken to a house in Tigre, on the northern outskirts of Buenos Aires.

Genius footballer Diego Maradona, aged 60, died of a heart attack on Wednesday. He went through brain surgery for a blood clot and was discharged from the hospital just two weeks ago, according to media reports.

The player was suffering from confusion caused by "abstinence", said  Maradona's personal doctor Leopoldo Luque, after he underwent surgery on November 3. However, he recovered enough to leave the hospital and was taken to a house in Tigre, on the northern outskirts of Buenos Aires.

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The 'Hand of God' goal fame was feeling well after overcoming what was "maybe the toughest time of his life", said his lawyer Matias Morla.

Widely rated as the greatest player of all time, Maradona was captain when Argentina won the 1986 World Cup. The tournament featured a number of sublime performances from the legendary forward, the most prominent of which came in a quarter-final match against England and the goal he scored in the match which came after a 60-yard run with the ball from midfield, dribbling past six English players has since been dubbed 'Goal of the Century'.

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Born in a slum area in the southern outskirts of Buenos Aires on October 30, 1960, Maradona made his senior debut for Buenos Aires-based Argentinos Juniors in 1976. He went on to a play for Argentine giants Boca Juniors in the 1981-82 season. He then shifted to Europe where he spent two tumultuous seasons with Spanish giants Barcelona. His tenure with the Catalan club ended with a nasty brawl that triggered crowd trouble in the 1984 Copa del Rey final.

Maradona then went to Italian club Napoli, where he had arguably the most productive period of his career. He won two Serie A titles, a Coppa Italia and one UEFA Cup in his seven seasons with the club, leaving as their all-time highest goalscorer, a record that stood until Marek Hamsik overtook his tally in 2017. He went on to spend a season each at Spanish club Sevilla and Argentine club Newell's Old Boys before ending his career at Boca Juniors.

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As a coach, Maradona notably managed Argentina between 2008 and 2010. He was in charge of Gimnasia y Esgrima in Argentina's top flight at the time of his death.

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