- May 26, 2003
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As some of you already know, he was hospitalized yesterday... appearently there are some improvements!
Who can forget his invisible hand that kicked the British out 
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/americas/story.jsp?story=513173]
And his condition is improving:
http://quote.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=10000085&sid=au4pNnpXTv5o&refer=europe
'God bless you, Maradona': A nation prays for its hero
By Elizabeth Nash
20 April 2004
Outside the hospital, they stood in vigil. Images of the man they have revered for decades were held aloft. Worry beads passed through fingers.
Argentinians had come to pray for their fallen angel of football. Diego Maradona, perhaps the best player ever, was fighting for his life in intensive care.
The player named by Fifa in 2000 as the greatest player of all time was rushed to the Swiss hospital in the Argentine capital with breathing difficulties and what his doctor described as a "swollen heart" and pulmonary infection.
His own medical staff denied reports that he had taken a cocaine overdose but, last night, Maradona was in intensive care, on a respirator, and sedated. His condition was described as critical: "He treads a thin line between life and death," Argentine newspapers informed a nervous nation.
Maradona, 43, fell ill at a traditional asado or barbeque after watching a match at La Bonbonera, the stadium of his former club Boca Juniors at the rough end of the city on Sunday night. Despite his enthusiasm for the match, he withdrew during the second half from the box he has rented for life.
His father, Diego, his ex-wife, Claudia, and his two teenage daughters, Dalma and Gianina were by his bedside. Doctors feared his heart would not be able to withstand the crisis.
In recent years, Maradona has been a pallid, grotesquely bloated figure - his health ravaged by cocaine abuse. But his personal doctor, Adolfo Cahe, denied that the footballer's condition was due to a cocaine overdose. His collapse "was nothing to do with his addictions, Dr Cahe said. "He hasn't been using cocaine recently."
Fans mounted a devoted vigil outside the clinic throughout yesterday, some draped in the blue-and-yellow colours of Boca Juniors, others carrying photographs of the nation's idol. "We love you Diego," they said.
They glued posters of their idol bearing El Diez - the Number 10 shirt - in his glorious prime to the walls of the hospital. Priests and tearful young women were among the crowds who reattached their posters and stickers to the walls no sooner had a hospital employee removed them. "Diego, Argentina loves you," and "Hold on, Diego," they said.
Police had to cordon off the hospital entrance and hold back the crowd on a busy boulevard in central Buenos Aires. Many Argentinians confessed to keeping the radio and television turned off for fear of what they might hear.
Despite his well-publicised addiction, Maradona has worldwide following of disciples. From Italy to Iceland, from Vietnam to Venezuela, they belong to the "Church of Maradona".
The one they worship suffered heart failure in January 2000 at the Uruguayan beach resort of Punta del Este, which is popular with wealthy Argentinians. He was treated in hospital for weeks for hypertension and an irregular heartbeat.
Since then, he has spent long periods in Cuba for drug rehabiliation treatment, during which time he dyed his ebony hair a screaming orange, and became acquainted with Fidel Castro. That time, he stepped back from an early grave but his broken health has never really recovered. His popularity, however, did not falter. His autobiography, I am Diego, published in Argentina in September 2000, became a national bestseller, shifting 125,000 copies in a week.
"God bless you, Maradona!" said a placard held up by one man outside the hospital in Buenos Aires yesterday. But for many, Maradona is God, and the crazed megalomania that marked his years of tragic decline suggest that he came to believe he was indeed divine. "Diego, today and for ever," they called yesterday, already bracing themselves to celebrate the football star's immortality.
Maradona's rags-to-riches streak was marked by drug abuse. He was suspended from the Italian league in 1991 for 15 months after testing positive for cocaine. Fifa suspended him in 1994 for 15 months for the same reason at the World Cup finals in the United States. He retired from the game in 1997, a physical wreck, aged 36.
Maradona's tumultuous career started in 1976. He swiftly scaled unparalleled heights of football genius, interrupted by humiliating plunges marked by drugs, bans and arrests.
After his meteoric rise to world stardom, fans watched with foreboding as he careered towards what a Buenos Aires psychology professor described as a downfall as inevitable as that of Diana, Princess of Wales. "When I think of Maradona, I imagine him driving in slow motion towards the same column as Lady Di," Professor Rodolfo Urribarri said.
After stints at Barcelona, Napoli and Seville, he returned to Argentina in 1993, and was welcomed back with open arms when he signed for the Rosario club Newell's Old Boys. They sacked him for missing training in 1994, the year when he opened gunfire on journalists outside his house. His final comeback, with Boca Juniors in 1997, was aborted by yet another failed drugs test.
Fame and football plucked the urchin from the Buenos Aires slums and brought him home physically and mentally broken, but for Argentinians today and for ever, as they say, he is their undisputed hero.
RISE AND FALL
1976: At 15, makes debut for Argentinos Juniors
1981: Wins Argentinian League with Boca Juniors
1982: Moves to Barcelona for £1.875m
1984: Joins Napoli for £4.68m (two league titles and Uefa Cup)
1986: Wins World Cup
1990: Loses World Cup final to Germany.
1991: Fails cocaine test, banned for 15 months
1994: Fires airgun at crowd of reporters at his home, wounding four
1996: Books into Swiss drugs clinic
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/americas/story.jsp?story=513173]
And his condition is improving:
Soccer Star Diego Maradona's Condition Is `Improving' (Update1)
April 19 (Bloomberg) -- The condition of former Argentina soccer star Diego Maradona, 43, who was hospitalized yesterday with breathing difficulties, is ``improving,'' his doctor said.
``He is responding to treatment,'' said Alfredo Cahe, on TodoNoticias television station. Maradona's personal physician was shown on the doorsteps of the Suizo-Argentina Maternidad clinic where the soccer idol is in an intensive care unit.
A medical report, issued by the clinic at 2 p.m. local time, said Maradona remained in intensive care, sedated and breathing with the help of an artificial respirator, TodoNoticias said.
Maradona's blood pressure is ``normalizing'' and his heart function is ``acceptable'', the report said, according to the TV station.
Doctors said Maradona's early symptoms were high blood pressure followed by ``insufficient heart function'' and breathing difficulties. The hospital is expected to comment again tomorrow around midday, TodoNoticias said.
Television pictures showed hundreds of fans keeping vigil at the clinic, holding signs reading ``God Help Diego'' and blocking traffic on Pueyrredon Avenue in front of the clinic. A priest appeared at the clinic at about 2 a.m. to administer the last rites, TodoNoticias said. He wasn't allowed in and gave the rites from outside, the report said.
Cocaine Addiction
Maradona, who led Argentina to the 1986 World Cup title and to second place in 1990, has struggled with cocaine addiction since retiring as a player in 1997 and has had heart problems in the past four years. Maradona was hospitalized and first diagnosed with a heart condition in January 2000 in Punta del Este, a seaside resort in Uruguay.
He became ill yesterday after watching a match involving his former club, Boca Juniors.
Maradona failed a drug test at the 1994 World Cup and was sent home the day before he was due to make a record 22nd appearance in the tournament.
He won the Italian and Argentine leagues, and in 2000 tied with Brazil's Pele for ruling body FIFA's title of soccer's best- ever player. Argentine sports writers named him the Sportsman of the Century in 1999.
http://quote.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=10000085&sid=au4pNnpXTv5o&refer=europe
