Diego Maradona’s Shadow Still Rules Naples And Haunts Argentina’s Courts
Five years after Diego Maradona’s death, Naples still mourns him like a lost son, while in Argentina, prosecutors, doctors, and relatives argue over his final days, tracing every decision and omission to answer the question nobody has managed to bury: who failed Diego?
Naples Still Grieving Its Adopted Son
In the Spanish Quarters of Naples, where the streets are barely wider than the laundry lines that cross them, a man named Luigi still sells Maradona shirts from a tiny stall wedged between motorbikes and doorways. The jerseys hang like flags in a permanent celebration that never quite feels festive.
“It’s as if a relative had died,” he admits to EFE, looking up at the blue number tens fluttering in the breeze. For him, and for much of the city, the shock of November 25, 2020, has never really faded.
That day, Diego Armando Maradona, the “Pibe de Oro”, died at sixty from heart failure and acute pulmonary edema. In Naples, where he delivered two league titles and a UEFA Cup and rewrote local identity with a left foot, his presence is still everywhere. He stares down from balconies and shuttered storefronts, from building-sized murals and cheap plastic key chains, from tattoos on forearms that lift espresso cups each morning.
Naples did not just admire Maradona; it adopted him. The skinny kid from Villa Fiorito found in this chaotic port city a mirror of his own story: poor, mocked by the powerful, overflowing with talent and rage. As Luigi recalls to EFE, Diego took one look and decided, “This is my city.“
In a region scarred by unemployment, crime, and the contempt of Italy’s north, his talent gave people something they hadn’t owned in a long time: pride. To cheer for Maradona was to answer every stereotype with a nutmeg and every insult with a goal. Five years after his death, the grief still feels like a family bereavement because that is how many Neapolitans experienced his life: as the improbable rise of a cousin, a brother, one of their own who proved the world wrong.

A City And Its Number Ten Choose Each Other
Gennaro, a young Neapolitan who never saw him play, has grown up in the echo of those Sundays. For him, the man on the murals is “a god,” someone his grandfather remembers as generous, impulsive, larger than life. “The older people suffered the most,” he tells EFE. “They felt emotions we couldn’t live without.“
Before Maradona arrived in 1984, Napoli had never won the Italian league. The club existed in the shadow of rich northern giants, while the city itself was reduced in the national imagination to clichés of poverty, corruption, and mafia violence. On the pitch and off it, Naples was told to know its place.
Diego refused. Neapolitans remember not only the goals but the attitude with which he wore their colors. He embraced the slur “terrone”, a term used to belittle southerners, and turned it into fuel. With him in the number ten shirt, Napoli stopped being the butt of the joke and became the nightmare of Juventus and AC Milan.
Each November 25, the date of his death, the city still dresses in blue and black. Spontaneous vigils form in alleyways. Old radios play commentary from the title-winning seasons. In a bar, someone will raise a glass and say, “He made us feel like we were worth something.”
That emotion is not nostalgia for a trophy cabinet; it is remembrance of a time when a kid from Argentina and a city considered second-class chose each other and climbed together.

Altars, Murals, And A Daily Pilgrimage To Diego
Recently, that shrine almost vanished. Police seized several items a month ago, citing safety regulations and overcrowding in the narrow alley. After a tense standoff and negotiations with city hall, the objects were returned, but the fear of losing this improvised sanctuary still lingers. The altar’s guardian, Antonio “Bostik” Esposito, tells EFE they are still waiting for definitive approval that would grant the place legal protection commensurate with its moral weight.
On most days, tourists queue quietly for a photo while locals pass by with groceries. Sitting in front of the mural, brush in hand, is Juan Pablo, an Argentine painter and friend of Antonio’s who has become part of the square’s daily life. He first came to Europe for museums, he explains to EFE, but ended up settling in Naples, a city he initially sought out because of Maradona.
“When you were a kid, you didn’t dream of painting like Velázquez,” he says with a half-smile. “You dreamed of playing like Diego.“
For Juan Pablo, Diego’s appeal goes far beyond football statistics. What binds people to him, he argues, is a sense that this superstar, for all his excesses, did not hide behind polished statements or polite silence. He chose sides. He spoke up for the poor, the workers, the outsiders, even when it angered presidents or club owners.
Naples understands that posture instinctively. It is a city accustomed to feeling looked down on by its own country. A player who wore their shirt and publicly embraced their stigma became more than a champion; he became a symbol of resistance. That is why the daily pilgrimage to Largo Maradona feels more like a visit to a relative’s grave than a stop on a football tour.
While one city tends to its altars, many in Argentina wonder about the true causes of Diego’s passing-were there medical oversights, or was it inevitable? The quiet, private nature of his death has sparked debates about his health, adding layers to his enduring legacy and the emotional debates surrounding his final moments.

A Final Match Under Scrutiny
Eight health professionals who cared for him in his final days have been under investigation; seven have already appeared in court. The trial that began in March 2024 was abruptly halted in late May after it emerged that the judge, Julieta Makintach, was featured in a documentary about the case. Proceedings are now scheduled to restart in March 2026, prolonging the wait for his daughters and siblings, who want to know whether his death could have been prevented and who, if anyone, will be held accountable.
Evidence heard so far and reported by EFE paints a grim picture of a body that had carried too much for too long. The autopsy revealed advanced liver disease, chronic lung problems, severe kidney issues, and an enlarged heart weighing more than twice the norm. The official cause of death was an acute pulmonary edema linked to worsening chronic heart failure in a body already overloaded and exhausted.
Maradona had undergone brain surgery just weeks earlier at the Olivos Clinic, outside Buenos Aires. According to testimony from his daughters, when he was discharged, the neurosurgeon in charge, Leopoldo Luque, persuaded the family to accept home care instead of transferring him to a rehabilitation clinic, as other doctors had advised.
On paper, the house in a gated community north of the capital was supposed to offer a level of attention comparable to the clinic. In reality, relatives and witnesses described to EFE something closer to a poorly improvised stage set. A high-complexity ambulance that was meant to be stationed outside reportedly stayed only the first two days. The property was poorly adapted for a man with reduced mobility. There was no defibrillator, despite his heart condition.
His daughter Gianinna later described the setup as a “disastrous piece of theatre.”
Toxicology tests showed Diego died with no alcohol or illegal drugs in his system. Yet his body was swollen with liquid. Experts spoke of edema “from head to toe” and calculated that the four and a half liters of fluid found could only have accumulated over several days. Gianinna testified that she repeatedly told Luque she saw her father getting “worse and worse” and was told he was having “ups and downs.“
The reconstruction of his final hours, presented in court and reported by EFE, carries a quiet horror—a last clinical check shortly after midnight on November 25. A nurse is sleeping in a room far from his bed. No continuous monitoring. An emergency doctor arriving around lunchtime concluded that the former captain had been dead for some time.
On medical advice, family members were limited to a few visits so he could “rest.” Now they fear that, in those crucial hours, the man who had made millions scream in stadiums around the world may have been mostly alone.

From Little Onions To Eternal Icon
At fourteen, he signed for Argentinos Juniors and, ten days before his sixteenth birthday, made his first-division debut. Just a few months later, he became the youngest player ever to wear Argentina’s national team shirt. Left out of the 1978 World Cup because coaches felt he was still too young, he answered by leading the under-20 side to the Junior World Cup title the following year.
He moved to Boca Juniors in 1981 and won the league before heading to Europe. At Barcelona, he lifted the Spanish Cup. Still, the transfer that would define his legacy came in 1984, when he joined Napoli and dragged a chronically underachieving club to the summit of Italian and European football. Two Serie A titles and a UEFA Cup transformed him into a secular saint in the city’s working-class neighborhoods.
His brilliance was inseparable from chaos. An arrest for cocaine possession led to a fifteen-month ban and his departure from Napoli. Later, he had spells with Sevilla and Newell’s Old Boys, and a final return to Boca Juniors, where he played his last professional match in 1997.
With Argentina, he appeared at four World Cups. Mexico 1986 remains his masterpiece: the infamous “Hand of God” goal against England, followed minutes later by the slaloming run that many still call the goal of the century. His last World Cup, in 1994, ended abruptly when he was sent home after testing positive for a banned stimulant.
Over a 21-year professional career, he played 490 official club games and scored 259 goals; for Argentina, he scored 34 goals in 91 appearances. A combative playmaker from the working class, he became a hero to people who saw in him a reflection of their own struggles, from the barrios of Buenos Aires to the narrow streets of Naples. In an online poll organized by FIFA, fans voted him the greatest player of the twentieth century.
In later years, Maradona tried to reinvent himself as a coach, leading Argentina at the 2010 World Cup, working in the United Arab Emirates and elsewhere in the Middle East, and finally in Mexico with Dorados de Sinaloa. Even as his health deteriorated, he remained magnetic: volatile, generous, contradictory, impossible to ignore.
Five years after his death, those contradictions remain unresolved. In Naples, Luigi still folds blue number ten shirts while tourists pose under the mural at Largo Maradona and kids volley a ball off the cobblestones as if he might turn the corner. In Buenos Aires, lawyers prepare for a new trial, experts sharpen their reports, and his daughters brace themselves for another round of testimony.
For millions of fans, however, the verdict is already written, not in legal language but in graffiti, in chants, in the way a stadium roars when someone in a number ten shirt picks up the ball and dares to dribble. Whatever the courts decide about his final hours, the kid from Villa Fiorito, the adopted son of Naples, will remain something larger than the sum of his scandals, a symbol of beauty and rebellion who refused to know his place.
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