ডিয়েগ' মাৰাড'না: বিভিন্ন সংশোধনসমূহৰ মাজৰ পাৰ্থক্য
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In Argentina, Maradona is considered a sports hero. On the idolatry that exists in Argentina, former teammate [[Jorge Valdano]] said, "At the time that Maradona retired from active football, left traumatized Argentina. Maradona was more than just a great footballer. It was a special compensation factor for a country that in a few years lived several military dictatorships and social frustrations of all kinds".<ref name="Deportes"/> Valdano added that "Maradona offered to the Argentines a way out of their collective frustration, and that's why people love him. There is a divine figure."<ref name="Deportes">[http://espndeportes.espn.go.com/news/story?id=455305 "¿Es el sucesor natural?"]. ESPN Deportes. (Ed, 29 June 2014). Retrieved 3 July 2014</ref>
Ever since 1986, it is common for Argentines abroad to hear Maradona's name as a token of recognition, even in remote places.<ref Name=Guardian/> The [[Tartan Army]] sing a version of the [[Hokey Cokey]] in honour of the [[The hand of God|Hand of God goal]] against England.<ref>Shields, Tom (9 April 2006). [http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4156/is_20060409/ai_n16175117 LET'S RAISE A GLASS TO MARADONA TOM SHIELDS SPORT DIARY] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081208061736/http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4156/is_20060409/ai_n16175117 |date= 8 December 2008 }}, ''[[The Herald (Glasgow)|Sunday Herald]]''.</ref> In Argentina, Maradona is often talked about in terms reserved for legends. In the Argentine film ''[[Son of the Bride|El Hijo de la Novia]]'' ("Son of the Bride"), somebody who impersonates a [[Priest#Catholic and Orthodox|Catholic priest]] says to a bar patron, "They idolized him and then crucified him." When a friend scolds him for taking the prank too far, the fake priest retorts, "But I was talking about Maradona." He is the subject of the film ''[[El Camino de San Diego]]'', though he himself only appears in archive footage.
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