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SportMonday, June 22, 2026

Maradona's 'Hand of God' and Solo Masterpiece: 40 Years Since Argentina's Quarter-Final Reckoning

On the anniversary of the 1986 World Cup clash with England, the two goals that defined a career and a rivalry still resonate, as Argentina faces Austria in the 2026 tournament.

On 22 June 1986, Argentina defeated England 2-1 in a World Cup quarter-final at Mexico City’s Azteca Stadium, a match decided by two goals from Diego Maradona that have since become indelible in football lore. Six minutes into the second half, Maradona leapt with goalkeeper Peter Shilton and punched the ball into the net; the Tunisian referee allowed the goal, which Maradona later described as “a little with the head and a little with the hand of God.” Four minutes later, he collected a pass from Héctor Enrique inside his own half, slalomed past five English players over 60 metres in 10.6 seconds, and slotted home a goal that Uruguayan commentator Victor Hugo Morales famously called a “cosmic kite” and “the play of all time.” Inside the stadium, a crowd of 114,600 erupted, many initially bewildered by the first goal’s legitimacy before witnessing the second.

The match carried a weight beyond sport. Only four years had passed since the Falklands/Malvinas war between Argentina and the United Kingdom. In his autobiography, Maradona acknowledged that, despite pre-match denials, the players felt the encounter was a form of symbolic reclamation: “We knew that many Argentine boys had died there… it was revenge, it was recovering something of the Malvinas.” British indifference, by contrast, was noted by Argentine striker Jorge Valdano, who later remarked that the English “lived it with a certain indifference, that of the one who won the war and does not have it present.” Argentina was three years into redemocratisation and grappling with an economic crisis left by the military dictatorship, a backdrop that lent the victory a broader resonance.

Argentina advanced to the semi-finals and went on to win the World Cup. The date, 22 June, was subsequently adopted as Argentina’s Footballer’s Day, replacing the previous 14 May commemoration. The “Hand of God” entered global sporting vocabulary, while the second goal was voted “Goal of the Century” in a 2002 FIFA poll. Maradona’s international career would later end in controversy: his last World Cup goal, a curling strike against Greece in 1994, was followed by a positive doping test and expulsion from the tournament, making that finish his final act in the national shirt.

Forty years to the day, Argentina again plays a World Cup match on 22 June, this time against Austria in the group stage of the 2026 tournament co-hosted by the United States, Mexico and Canada. The fixture, held in the US, echoes the Mexican setting of the 1986 quarter-final, a symmetry not lost on Argentine supporters. The current side, led by Lionel Messi, carries the weight of a different legacy, but the date remains a touchstone for a nation’s footballing memory.

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 3 languages

49%
ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Latin American pressContinental European press
Latin American press/ Market
TriumphRevanchism

Forty years on, Argentine media celebrate Maradona's two goals against England as a mythological act of revenge for the Falklands war, enshrining the second as the 'Goal of the Century' and keeping the memory of an eternal triumph alive.

Continental European press/ Mediterranean
DetachmentIrony

Continental European media reconstruct the goal meter by meter, treating the match as football's last day of freedom, blending technical analysis with poetic wonder while remaining unaligned.

Related articles

Read more
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Upd. 06:23 AM3 languages · 3 outlets
3 outlets|3 languages|3 min read
Monday, June 22, 2026

Maradona's 'Hand of God' and Solo Masterpiece: 40 Years Since Argentina's Quarter-Final Reckoning

On the anniversary of the 1986 World Cup clash with England, the two goals that defined a career and a rivalry still resonate, as Argentina faces Austria in the 2026 tournament.

On 22 June 1986, Argentina defeated England 2-1 in a World Cup quarter-final at Mexico City’s Azteca Stadium, a match decided by two goals from Diego Maradona that have since become indelible in football lore. Six minutes into the second half, Maradona leapt with goalkeeper Peter Shilton and punched the ball into the net; the Tunisian referee allowed the goal, which Maradona later described as “a little with the head and a little with the hand of God.” Four minutes later, he collected a pass from Héctor Enrique inside his own half, slalomed past five English players over 60 metres in 10.6 seconds, and slotted home a goal that Uruguayan commentator Victor Hugo Morales famously called a “cosmic kite” and “the play of all time.” Inside the stadium, a crowd of 114,600 erupted, many initially bewildered by the first goal’s legitimacy before witnessing the second.

The match carried a weight beyond sport. Only four years had passed since the Falklands/Malvinas war between Argentina and the United Kingdom. In his autobiography, Maradona acknowledged that, despite pre-match denials, the players felt the encounter was a form of symbolic reclamation: “We knew that many Argentine boys had died there… it was revenge, it was recovering something of the Malvinas.” British indifference, by contrast, was noted by Argentine striker Jorge Valdano, who later remarked that the English “lived it with a certain indifference, that of the one who won the war and does not have it present.” Argentina was three years into redemocratisation and grappling with an economic crisis left by the military dictatorship, a backdrop that lent the victory a broader resonance.

Argentina advanced to the semi-finals and went on to win the World Cup. The date, 22 June, was subsequently adopted as Argentina’s Footballer’s Day, replacing the previous 14 May commemoration. The “Hand of God” entered global sporting vocabulary, while the second goal was voted “Goal of the Century” in a 2002 FIFA poll. Maradona’s international career would later end in controversy: his last World Cup goal, a curling strike against Greece in 1994, was followed by a positive doping test and expulsion from the tournament, making that finish his final act in the national shirt.

Forty years to the day, Argentina again plays a World Cup match on 22 June, this time against Austria in the group stage of the 2026 tournament co-hosted by the United States, Mexico and Canada. The fixture, held in the US, echoes the Mexican setting of the 1986 quarter-final, a symmetry not lost on Argentine supporters. The current side, led by Lionel Messi, carries the weight of a different legacy, but the date remains a touchstone for a nation’s footballing memory.

Source divergence

Sport · 3 outlets · 3 languages

49%Medium

How sources tell the same facts differently.

How They Split

Favorable57%
Neutral43%

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 3 languages

ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Latin American pressContinental European press
Latin American press/ Market
TriumphRevanchism

Forty years on, Argentine media celebrate Maradona's two goals against England as a mythological act of revenge for the Falklands war, enshrining the second as the 'Goal of the Century' and keeping the memory of an eternal triumph alive.

Continental European press/ Mediterranean
DetachmentIrony

Continental European media reconstruct the goal meter by meter, treating the match as football's last day of freedom, blending technical analysis with poetic wonder while remaining unaligned.

This story appeared in

3 outlets · 3 languages

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