Maradona urges Messi to call it quits

Former Argentina coach Diego Maradona has said Barcelona star Lionel Messi should quit the national team and send everyone “to hell.”

Messi has taken an indefinite leave of absence from Argentina since captaining the team to the round of 16 during the 2018 World Cup tournament. Maradona, currently the manager of Mexican second division club Dorados says he would tell Messi “not to come (to the national team) again.”

“Yes, because if the under-15 side loses, it’s Messi’s fault. He is always at fault. I would tell him, “Don’t come (to the national team) anymore,” said Maradona when asked if he thinks Messi should retire.

Messi who is yet to win a major trophy with the national team has never addressed public and Maradona thinks the Argentine should come out clean. “I would have liked for him to have sent everyone to hell because it’s not his fault not to be a world champion… Today the national team doesn’t awaken absolutely anything.”

The 31-year-old has netted 65 goals in 128 appearances since making his debut with Argentina in 2005.

Despite competing in four World Cups and four Copa Americas, the Barcelona forward has not won a major trophy for his country, and Argentina FA  president Claudio Tapia has said he faced too much pressure heading into the World Cup earlier this year.

Born and raised in central Argentina, Messi was diagnosed with a growth hormone deficiency as a child. At age 13, he relocated to Spain to join Barcelona, who agreed to pay for his medical treatment. After a fast progression through Barcelona’s youth academy, Messi made his competitive debut aged 17 in October 2004. Despite being injury-prone during his early career, he established himself as an integral player for the club within the next three years, finishing 2007 as a finalist for both the Ballon d’Or and FIFA World Player of the Year award, a feat he repeated the following year. His first uninterrupted campaign came in the 2008–09 season, during which he helped Barcelona achieve the first treble in Spanish football. At 22 years old, Messi won the Ballon d’Or and FIFA World Player of the Year award by record voting margins.

Three successful seasons followed, with Messi winning three consecutive FIFA Ballons d’Or, including an unprecedented fourth. His best campaign statistically to date was the 2011–12 season, in which he set the La Liga and European records for most goals scored in a single season, while establishing himself as Barcelona’s all-time top scorer in official competitions in March 2012. The following two seasons, Messi finished twice second for the Ballon d’Or behind Cristiano Ronaldo, his perceived career rival. Messi regained his best form during the 2014–15 campaign, breaking the all-time goalscoring records in both La Liga and the Champions League in November 2014,  and led Barcelona to a historic second treble.

An Argentine international, Messi is his country’s all-time leading goalscorer. At youth level, he won the 2005 FIFA World Youth Championship, finishing the tournament with both the Golden Ball and Golden Shoe, and an Olympic gold medal at the 2008 Summer Olympics. His style of play as a diminutive, left-footed dribbler drew comparisons with compatriot Diego Maradona, who declared the teenager his successor. After making his senior debut in August 2005, Messi became the youngest Argentine to play and score in a FIFA World Cup during the 2006 edition, and reached the final of the 2007 Copa América, where he was named young player of the tournament. As the squad’s captain from August 2011, he led Argentina to three consecutive finals: the 2014 World Cup, for which he won the Golden Ball, and the 2015 and 2016 Copas América. After announcing his international retirement in 2016, he reversed his decision and led his country to qualification for the 2018 World Cup.

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