Diego Maradona appointed Argentina coach
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina â Diego Maradona officially took over as the new coach of Argentina on Tuesday, asking his skeptical countrymen to âgive me a chance." He was contracted to the end of the 2010 World Cup in South Africa, if Argentina qualifies. Argentina was lying third in the South American race. âItâs an honor," Maradona said. âItâs a dream come true being named coach of the national team. âIâm going to give it my all to make sure that things go well. Weâre going to work every day so that Argentina has a national team that keeps getting better and better." Dressed in a suit and blue tie, the 48-year-old Maradona was flanked at a news conference by new Argentina manager Carlos Bilardo and Julio Grondona, the head of the Argentine Football Federation. While Maradona remains a national hero, his appointment has been questioned by local media and fans since it was first announced last week. Many are doubtful Maradona can translate his technical skills into coaching expertise, and are wary of the starâs past, which includes near-death battles with drugs and obesity. Grondona brushed aside criticism that Maradona wasnât qualified to be the national coach, saying âwe have the security of excellence." Maradona agreed: âItâs fine, but theyâre going to have to be my fans because Iâm Argentine," he said. âI ask that they give me time, that they give me a chance." He said heâd recuperated from his drug and alcohol problems, and that the job offer came at a most opportune time. âThis is the best moment in my life," he said. âI have my two daughters, I get up every morning and I look forward to the day. Thatâs something Iâve gotten back. âIâm earning back the confidence of my daughters and I have the beautiful dream that is the national team ... itâs like touching heaven with my hands." Asked by reporters if he was daunted by the prospect of failure while leading the team and further damaging his reputation as a living football great, Maradona said, âIâm not afraid that my crown will fall. It would be worse to hide myself." He replaces Alfio Basile, who stepped down on Oct. 16, a day after an historic 1-0 loss against neighbor Chile in World Cup qualifying. His first game in charge will be a friendly against Scotland on Nov. 19 at Glasgow, followed in February by another friendly against France. His first match before a demanding home crowd will be a World Cup qualifier against Venezuela in March. One of Maradonaâs first decisions was to replace Javier Zanetti as captain with Javier Mascherano. Maradona said Mascherano was the âbest suited player" because he brings together the necessary characteristics of âthinking, sacrifice, professional, being attentive to teammates." His first squad for the Scotland game was little changed from Basileâs tenure. As expected, star Lionel Messi was not on the list due to a deal struck between AFA and his Barcelona club to allow him to play in Beijing but then finish the season playing only for the club, an arrangement Maradona said last week he would respect. The roster includes his son-in-law Sergio Aguero, from Atletico Madrid, and the only notable absence was goalkeeper Roberto Abbondanzieri. However, Maradonaâs coaching team was still in limbo. Last Friday, it seemed Sergio Batista and Jose Luis Brown, Maradonaâs teammates in Argentinaâs 1986 World Cup champion side, would be his assistants. Batista was the Argentina Youth coach and Brown his assistant. Batista also coached the team that won the Olympic gold medal in Beijing. But Maradona surprised local media on Monday when he announced that he preferred Oscar Ruggeri and his friend Alejandro Mancuso on his coaching team. But AFA head Grondona apparently doesnât approve, and so the official announcement on the assistants was stalled. âWe still donât have it resolved," Maradona said. âWhat weâre looking for with Carlos is that the (new coaching staff) be made of iron, that theyâre ready to work and that they will accept orders from the head guy, which is me," Maradona said on Tuesday. His will travel to Spain to watch Real Madrid host Juventus in the Champions League on Wednesday, he said. He will continue throughout Europe to speak with overseas-based Argentine footballers. â AP