Sport · Culture · History
— Key Facts
—The coincidence. Messi broke the World Cup goal record on June twenty-second, the same date as Maradona’s most famous match.
—The original. On June twenty-second, 1986, Maradona scored the “Hand of God” and the “Goal of the Century” against England.
—The gap. Exactly forty years separate the two moments, both on North American soil.
—The echo. Both defining goals were finished with the left foot, the trademark of each man.
—The meaning. For Argentina, the date has become almost a fixture of national memory.
When it comes to June 22 Argentine football has a strange habit of producing its defining moments, and Messi has just added the latest chapter to a date Maradona made sacred.
Some dates belong to a country. For Argentina, June twenty-second is one of them, and it now carries two of the greatest moments in its football history.
On Monday, Lionel Messi broke the World Cup goal record in Dallas. Exactly forty years earlier, on the same calendar date, Diego Maradona produced the most famous afternoon the tournament has ever seen.
What June 22 Argentine football history holds
The date of June twenty-second, 1986 is fixed in the sport’s memory. In the quarter-final against England at the Azteca Stadium in Mexico City, Maradona scored twice in four minutes.
The first was the “Hand of God,” an illegal goal he punched in past the goalkeeper. The second was the “Goal of the Century,” a solo run past five England players later voted the finest goal in World Cup history.
The match was about more than football. It came four years after the Falklands War between Argentina and Britain, and Maradona himself later called the win a kind of revenge.
For a watching nation, that afternoon became foundational. It is the day a working-class boy from the slums of Buenos Aires turned a football match into a piece of the country’s identity.
The moment lives on in sound as much as image. The Uruguayan commentator’s anguished cry of “barrilete cósmico,” or cosmic kite, as Maradona ran through England remains one of the most quoted pieces of Spanish-language broadcasting.
Maradona died in 2020, aged sixty, drawing crowds in their hundreds of thousands to his funeral in Buenos Aires. The date of his greatest match had already passed into folklore long before.
Forty years later, the same date
Now the date has a second owner. Forty years on, almost to the hour, Messi chose June twenty-second to claim the one World Cup record that had eluded Argentina’s greatest players.
The parallels are almost too neat. Both moments came on North American soil, Maradona’s in Mexico and Messi’s in the United States, four decades apart.
Both defining goals were struck with the left foot, the signature of each man. And both players wore the same number ten and the same captain’s armband for Argentina.
The two men were always linked in the national imagination. Maradona was the flawed genius who won the 1986 World Cup; Messi the quieter heir who finally matched him by lifting the trophy in 2022.
For years that comparison weighed on Messi. He was measured against a man many Argentines treated as a deity, and only the 2022 title in Qatar truly settled the argument in his favour.
For Argentines, the shared date closes a circle. The country’s two footballing gods, separated by a generation, now share not just the number on their backs but the day on the calendar.
Coincidence is the honest word for it. But in a football culture as romantic as Argentina‘s, a coincidence this precise will be remembered as something closer to fate.
Messi himself has spoken often of Maradona’s shadow. To break a record on the very date of his predecessor’s masterpiece reads, even to the unsentimental, like the game writing its own poetry.
Why is June 22 Argentine football so storied?
On June twenty-second, 1986, Diego Maradona scored the “Hand of God” and the “Goal of the Century” against England. Forty years later to the day, in 2026, Lionel Messi broke the World Cup goal record, giving the date two of the sport’s greatest Argentine moments.
What links Messi and Maradona on this date?
Both produced their defining World Cup moments on June twenty-second, both on North American soil, and both finished with the left foot while wearing Argentina’s number ten and captain’s armband. The two are the country’s most revered footballers.
Is the connection real or just coincidence?
It is a genuine coincidence of the calendar, not a planned event. But the precision of the forty-year gap, on the same date and continent, has given it deep meaning for Argentine football fans.
Frequently Asked Questions
What did Maradona do on June 22, 1986?
On June 22, 1986, Maradona scored two famous goals against England in a World Cup quarter-final at the Azteca Stadium in Mexico City. The first was the 'Hand of God,' an illegal goal he punched past the goalkeeper, and the second was the 'Goal of the Century,' a solo run past five England players that was later voted the finest goal in World Cup history.
What connection does Messi's World Cup record have to Maradona's famous match?
Messi broke the World Cup goal record in Dallas on June 22, exactly forty years after Maradona's most famous match on the same calendar date. Both moments also share the detail that the defining goals were finished with the left foot, the trademark of each player.
Why is June 22 significant to Argentine football?
June 22 has become almost a fixture of national memory for Argentina, as it now carries two of the greatest moments in the country's football history. The date connects Maradona's iconic 1986 performance and Messi's World Cup goal record, both achieved on North American soil forty years apart.
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