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'I witnessed Maradona's Hand of God' - a goal still talked about 40 years on

A close-up image of Diego Maradona with his fist in the air punching the ball into the net with Peter Shilton close behind.
[Archivo El Grafico/Getty Images]

I wasn't supposed to be there.

I was 17, I had never been to a football match and I wasn't interested in the sport. But that afternoon, walking into the Azteca Stadium in Mexico City, I was about to watch Argentina play England in a World Cup quarter-final - and to witness something I would only fully understand many years later.

That morning, we had no plans. Then the phone rang. A friend of my father had two tickets he couldn't use. Would my mum and I like them?

My father wasn't sure about his "princesses" going. This was less than five years since the end of the Falklands War and he was worried that tensions between Argentinian and English fans would spill over.

My mother didn't hesitate. This was the World Cup, after all. A once-in-a-lifetime opportunity and she wasn't going to let her daughter miss out.

Lourdes Heredia laughs and looks sideways to the camera. She has brown, curly hair and has a big smile.
I dressed up for my first football game as if I was going to a party [Lourdes Heredia]

The excitement started as soon as we were en route, as we headed to cross the city to the stadium. Flags hung from car windows and strangers shouted chants across traffic.

I joined in, of course-shouting "Viva México!" with everyone else, even though our team had already been knocked out of the tournament. Football didn't matter much to me, but being part of the moment did.

If anything, I treated it more like a party than a match. I dressed up, wore far too much make-up, and imagined the stadium would be full of handsome foreign fans rather than legendary players. My mother raised an eyebrow, but let it slide.

Inside the Azteca, the scale of it all was overwhelming. The noise, the colours, the sense that the whole world had gathered in one place. Around us were fans from everywhere - singing, laughing, dressed in costumes, faces painted in bright colours. I remember thinking less about the game itself and more about how exciting it felt to be there among them.

English and Argentine fans share a laugh and a joke outside the Azteca stadium. The photo is black-and-white and they are holding banners from their respective countries and smiling broadly.
Argentina and England fans at the Azteca before the game [Monte Fresco/Daily Mirror/Mirrorpix via Getty Images]

When the match started, I barely followed what was happening on the pitch. I was too busy joining in the Mexican wave - known as "la ola" in Spanish - caught up in the rhythm of the crowd. The football felt distant, almost secondary.

Suddenly, everyone was on their feet. For a second there was celebration then confusion, arguments, noise swelling in different directions.

It was a moment that would be talked about for decades.

The ball was airborne above the England penalty area. Argentina's star player Diego Maradona launched himself into an aerial contest with English goalkeeper Peter Shilton who had also leapt up in an attempt to punch the ball away. But instead it bounced off Maradona and crossed the goal line.

It looked as if he had headed the first goal - and that is when things changed for me. Suddenly it was the football that mattered.

People around me started questioning whether it was really a goal or not - did he head the ball into the net or... was it his hand that pushed it in? You could hear loud protests from the English fans.

Maradona is seen dribbling the ball through a number of English footballers and the English goalkeeper is seen diving to the side.
Maradona's second goal - which came just four minutes after the Hand of God - is sometimes overlooked because of the controversy of his first [AFP via Getty Images]

I turned to the man next to me, a bit confused. "Porque tanto alboroto [what happened]?" I asked. He said Maradona had punched the ball into the net with his hand but the referee didn't see it, and allowed the goal.

I was puzzled and at that moment I certainly never thought that what we had just seen would become one of the most talked about events in sporting history.

In time, it became known globally as the "Hand of God" incident - coined by Maradona himself: "[The goal was scored] a little bit with my head and a little bit with the hand of God," he famously said.

A T-shirt with the face of Maradona and the inscription 'Mano de dios' on the streets of the historic centre the day after the first anniversary of the death of Diego Armando Maradona on November 26, 2021 in Naples, Italy.
Maradona will always be associated closely with the controversy of the 1986 game with England [Laura Lezza/Getty Images)]

But so intense was the debate in the stands that day about what we had just seen that, four minutes later when the next goal game from Maradona, we almost missed it.

And here's the thing. When I think back to being one of thousands of people in the stadium that day, it's not the "Hand of God" that I immediately recall - it was that second goal. Unlike Maradona's first spectacle, the whole stadium went quiet when he was charging forward with the ball.

He began in his own half with a pirouette to escape the attention of two England players, then you could see him advancing up the pitch, weaving from one side to the other, eluding tackles, then into England's penalty box and then - boom! The ball in the back of the net. The stadium exploded.

I remember thinking: "This is why people love football - now it makes sense."

I looked around and was amazed to see that, unlike the first goal, this one was celebrated by everyone, even some of the English fans nearby.

An infographic headlined Argentina's Golden Boy with the 'Hand of God' - with an image of Diego Maradona holding the World Cup trophy in 1986 alongside facts and figures about his performance, including that he scored the "Goal of the Century" and that he was the only man directly involved in five goals and five assists at the World Cup
[BBC]

After the game ended with the now famous 2-1 Argentinian victory, my mother and I left the stadium and walked towards our car.

At that moment, what stayed with me wasn't the match but the overwhelming feeling of having been inside the Azteca itself - this vast, iconic place that carried so much of Mexico's history within its walls. It wasn't just a stadium; it was part of our collective memory.

Even then, the echoes of the 1985 earthquake, when whole sections of Mexico City were reduced to rubble, were still vivid for me - the weeks when the air smelled of dust and loss, and the city seemed to hold its breath. I knew that the Azteca had been one of the great places of refuge, where families who had lost everything found shelter and hope. Being there felt deeply moving, almost solemn, and yet outside it transformed into something joyful and alive.

As my mum and I walked, talking and eating tacos and fruit drenched in chilli and lime from street vendors, we felt immense pride in being Mexican. We laughed about how we embraced every stereotype - the sombreros, bright colours, all of it worn with humour and defiance, and how, as hosts, we gave warmth, laughter and generosity to the world.

Even the World Cup mascot, a chilli pepper with a sombrero, seemed to capture that spirit perfectly - bold, playful, and unmistakably ours.

A small costumed figure wearing a red shirt and a large sombrero and large black-and-red shoes walks in the packed stadium between two men in Mexico 86 tracksuits.
The Mexican mascot in 1986 seemed to capture the spirit of the tournament perfectly [George Tiedemann/Sports Illustrated via Getty Images]

It was only years later that I understood that I had witnessed a truly magical moment. Football itself never really became that exciting for me, even after being at that game, but that particular moment has stayed with me.

Yes, the first goal was controversial, and enraged many - not just around me that day but in England and all over the world for many years.

When I subsequently lived and worked in Argentina, people regularly brought up the Hand of God, and my Argentinian friends never missed an opportunity to mention it to my English colleagues.

But this is to forget that the second goal was just spectacular - almost unbelievable if I hadn't seen it with my eyes.

Personally, I would be much keener to boast about that one.

Which teams have qualified for the World Cup 2026 knockouts, round of 32?

The knockout bracket in the FIFA World Cup 2026 is starting to take shape.

It begins with the round of 32, which runs from June 28 to July 3.

What is the format and criteria for qualification, and which teams have progressed or been eliminated?

What is the format of the World Cup knockouts?

The top two teams in each of the 12 groups, along with the eight best third-place finishers, advance to knockouts.

The knockout phase begins with the round of 32, introduced for the first time at a World Cup after the expansion of the tournament from 32 to 48 teams.

Then comes the round of 16, followed by the quarterfinals, semifinals and a playoff for third place. The final is on July 19.

The stage-wise breakdown of the tournament’s schedule is:

  • Group stage: June 11 to June 27
  • Round of 32: June 28 to July 3
  • Round of 16: July 4-7
  • Quarterfinals: July 9-11
  • Semifinals: July 14-15
  • Bronze medal match: July 18
  • Final: July 19

What are the rules change for the tie-breaker criteria at the 2026 World Cup?

FIFA is using head-to-head records instead of goal difference as the primary tiebreaker for teams level on points for the first time at a World Cup.

Haiti, Turkiye and Tunisia have been eliminated because they are unable to catch the third-placed teams in their respective groups, as they lost to those teams.

Tie-breaker criteria for World Cup groups

According to FIFA’s rules for the tournament, if two or more teams in the same group are equal on points after the group stage ends, the following criteria, in the order below, will be applied to determine the ranking:

Step one

  • Greatest number of points gained in the group matches.
  • Superior goal difference in the group matches between the teams concerned (head-to-head).
  • Greatest number of goals scored in the group matches between the teams concerned (head-to-head).

If the teams are still tied, the criteria below applies:

Step two

  • Superior goal difference across all group matches.
  • Greatest number of goals scored across all group matches.
  • Highest team conduct score (players and team officials) relating to the number of yellow and red cards obtained.

If the teams somehow still cannot be separated, then the following criteria below applies:

Step three

  • The two or more teams still equal on points shall be ranked according to the most recent published edition of the FIFA world rankings.

The criteria for the eight best‑ranked teams

The eight best teams among those ranked third will be determined as follows:

  • Greatest number of points gained in all group matches.
  • Goal difference resulting from all group matches.
  • Greatest number of goals scored in all group matches.
  • Highest team conduct score (players and team officials) relating to the number of yellow and red cards obtained in all group matches.
  • The two or more teams still equal on points shall be ranked according to the most recent published edition of the FIFA world rankings.
FIFA World Cup trophy.
The FIFA World Cup trophy is displayed during a stop of the FIFA World Cup Trophy Tour at the American Museum of Natural History in New York City on June 2, 2026 [Timothy A Clary/AFP]

Which teams have reached the World Cup round of 32?

(As of June 23, 02:30 GMT)

⚽️ Mexico (Group A) 

The cohosts were the first to qualify for the knockouts, after taking top spot in Group A with a 1-0 win over South Korea on Thursday, June 18. The Mexicans started their campaign with a 2-0 win over South Africa in a chaotic tournament opener.

⚽️ USA (Group D)

The United States were the second team to punch their ticket to the knockouts, thanks to their 2-0 win over Australia that sent them on top of Group D on Friday, June 19. The USA thumped Paraguay 4-1 to kick off their campaign.

⚽️ Germany (Group E) 

Germany became the third team to enter the last 32 with a 2-1 win over Ivory Coast on Saturday, June 20. The Germans – who failed to get out of the group stage both at Russia 2018 and four years ago in Qatar – started their tournament with a 7-1 thrashing of Curacao.

⚽️ Argentina (Group J)

Argentina sealed their ticket to the knockouts with a 2-0 victory over Austria on Monday, June 22, as Lionel Messi scored twice, becoming the World Cup’s all-time leading scorer with 18 goals. The Argentina captain also bagged his maiden tournament hat-trick in their 3-0 opening game win over Algeria. Reigning champions Argentina are guaranteed the top spot in Group J.

⚽️ France (Group I)

Pre-tournament favourites France secured a place in the round of 32 with a 3-0 win over Iraq later on Monday, as Kylian Mbappe scored a brace. The 2018 world champions beat Senegal 3-1 to kick off their tournament, with Mbappe scoring twice in that game, too.

⚽️ Norway (Group I)

Norway beat Senegal 3-2 in their second game of the tournament, sealing their place in the knockouts. The Norwegians, who are back at the World Cup after 28 years, started their campaign with a 4-1 thrashing of Iraq.

Soccer Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Group I - Norway v Senegal - New York/New Jersey Stadium, East Rutherford, New Jersey, U.S. - June 22, 2026 Norway team do the traditional rowing celebration with their fans after the match REUTERS/Jeenah Moon
Norway team do the traditional rowing celebration with their fans after the match [Jeenah Moon/Reuters]

Which teams have been knocked out of the World Cup 2026?

⚽️ Haiti (Group C)

Haiti became the first team to be sent home packing from the World Cup after suffering a 3-0 loss to Brazil on Friday, June 19. Playing in their first tournament since 1974, they also lost 1-0 to Scotland in their first game.

⚽️ Turkiye (Group D)

Turkiye soon followed suit, bowing out of the tournament after a 1-0 defeat to 10-man Paraguay later on Friday. They also suffered a shock 2-0 defeat to Australia in the first group match – their first appearance at the tournament after 24 years.

⚽️ Tunisia (Group F)

Tunisia became the third team to be eliminated after they lost 4-0 to Japan on Saturday, June 20. The defeat came shortly after they suffered a heavy 5-1 defeat to Sweden in the opener. Tunisia were the first African team to win a World Cup match when they beat Mexico in 1978, but they have never progressed beyond the group stages.

Helio Varela reacts.
Cape Verde’s forward #26 Helio Varela celebrates after scoring his team’s second goal against Uruguay in a 2-2 draw on Sunday to stay in contention for a place in the Round of 32 [Chandan Khanna/AFP]
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