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- #1
From Rob Smyth's blog in the Guardian detailing the six most fanciful transfers that never occurred:
2) Diego Maradona (Argentinos Juniors to Sheffield United, 1978)
In modern football, the Copperfields rarely mix with the Schiffers, but back in the day such is-he-really-going-out-with-them trysts were surprisingly frequent: the barely fathomable transfers of John Charles from Juventus to Leeds and Allan Simonsen from Barcelona to Charlton spring instantly to mind. Yet those would have knocked into the proverbial cocked one had Diego Maradona, then 17, joined second-division Sheffield United in 1978. United's manager Harry Haslam was a renowned wheeler-dealer with a good strong finger in the South American pie; even allowing for that, however, it's hard to buy this story. Most reports suggest that United could have had Maradona for £200,000, but missed out on the ultimate Sheffield steal and instead decided to pay £160,000 for Alex Sabella. It's a good story, but then so are Walter Mitty's.
A report in the Guardian in 1981, the day after Haslam was sacked by United, said he had worked Argentinos Juniors down from £1m to £600,000 - a much more credible price for a player who had already played for Argentina, who was obviously blessed with genius and whose omission from Cesar Menotti's World Cup squad had caused a major rumpus. This was not a case of Haslam unearthing an unknown gem. The secret was already out.
So the fee Argentinos Juniors wanted for Maradona was, it seems, around 400 per cent of what United eventually had to spend on Sabella - not a cliched case of an excessively parsimonious Yorkshire board who refused t'part with a few notes that they kept hidden inside their flat cap in case World War III was declared. We cannot be entirely sure, because Haslam passed away in 1985 and Maradona inexplicably omitted the incident in his autobiography, but it all has the whiff of a myth. And there's one other thing: even allowing for the transfer climate of the day, why on earth would the world's best young footballer have wanted to play in the English second division, alongside Steve Finnieston, John Cutbush and Mick Speight?