It's been quite the year for football's gods being honored with statues -- not least in the reaction they have provoked.
Famously
known for his "Hand of God" goal against England in the 1986 World Cup,
Diego Maradona is the latest football great to be
immortalized, this time with a 12-foot statue in India.
immortalized, this time with a 12-foot statue in India.
The Argentine was on hand for the bust's recent unveiling in Kolkata.
The bronze representation is of a
youthful Maradona, with a head of hair that appears to make him look
more like one of the Beatles than a footballer, holding aloft the World
Cup trophy.
Almost single handed, the
Argentine guided his country to their 1986 World Cup success with a
series of stunning individual performances.
"I am not god of football but a simple footballer," said Maradona after the unveiling. "It's amazing to have my statue here."
However,
the statue has provoked plenty of mirth on social media, with
Maradona's visage prompting comparisons with singer Susan Boyle,
grandmas and a youthful Roy Hodgson, who now manages English Premier
League club Crystal Palace.
Earlier this year Portuguese artist
Emanuel Santos designed a sculpture of Real Madrid star Cristiano
Ronaldo's head to commemorate an airport being renamed after him.
Some
social media users said the bust looked more like other athletes,
obscure art and the character Sloth from the film "The Goonies." It was
like something from a horror movie, one football podcast joked on
Twitter.
2017 has been a year when
Ronaldo has had not one, but two busts of himself unveiled. The good
news for the Portuguese star is the second one actually looks like him.
Situated at Real's Santiago Bernabéu
Stadium in Madrid, Spain, the bronze figure -- made by famous Spanish
sculptor Jose Antonio Navarro Arteaga -- shows a more striking likeness
of Ronaldo with naturalistic eyes dreamily looking into the distance,
thick arched brows, a beauty mark resting above lifelike curved lips and
perfectly coiffed hair, among other details.
Maradona,
who is now 57 years old, is one of the greatest players in soccer
history, having helped Napoli win two Italian league titles after a
difficult two-year stay at Barcelona -- both clubs signed him for
world-record fees.
But
his career was marred by controversy over drug use -- he was thrown out
of the 1994 World Cup after testing positive for ephedrine -- and he
suffered from subsequent health problems.
There's
another statue of Maradona in his former club Boca Juniors' museum.
Unveiled in 2006, the fiberglass and cement bust was made by sculptor
Elizabeth Eichhorn.
Source:CNN