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Motivation Quote by Diego Maradona

"I'm not desperate but I know that some day I'll be the coach again of some team"

About this Quote

Maradona’s phrasing is a tightrope walk between pride and pleading, the kind of public self-management that only a global idol in free fall has to master. “I’m not desperate” is less a denial than a preemptive defense: he knows the headlines, the ridicule, the murmurs that he’s finished. By naming desperation, he admits it’s the charge hanging in the air, then tries to swat it away before it sticks.

The second half flips the mood from damaged present to fated future. “I know that some day” is prophecy language, not a job application. He’s not asking permission from clubs, federations, or presidents; he’s invoking inevitability, the same mythic certainty that powered his playing career. It’s also a subtle reminder of his scale: he won’t just work again, he’ll be “the coach again,” as if the role properly belongs to him and the sport is merely circling back to its natural order.

Context matters: Maradona’s coaching life was always tangled up with his biography - the brilliance, the chaos, the national psychodrama. After his Argentina stint, every return was both a football question and a cultural referendum: can genius be rehabilitated, can charisma substitute for planning, can the legend outlast the tabloid version of the man?

The line lands because it’s not inspirational; it’s stubborn. It’s the voice of someone who refuses retirement not out of hunger for money, but out of identity. For Maradona, to stop coaching isn’t to change careers. It’s to disappear.

Quote Details

TopicCoaching
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Maradona on coaching: not desperate, certain to return
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Diego Maradona

Diego Maradona (born October 30, 1960) is a Athlete from Argentina.

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