Alfredo Di Stefano, the player Real Madrid has hailed as being the
most important component in its mid-20th century ascent to becoming a
global powerhouse, has died. He was 88.
The club said in a
statement that Di Stefano, its honorary president, died on Monday
afternoon at Gregorio Maranon hospital, two days after a heart attack.
Di
Stefano turned 88 on Friday. The following day, he had a heart attack
on a Madrid street near the club's Santiago Bernabeu Stadium. Paramedics
were able to resuscitate him after 18 minutes, but he spent the
following days in a coma.
Renowned for his speed, versatility and
strategic grasp of the game, he helped Madrid attain five straight
European Champions Cups and was voted European player of the year in
1957 and '59.
In a career spanning five clubs in three countries -
Argentina, Colombia and Spain - from 1945-1966, Di Stefano scored 789
goals in 1,090 matches. In the process he claimed top-scorer status once
in the Argentine league, twice in Colombia's league and five times in
Spain.
However, as FIFA acknowledges on its official website,
"statistics will show that Alfredo Di Stefano is one of the world's
greatest ever goal scorers, but the bare facts only tell part of the
story."
"I'm very saddened by the news of the death of Alfredo Di
Stefano," said Sepp Blatter, president of the sport's international
governing body. "He was the most complete player I've ever seen. He was
also my favorite player."
Those who knew him recall a
straight-talking character who believed success on the field came
through physical effort and dedication.
"I don't want to be
idolized, I just want to play. And to do that you have to run and
sweat," he said. His modesty in the face of overwhelming sporting
success won him the admiration of many.
"I think he was one of the greatest, if not the greatest, football player ever," England great Bobby Charlton said.
Born
July 4, 1926, in the Barracas suburb of Buenos Aires, near the port
where British sailors introduced football to Argentina, Di Stefano
learned the game while playing free-for-all soccer in what he called
"the academy of the streets."
"In our neighborhood we used to
hold major football sessions that went on until it got dark, with
everyone playing against each other," he said.
"Pope Francis and I
went to the same school," Di Stefano said when Jorge Mario Bergoglio
was elected pontiff, adding the two likely played together as children.
Di
Stefano's father, Alfredo, the son of an immigrant from the Italian
island of Capri, was a loyal fan of River Plate. De Stefano's mother,
Eulalia Laulhe Gilmont, was of French and Irish ancestry.
Having
trialed successfully for River Plate, he turned professional in 1945,
joining Colombia's Millonarios six years later. He won six league titles
for the two clubs.
His turn of speed soon had fans chanting,
"Help, here comes the jet-propelled 'blonde arrow,'" ("Saeta Rubia," in
Spanish) a nickname Di Stefano retained all his life.
He played
in Spain for the first time in 1952 and dazzled the crowd at a
tournament commemorating Real Madrid's 50th anniversary, a fateful
encounter.
Barcelona signed Di Stefano in 1953 after agreeing a
transfer with River Plate, but the move was thrown into doubt when
Madrid also negotiated his transfer - with Millonarios.
Although
the Spanish federation authorized Di Stefano to play half of his
four-year contract with each club, Barcelona opted out, alleging
pressure from the Madrid-based ruling military dictatorship of Gen.
Francisco Franco.
In his first season Di Stefano helped Madrid win its second league title, ending a 21-year drought.
Within three years, he helped Madrid lift its first European Cup by scoring in a 4-3 win over France's Stade Reims.
The
arrival at Madrid of Hungarian great Ferenc Puskas in 1958 led to an
attacking partnership of dynamic effectiveness which allowed the club to
retain the European title through to 1960, a record yet to be beaten.
Di
Stefano's last final in 1960 at Glasgow saw possibly his finest match.
Before 127,000 fans, he scored three times in Madrid's 7-3 demolition of
Eintracht Frankfurt.
The same year, he helped Madrid win the
inaugural Intercontinental Cup between European and South American
champions with a 5-1 aggregate victory over Uruguay's Penarol.
In his remaining four years at Madrid, Di Stefano helped his team lift a further four league titles.
He
topped the Spanish league's scoring standings in five of his 11 seasons
with Madrid. He scored 49 times in 58 European matches, a record in the
competition that stood for more than four decades.
Di Stefano left Madrid in 1964 to join Barcelona-based Espanyol for a two-year spell before retiring at age 40.
"Football
brought me so many beautiful moments. It built my life," said Di
Stefano, who was also an Argentina and Spain international. But World
Cup glory eluded him. Argentina didn't play in 1950 and '54, while Spain
didn't qualify for Sweden in 1958. Di Stefano carried an injury to
Chile 1962 and did not play. So, his only international success was a
1947 Copa America victory with Argentina.
In 1963, Di Stefano was
held captive by a guerrilla group during Madrid's tour of Venezuela. He
was taken at gunpoint from his hotel room by the publicity-seeking
National Liberation Army Front and released unhurt two days later.
As
a coach, he led Boca Juniors and River Plate to Argentine league
titles, and won the European Cup Winners' Cup, the Spanish league title
and the Copa del Rey with Valencia. He also managed Madrid between 1982
and 1984.
Madrid appointed Di Stefano honorary president in 2000,
named its training complex stadium after him six years later and
erected a statue in his honor in 2008.
A diabetic, Di Stefano
fought ill-health in old age and underwent a quadruple bypass with a
pacemaker implanted in December 2005 after a heart attack.
In May
2013 his children asked a court to rule him mentally incapable after he
announced plans to marry a woman 50 years his junior.
"I don't care that my children are against it," Di Stefano, then 86, said of his plans to marry 36-year-old Gina Gonzalez.
His interest in football never diminished. At 86 he still maintained a regular column in Spanish sports newspaper
Marca.
In
it, he revealed that he had missed Pope Francis' appointment. "I must
confess that while everyone else watched the white smoke live," he
wrote. "I was, as always, watching a football game."