Henry, Maradona and the most infamous handballs of all time | OneFootball

Henry, Maradona and the most infamous handballs of all time | OneFootball

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The Football Faithful

·22 June 2025

Henry, Maradona and the most infamous handballs of all time

Article image:Henry, Maradona and the most infamous handballs of all time

Diego Maradona’s ‘Hand of God’ at the 1986 is one of football’s most iconic and infamous moments.

The Argentine deceived the officials by beating England goalkeeper Peter Shilton to the ball with his hand to net the opener, before scoring a sensational solo goal, as La Albiceleste marched on into the World Cup semi-finals.


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It’s a moment that, perhaps for the wrong reasons, is etched into football folkore. However, it’s not the only unforgettable handball the game has seen. On the anniversary of Maradona’s ‘Hand of God’, we’ve looked at the most infamous handballs of all time.

Henry, Maradona and the most infamous handballs of all time

Luis Suarez – Uruguay vs Ghana, World Cup 2010

Nine years ago Luis Suarez made a name for himself as striker at the World Cup in South Africa with performances and goals, but he also gained a worldwide reputation for being an utter shithouse.

When his native Uruguay faced Ghana in the quarter-finals, the game was tied in extra-time but the Black Stars were piling on the pressure late on. Just as it looked like they were about to make the breakthrough, Suarez stopped a shot on the line with his arm in a desperate attempt to save his team.

The future Liverpool forward was subsequently sent off and a penalty given against him. But his dastardly deed paid off – Asamoah Gyan cracked his spot kick off the bar, Uruguay won in a shootout and Ghana missed the opportunity to become the first African team to reach the semi-final stage.

Diego Maradona – Argentina vs England, World Cup 1986

In the World Cup quarter-finals of 1986, Diego Maradona scored arguably the greatest goal in the history of football. On the same day he also scored the most infamous goal ever, displaying the two sides to El Diez in the one game.

The Argentine playmaker opened the scoring when he leapt in the air and punched the ball past goalkeeper Peter Shilton into the goal. Standing at roughly 5 foot 6″, it was scarcely believable that the diminutive Maradona could ever beat Shilton to a high ball. But he cunningly encouraged his teammates to celebrate like crazy so as not to let on that anything was afoot.

It worked, and Argentina ended up winning the whole thing after beating Germany 3-2 in the final. The English, understandably, never quite got over it.

Paul Scholes – Man United vs Zenit St. Petersburg, Uefa Super Cup 2008

A bizarre moment in the career of Paul Scholes, mainly because it’s not something you would have ever expected from the former Manchester United midfielder.

With his side trailing 2-1 to Zenit in the final few minutes of the 2008 Uefa Super Cup final, the Englishman jumped up to meet a cross and it looped over the goalkeeper and into the net. It looked great, but the only problem was he hit it with his hand.

It resulted in a second yellow card and an early bath for Scholes, but did at least result in Clive Tyldesley’s daft bit of commentary when he said “there’s nothing funny about that”.

Steven Taylor – Newcastle United vs Aston Villa, Premier League 2005

This, on the other hand, was very funny. With Darius Vassell clean through on goal after rounding Shay Given, Steven Taylor stopped the striker’s effort on goal with his arm. Had he been a goalkeeper, it would’ve been one of the saves of the season.

In an attempt to fool the referee into believing he hadn’t handled the ball, he feigned injury, grabbing his side as if he had just been shot. The official was having none of it and duly sent him packing.

Somewhat fortunately for Taylor, the match was overshadowed by the brawl between Newcastle United teammates Kieron Dyer and Lee Bowyer. That wasn’t much consolation though, as the Magpies ended the game with eight men and lost 3-0.

Raul – Real Madrid vs Leeds United, Champions League 2001

During their incredible run to the Champions League semi-finals in 2001, Leeds United faced the mighty Real Madrid in the now-defunct second group stage.

The Yorkshire outfit took an early lead too, thanks to an Alan Smith left-footed shot. Their advantage lasted all of about a minute, however, as Real went down the other end and won a free-kick, which Luis Figo swung in for Raul. The Spanish striker scored, but it was clearly with his hand.

The referee failed to see the infraction however, and the goal stood. That was the difference maker in the end, as the home side won the tie 3-2.

Leeds qualified for the knockout stages regardless, but they were robbed of getting a famous result against the reigning champions.

Abel Xavier – Portugal vs France, Euro 2000

What exactly Abel Xavier was thinking, we’ll never know, but his silly handball cost Portugal the chance to make the Euro 2000 final.

The semi-final between them and France was a closely contested match; Nuno Gomes gave Selecção das Quinas a first-half lead, before Thierry Henry cancelled that out just six minutes after the break.

The game went into extra-time and seemed destined for penalties, until Sylvain Wiltord took a shot at goal from an acute angle, which ricocheted out off Xavier’s arm.

It was an absolutely ludicrous thing for the former Everton and Middlesbrough defender to do when he could easily used his body or leg to block a shot that may not have even been going in. Zidane scored the resultant golden goal penalty, and the rest is history.

Lionel Messi – Barcelona vs Espanyol, La Liga 2007

What is it with Argentinian, immensely talented short playmakers, and handballs? Lionel Messi joined the club in 2007 when he punched the ball into the Espanyol net, emulating his compatriot Maradona 21 years later.

Miraculously none of the officials witnessed it and the goal stood.

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