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The Central Bank of Argentina (BCRA) has just issued one of the most unique pieces in its numismatic history: a commemorative coin for the 2026 FIFA World Cup, issued in silver and gold versions, that pays homage to Argentina's second goal against England in Mexico '86—the famous "Goal of the Century"—but without mentioning its scorer, Diego Armando Maradona. The paradox is irresistible: the greatest icon of Argentine and world football is, at the same time, absolutely present and completely absent.
A design that tells a story without showing.
The coin's surface features no faces, jerseys, or names. Its reverse side displays a minimalist design: lines marking the ball's path from midfield to the goal, dots representing the English opponents, and a final shot crowning the play. It is, quite literally, a map of the miracle. Instead of Maradona's body, there is his movement. Instead of the celebration, the tactical narrative.
The more institutional obverse depicts a ball piercing the metal, with the inscriptions “República Argentina” and “Copa Mundial de la FIFA 2026™”. The silver coin, 40 millimeters in diameter and weighing 27 grams, has a mintage of only 2,500 units for the local market. Its gold version, with a very similar design, is intended for international collectors. Both were minted by the Royal Mint of Spain, under the artistic direction of the Central Bank itself.
The tribute that avoids a name
The reason for the issue is twofold: to participate in the FIFA World Cup International Commemorative Coin Program—of which Argentina has been a part since 2006—and to celebrate the 40th anniversary of that goal that forever changed the history of football. However, the detail that everyone noticed was the omission: the word “Maradona” does not appear anywhere.
The official explanation was immediate: to avoid image rights conflicts. Since the star's death in 2020, the use of his name, signature, jersey number "10," and image has been regulated by licenses administered by his heirs. Any commercial use—and a collector's coin certainly qualifies—could involve payments or litigation. For a public institution, legal prudence outweighed popular sentiment.
In legal terms, it makes sense. In symbolic terms, it's ironic. The Argentine state decided to pay tribute to its most universal hero precisely by erasing his face.
Between devotion and trademark
The goal against England belongs to the collective memory of Argentina, but also, today, to an ecosystem of rights. Maradona is a national myth and, at the same time, an international brand. His name lives on in museums, TV series, jerseys, perfumes, NFTs, and family disputes. Turning it into currency would mean crossing a blurred line between cultural tribute and commercial exploitation.
The Central Bank of Argentina (BCRA) chose a middle ground: counting the goal without showing the player. And in that decision lies a metaphor for the current state of Argentina. The country is trying to preserve its footballing epic, even as its symbols are fragmented between nostalgia, the courts, and the market.
A silence that screams
But Maradona's omission doesn't erase his presence. On the contrary, it amplifies it. Every line of the design, every arrow aimed at the bow, every empty space speaks of him. The viewer automatically fills in the name. It's impossible to look at the coin and not think of his dazzling career, his precise left foot, Víctor Hugo Morales's still-resonant commentary: "Cosmic kite!"
The coin transforms that moment into an abstract, almost sacred symbol. It is the national gesture transformed into an icon: the movement of a body that is no longer there, but whose imprint continues to move an entire country.
Politics, identity and memory
Beyond the issue of rights, some interpreted the absence as a political decision. Maradona was an uncomfortable figure for all powers: loved and controversial, rebellious, Peronist, anti-establishment, and deeply popular. Engraving his face on official currency could be seen as a contradictory gesture by the current government. But even if that calculation was made, the result transcends the immediate situation: it is the institutionalization of a myth that the State adopts as its own, even if it cannot name it.
The people's goal, coined without his name
The 2026 World Cup coin is a beautiful and complex object. It commemorates a feat that belongs to everyone, but presents it without its hero. It is, perhaps unintentionally, a perfect synthesis of Argentina's relationship with Maradona: a mixture of pride, debt, dispute, and devotion.
The Central Bank has minted more than just precious metal. It has minted a question: to whom does a myth belong? To the country that celebrates it, to the family that inherits it, or to the people who dreamed it up?
And perhaps, in that brilliant absence on the other side of the coin, lies the answer. Because if it's not necessary to write "Maradona" for everyone to see him, then Diego no longer needs a face. He is, as always, in the air, in the play, in memory.
Characteristics of coins
Feature Silver Coin Gold coin Metal / Law 925 Sterling Silver 999‰ Gold
Weight 27 grams 6.75 grams
Diameter 40 mm 23 mm
Singing Fluted Fluted
Print run 2,500 units (local market) 750 units (international market)
Face value 10 Argentine pesos 25 Argentine pesos
Approximate selling price 235,000 Argentine pesos ≈ 140 euros Not officially available
Minting House National Mint and Stamp Factory – Royal Mint of Spain National Mint and Stamp Factory – Royal Mint of Spain
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