On June 22 1986, Diego Maradona scored what is regarded as the greatest goal in football history in the World Cup quarter-finals against England. But it wasn't just about the famous solo sensation in Peter Shilton's net as the Argentine prodigy had already stunned the world only a few minutes earlier. It all happened in four minutes as Maradona opened the scoring with a blatant 51st minute handball that everyone saw except Tunisian referee Ali Bin Nasser. "I didn't mean any disrespect to the English!" El Diego said in an interview with England's BBC several years after his Mexico antic. "I couldn't reach the ball and Shilton was already there, I couldn't head it so I moved my head back, scored and started to celebrate. I can see that the ref took the bait." Hardly feeling guilty, the phenomenal number 10 punished the English again a few minutes later, but this time with an extraordinary piece of genius. "I had the momentum and knew that the English aren't going to stop me. No one was going to stop me, not even Mike Tyson!" Maradona commented on his historic goal. Maradona's first (English commentary) Maradona's second (Argentine commentary) Maradona's second (English commentary)