Maradona, who watched his side eliminated 4-3
by France last weekend in Kazan, was asked if he fancied another
shot at the job – even though current coach Jorge Sampaoli has a
contract until 2022.
"Yes, and I would do it for free," Maradona said on a Venezuelan
TV show. "I wouldn't ask for anything in return."
The former Boca Juniors and Napoli player coached Argentina at
the 2010 World Cup, where his team were beaten 4-0 by Germany at
the quarter-final stage.
Since then, the player who guided Argentina to their last World
Cup win in 1986, has only coached two club sides in the United
Arab Emirates.
He is still one of the most controversial faces in football, and
he hit the headlines in Russia for his colorful appearances at
Argentina games.
Never a stranger to extremes, Maradona produced some of this
World Cup's lasting images - celebrating victories in iconic
poses, giving the finger to fans, and being helped into a
hospitality box to be seen by doctors after suffering from low
blood pressure.
"People think I am happy but my heart is heavy," Maradona said
about Argentina's elimination. "I feel really bad that
everything we built with so much effort we destroyed so easily."
(Reporting by Andrew Downie; Editing by Hugh Lawson)
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