From the press tribune above the Estadio Azteca field it was impossible to discern the trickery Diego Maradona had performed.
From the same location, it was impossible not to marvel at the brilliant maneuverability that Maradona also performed.
That was the paradox presented by Maradona, the great Argentine player who died Wednesday at age 60. He could be magical in positive and negative ways.
His most famous — and infamous — game came against England at the then-majestic stadium in Mexico City, a World Cup quarterfinal in 1986. The lure of being there was as strong for media members as it was for the 100,000 or so fans on hand. Not since Pele in his prime had there been such a must-see footballer on such a superlative stage.
Adding to the electric atmosphere were the legions of Argentina fans in their blue-and-white striped jerseys, waving their flags and chanting tributes to "El Gran Diego." There even were some shouts of "El Dios Diego."
If only they truly knew.
Soccer at its highest level is a game of intrigue, 11 players on each side weaving a tapestry. The wise fan does not concentrate on the ball the way hockey followers will watch the puck. Rather, you focus on the movement of the players as a group, the patterns and the probing, and eventually the penetrating attacks.
But not when Maradona was in his prime. You watched No. 10 for Argentina. Always.