- Gift Wonderland
Who Is Paolo Maldini - The Legendary AC Milan Defender.
Updated: Dec 14, 2020

Paolo Maldini was beyond mere mortals. Whether at centre-half or left-back, 80s, 90s or 2000s, At the San Siro he shone brighter than the rest
Who Is Paolo Maldini
Paolo Cesare Maldini is an Italian former professional footballer who played as a left back and central defender for A.C Milan and the Italy national team. He is widely regarded as one of the greatest ever defenders, and as one of the greatest players of all time,
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Paolo has been married to Adriana Fossa since December 1994 and they have two sons, Christian Maldini and Daniel Maldini, both have been signed by Maldini's former club AC Milan and played in the youth teams, His father Cesare was also a footballer who also played as a defender, captained AC Milan, and represented the Italy national team, later going on to become a coach. Throughout Cesare's managerial career, he coached his son both in the Italy under-21 side and the senior team, as well as at AC Milan.
On 3 April 2016, Paolo's father Cesare died at the age of 84 his mother died later that year, on 28 July.
His career in the Rossoneri first team began in the 1980s as a right-back, before switching to the left. While he was notionally right-footed, his left was better than most players’ best foot. It would be 25 years later when he finally retired at 41, Imagine playing as a defender in Italy until that age?! It is a remarkable feat of endurance, if nothing else.
He won seven Serie A titles, five European Cup/Champions League medals and pretty much every individual award, twice finishing third in the Ballon d’Or, almost unheard of for a defender. He captained his country at two World Cups.

After making his debut in 1984 at the tender age of 16 years and 208 days, he only played fewer than 30 games in five seasons, three of which were in his late thirties. With only one campaign – 2001/02 – half lost to injury, he was imperiously consistent.
He broke many records throughout his career. One of the most remarkable is the fastest goal scored in Champions League/European Cup final history: 50 seconds against Liverpool in 2005. That also made him the oldest player to score in one at 36 years and 333 days. He has appeared in the most Champions League Finals – eight – of any player. He was the first defender to be listed for the FIFA World Footballer of the Year award in 1995 (though it had only been in existence since 1991), coming second to George Weah.
He has made the most appearances for a single Italian club, the most competitive appearances in European competition (168), the most FIFA World Cup appearances for Italy (23), and has the most minutes played at World Cups (2,216).
Andrea Pirlo, a man who knows a thing or two about being a footballing god, said: “Paolo Maldini is the best. A defender. A peerless defender. The best defender going. Both physically and mentally, he had everything, and the enjoyment he got from playing was as obvious at 40 years of age as it had been the day I first walked through the door at Milan.”
Ronaldinho said of him: “He was one of the best defenders in Champions League history, but what was so impressive about him is that when he was on the ball he didn’t look like a defender, but like an elegant midfield player.”
Why The Love?
Now, regardless of the fact he was a brilliant, elegant 6′ 2″ footballer, we must first address the fact that Paolo is stunningly good looking. With Mediterranean blue eyes framed by mascara-like black eyelashes, high cheekbones, butterfly kiss lips and messy tousled hair, he could easily have had a career as a model. It all added to the sense of cool, calm, stylish class that pervaded his whole career.
Have you noticed that he’s one of those players who looks wonderful in slow motion? The hair thrashing, the eyes piercing as they stare down a player, the almost expressionless but composed look, even in the fiercest of encounters. Quite, quite epic.
To see him glide across the pitch was to witness someone pass through the air with an effortless ease, as though impervious to gravity or the elements. He seemed above and beyond a mere mortal, forever level-headed, always seeing the play several moves ahead.
What was so constantly wonderful about him was his style of defending really wasn’t based around tackling. Tackling was for lesser mortals, players who had been caught out of position, who had not read the play. His famous quote – “If I have to make a tackle then I have already made a mistake” – has been so often repeated it is teetering on cliche, but it is, nonetheless, the perfect summation of his approach and of how we understood his defending.
More typically, he dispossessed the opposition player by a mixture of anticipation, interception and physicality. Because for all he was elegant, he was also a big, fast, powerful unit who was never going to lose any battles of strength. Of course he actually could tackle, too. And when he did so, you damn well knew about it, as he did it with strength and precision. But he only did so as a last option, which is perhaps why so many are high speed and sliding, arrowing in on the ball.
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A point not often made is that his career straddled two very different eras. When he began in the mid-80s, he faced an entirely different type of player to that in the 2000s. But even as fitness levels improved and tactics evolved, it made no difference to him. Whether at centre-half or left-back, he purred through games effortlessly.
Today, we all love Virgil Van Dijk’s cool, break-no-sweat approach to defending, and he is cut from similar cloth to Mr Maldini but with one crucial difference: in the 80s and 90s, the game was far more aggressive and physical. Being cerebral was fine, but you had to have the stones to back it up, too. You had to be able to hold your own against strikers who were less the middle-distance athletes of today and more like battering rams. If you were made of anything less than pig iron, you’d shatter like a biscuit.
He was so good that, perhaps for the first time ever, people just wanted to see him defend. It was as exciting and thrilling as any striker to see him show a player inside and nick the ball off his foot, collect it, accelerate away, and thread a killer pass through midfield. Not many defenders can get you off your seat but Paolo was cut from different cloth.
And, man, he was fast, time and again, winning the ball at left-back, laying it off and then sprinting at high pace to take the return pass, knocking it past a defender, taking position again and crossing the ball. I mean, this isn’t how defenders play. Defenders are rarely this good at other elements of the game. He could have played as a winger, played any role in midfield – shielding or progressive – or played as a striker using his height and power. He was that good, his skill set that wide.