- What exactly happened to Andrés Escobar after the 1994 World Cup?
- Eleven days after scoring an own goal in Colombia’s 2-1 loss to the United States, Escobar was shot multiple times outside a Medellín bar. He died in hospital hours later; the shooter claimed Escobar’s mistake cost bettors millions.
- Did Atlético Nacional have any ties to Pablo Escobar’s drug empire?
- Atlético Nacional’s 1989 Copa Libertadores success coincided with the period when Pablo Escobar’s Medellín Cartel openly financed local clubs. The club has never denied receiving cartel funds, though it has never formally acknowledged the scale.
- How long was Humberto Muñoz Castro imprisoned for Escobar’s murder?
- Muñoz Castro was sentenced to 43 years in 1995 but served just 11 years before early release in 2005. He has never publicly explained the killing beyond citing Escobar’s own goal as the motive.
- What does Atlético Nacional’s new video tribute include?
- The club’s video features archival footage of Escobar in action, interviews with family, and blunt narration that frames the murder as a symptom of football’s intersection with organized crime—no soft-focus nostalgia, just raw reckoning.
- Is there a permanent memorial for Escobar at Atlético Nacional’s stadium?
- Not yet. Next month the club will unveil a permanent mural at Estadio Atanasio Girardot that forces players to confront Escobar’s legacy before their debut. It’s part memorial, part warning label.
- Why does Escobar’s story still resonate in Colombian football today?
- Because the pressures Escobar faced—gambling syndicates, cartel influence, life-or-death stakes—haven’t vanished. Every time Colombian clubs chase continental glory, the specter of dirty money and violent retribution lingers in the background.