The latest chapter in Argentine football legend Diego Maradona's colorful career will be coaching Mexican second-division club Dorados, a team owned by a powerful family that has faced accusations of ties to drug trafficking.

Maradona, 57, raised eyebrows Friday with the announcement that he had signed on to manage the struggling club in Sinaloa, a state best known as home to the drug cartel of jailed kingpin Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman.

Rumors and jokes immediately swirled online about what interest Maradona, who has publicly struggled with drug addiction, might have in such a deal.

“Maradona is headed to a place full of narcos. What could possibly go wrong?” cracked one Twitter user.

RELATED | Maradona appointed coach of second-tier Mexican side Dorados

Jokes aside, the clan behind the club, the Hank family, has faced accusations of links to Mexico's lucrative and violent drug trafficking industry.

The family patriarch, Jorge Hank Rhon, is a businessmen and politician whose company, Grupo Caliente, owns an empire of casinos, hotels and a dog racing track in Tijuana, across the US border from San Diego. The company also owns first-division football club Xolos in Tijuana, in addition to Dorados.

Hank Rhon's son, Jorgealberto Hank Inzunza, is the president of both clubs. He said Dorados, which is currently in 13th place in its 15-team league, wants Maradona to stay for the remainder of the 2018 season and all of next season.

“In my conversations with him he's been very excited to come coach here. Honestly, it was easier to convince him than I thought,” he told ESPN.

'Powerful eccentric'

Dorados was previously best known as the club where Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola wrapped up his playing career. It is based in Culiacan, the capital of the western state of Sinaloa.

However The Hanks's stronghold is Tijuana, in the north. Hank Rhon, 62, was Tijuana's mayor from 2004 to 2007. He has faced accusations of involvement in organized crime.

In 2011, he was arrested when authorities raided his mansion and seized more than 80 guns and thousands of rounds of ammunition.

READ | Pogba claims 'it's not me who's talking' about Man United future

Prosecutors said two of the guns had been used to commit murders. But a judge ordered Hank Rhon's release after 10 days, in a widely criticized ruling.

Authorities also brought him in for questioning in 2009 over a woman's murder, but released him without charge.

Known for his wealth, eccentric style and love of exotic animals, Hank Rhon owns a private bullring and zoo on the sprawling property where his racetrack is located. He has been accused of trafficking in endangered species, including tigers and chimpanzees. His “favorite animals,” he once said, are women.

Twice married, he has 19 children, one of whom is named Tigre.

'Philanthropic side'

The ex-mayor, a heavyweight in the ruling Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI), is alternately feared and revered in Tijuana, according to Victor Clark, head of a local human rights group and a professor at the University of San Diego.

“He's controversial, there's no doubt. But he has a lot of people who support him. He's a sort of patron figure. He has a philanthropic side. He gives money to the poor. There are always people in his office asking him for help, and he generally gives it. If you need an operation or a medical treatment, you go to him,” Clark told AFP.

Journalists in Tijuana have nicknamed Hank Rhon “The Engineer,” and treat him with kid gloves, one told AFP.

READ | Ramos not worried about Salah backlash

“He'll always give you a good story if you ask him politely for an interview. He gives great quotes. But you have to tread carefully. You definitely don't ask the Engineer about drug trafficking,” he said, asking his name be withheld for his own safety.

The one journalist who dared to investigate Hank Rhon's links to organized crime was Hector Felix, a reporter for the local newspaper Zeta. He was murdered in 1988. Two of Hank Rhon's bodyguards were convicted of the crime.

Hank Rhon's own father was Carlos Hank Gonzalez, a towering figure in the PRI in the days when it ruled Mexico as a one-party state. Some say he coined the classic Mexican phrase, “a politician who is poor is a poor politician.”