Diego Maradona is the most famous player in the history of the club and the fans in Naples are very fond of him.
El Diego's transfer from Barcelona to Italy in 1978 caused a lot of excitement, but Khvicha Kvarats Khelia's arrival has caused even more.
Kvaratskhelia talked about the responsibility of being mentioned with Maradona and what the Argentine meant to the club when he joined.
He said he would give his all to be a big player for the club.
He scored eight goals in 11 games for Dinamo Batumi after his contract with Rubin Kazan was suspended because of the invasion of Ukraine.
He is likely to make his first appearance in the group stage of the competition on Wednesday.
Luka Lagvilava says that his Italian career started off the way he thought it would.
It was quite surprising that he was used to the system just weeks before the friendly.
Considering his output in the final third, which definitely brings loads of hope and promise, the opening couple of games were a joy.
Like Maradona, Kvaratskhelia made his debut in Italy and played a key role in a victory with a goal and an assist.
Things got better for the Georgian when he scored two goals on his home debut against Monza a week later.
"It was an amazing revelation, we did not expect it, and that is the best kind of surprise," says the author of More than Maradona.
With club legends Lorenzo Insigne, Kalidou Koulibaly and Dries Mertens all leaving, Kvaratskhelia is part of a rebuild.
It was more about mourning the players we lost rather than being excited because to us it was young no-name players.
Spalletti's idea of putting together a new, young, fun squad where the players will be given the chance to all grow together is important to me.
Kvaratskhelia is the most intriguing of Napoli's arrivals because of his distinct ball-carrying approach and ability to change games - predominantly operating off the left, he has attempted 6.58 dribbles per 90 minutes so far in the Italian top flight.
In Saturday's 2-1 victory at Lazio, he almost scored his best goal yet, rifling a strike against the post from range after gliding past his marker with a delightful Maradona turn, only to then grab the winner with a thumping strike in the second half.
He signed the contract after Spalletti invited him to his house for a cup of tea.
He has a shy way of doing things, but when he plays football, he is so confident, he is able to control any ball and make it clean.
Spalletti suggested earlier in the season that his winger was still getting loosened up, but now he seems to be completely unshackled.
He likes to dribble with his head down. You can see that he is excited about what he's doing.
He is definitely focused on the task at hand. I don't mean speaking in front of a press conference, but reading the game, and that's what intelligence is all about for me.
He is young and he may not have everything in order. Spalletti wants to keep his system in place so that Kvara will fit in and continue to learn and improve his intelligence.
Khvicha was part of a group of players who came through the Dinamo Tbilisi academy and are currently in the national team.
Zuriko Davitashvili, who joined Dinamo Batumi in March, was thought to be the bigger prospect, but he now refers to his international team-mate as the 'Georgian Messi'.
After moving to Rubin, Khvicha stepped up his game.
"For people who follow youth football, he was a well known name, but nobody probably expected such big progress in the amount of time he needed to."
Georgia's Kvaratskhelia scored eight times in 19 games since making his debut in June, including goals against Spain and Greece, as well as two in a World Cup qualification win over Sweden.
He's been the main talking point about the future of the team for the locals.
He has all the tools to become the greatest Georgian player of all time.
If he keeps his numbers up, he's likely to top that chart.
If he can win some trophies abroad and stay healthy, it will all come down to that.