Lionel Messi's move from Barcelona to PSG both proof and a result of European football's broken system

Wahesh

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If ever an image can sum up the current state of European football in all its cold and bloated glory it is that of Lionel Messi tearfully explaining why he can't play for his beloved Barcelona anymore.

The best footballer in the world, quite possibly the best footballer ever, stood sobbing in front of FC Barcelona's logo and laid out the details of a desperate situation that was unfathomable even a week ago.

In short, though Messi wants to stay, and Barca obviously wants to retain him, the Catalan club has found itself in such an atrociously dire financial position that there is no conceivable way he can remain.

Even if Messi took the 50 per cent pay cut he had agreed to and signed the carefully structured contract that would spread his salary over five years instead of the two he actually plans to play, Barcelona's wages would still be at 110 per cent of the club's revenue.


La Liga only allows that number to reach 70 per cent, and as such will not allow Messi to be registered.

And just like that, one of the greatest love stories in the history of the sport ends. Messi and Barcelona, whose individual and collective greatness have reached unprecedented heights and defined football for much of this century, have been forced into a premature parting by pure mismanagement and greed.

Messi's tears were heartbreaking, but his sadness should be all of ours. Not just for the fact he is leaving, but for what it represents for the European game in general, particularly at its very top.

That money rules all in football is not new or surprising, but 2021 has felt like a tipping point.


As COVID cuts and loss of matchday revenue due to the pandemic crippled a number of clubs at the bottom of the sport's food chain, those at the top launched their ill-fated Super League — a callous cash grab designed to shore up the fragile financial strangehold of the elite at the expense of anyone with designs on challenging them.

There was outrage and consternation, and the plot comically fell apart in an instant, but no real sanction or deterrent awaited those who attempted it. The status quo remained.

But the game was already broken. The scales had long since been tipped with the introduction of Financial Fair Play, a misnomer that merely protects the clubs with existing wealth from the nouveau riche, making sure we will never see another Manchester City or Chelsea explode to prominence on the back of a wealthy benefactor again.


It's why when Messi has been forced out of Barcelona. There are really only two or three places he could end up.

One, Manchester City, just spent 100 million pounds on Jack Grealish and has another 100 million set aside for Harry Kane. Another, Chelsea, is reportedly about to put the finishing touches on a deal worth about 100 million pounds for Romelu Lukaku.

That leaves Paris Saint-Germain. Messi has friends there already, and a good relationship with their Argentinian manager, Mauricio Pochettino, but the truth is PSG is the only remaining club that can afford him.

To rub salt into the wounds, the move was effectively confirmed days ago, not by the club or the player, but by the brother of the Emir of Qatar, who controls the club through the state-owned Qatar Sports Investment group.


This is football as far removed from the people and from the romance that initially captivated them as is humanly possible.

And while the alternative to this whole mess — Barcelona somehow finding a way to circumvent the rules to keep Messi while continuing to wildly spend beyond their means — doesn't fix any of these problems and arguably exacerbates them, it at least would keep some purity in the game.

This outcome changes the way we look at Lionel Messi and his career, which is devastating. It affirms the belief that, Super League or no, the elite few clubs are playing a completely different sport to the rest.


It deepens the suspicion that there is no way back from here, that the things we once loved most about football have been permanently replaced by whatever this is.

It's all just a massive shame.

Fans will return to stadiums in England this weekend for a new Premier League season, which City will probably win, and the big teams will branch off again to compete in the Champions League, which PSG will probably now win, and it'll all feel normal again.

But something has been lost here. No matter what happens between now and May, Messi's tears are the story of the season.

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Wahesh

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... and so closes this CHAPTER of the G.O.A.T.s career. Was, and always will be a Legend of the game.
 

Rodzilla

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If Ronaldo did the same thing to Madrid it would be a different story
 

Wahesh

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He simply is the Greatest of all Time.

Regarding his rivalry with Ronaldo, NO ONE can deny Ronaldo is a great player, however they play very different games. Ronaldo simply smashes the ball and can hit the target low, hard and fast. In addition, a good majority of his goals come of penalities.

Messi is different. He simply controls and dribbles the ball as it's attached to his foot. Even when he goes down he can still control it very well as illustrated in that video. He creates goals from nothing. That goal against Getafe is one I'll never forget. We will never see a player like him again because he's more than once in a lifetime, he's a once, period.

Greatest of all time!
 

BELMORE

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He simply is the Greatest of all Time.

Regarding his rivalry with Ronaldo, NO ONE can deny Ronaldo is a great player, however they play very different games. Ronaldo simply smashes the ball and can hit the target low, hard and fast. In addition, a good majority of his goals come of penalities.

Messi is different. He simply controls and dribbles the ball as it's attached to his foot. Even when he goes down he can still control it very well as illustrated in that video. He creates goals from nothing. That goal against Getafe is one I'll never forget. We will never see a player like him again because he's more than once in a lifetime, he's a once, period.

Greatest of all time!
Ronaldinho rips him
 

alchemist

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Ronaldinho rips him
a committed and disciplined Ronaldinho could have been the yardstick against which greatness is measured... unfortunately, he enjoyed the lifestyle of a footballer a little too much (like some other famous Brazilians --> Romario, Ronaldo, Adriano etc.) and his career started to peter out after 2006
 

alchemist

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He simply is the Greatest of all Time.

Regarding his rivalry with Ronaldo, NO ONE can deny Ronaldo is a great player, however they play very different games. Ronaldo simply smashes the ball and can hit the target low, hard and fast. In addition, a good majority of his goals come of penalities.

Messi is different. He simply controls and dribbles the ball as it's attached to his foot. Even when he goes down he can still control it very well as illustrated in that video. He creates goals from nothing. That goal against Getafe is one I'll never forget. We will never see a player like him again because he's more than once in a lifetime, he's a once, period.

Greatest of all time!
as great as Messi is, and you are correct that there is a clear distinction in class between he and CR7, I still believe Maradona at his peak was without peer
 

alchemist

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The story would be about how greedy he is and how he dragged the club into debt
this mess is ALL on Barcelona's management... the money spent on transfers for Dembele, Coutinho, Griezmann etc., the exorbitant wages across the entire playing group, the neglect of their academy, the European Super League rubbish, knowing that La Liga was implementing a salary cap etc.

it's like someone warned "iceberg!" and their response was "full steam ahead!"... morons
 

Wahesh

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Waaa waa waaa. If he took a 90% pay cut he'd still be earning more than 99.99% of people on this planet.
Messi was willing to play for free. It had to do with the rules about someone of his status in the team not being allowed to do so. Just like the NRL has a minimum wage which players MUST be paid (they can't play for free). I'm sure Messi has earned millions not just from playing but also being a brand ambassador. Money isn't an issue for him.
 

LFC Bulldogs

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I’m sure the $115 million bucks he will make annually in salary will comfort his pain of having to leave Barcelona .
 

alchemist

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I’m sure the $115 million bucks he will make annually in salary will comfort his pain of having to leave Barcelona .
well, Messi did want to leave Barcelona last year for the north west of England and then New York... so, it cannot be incomprehensible to him to move away... and he has every right to maximise his earnings

but there is no excuse for Barcelona
 

CrittaMagic69

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It's not going to happen but imagine if Barca won the champions league this season :tearsofjoy:
 

alchemist

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It's not going to happen but imagine if Barca won the champions league this season :tearsofjoy:
Ter Stegen, Dest, Pique, Lenglet, Umtiti, Garcia, Alba, De Jong, Busquets, Pedri, Coutinho, Fati, Griezmann, Dembele, Depay, Aguero etc. --> Barca still have a very good squad IF they can sort out their finances
 

CrittaMagic69

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Ter Stegen, Dest, Pique, Lenglet, Umtiti, Garcia, Alba, De Jong, Busquets, Pedri, Coutinho, Fati, Griezmann, Dembele, Depay, Aguero etc. --> Barca still have a very good squad IF they can sort out their finances
It's okay...wouldn't be upset if we drew them compared to other top sides. I personally don't see them handling the loss of Messi well, fans will turn on them very quickly if they're off too a bad start.
 
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