Barca's all-time top scorer signed the contract
in November, seven months before his old deal expired. It runs
until June 2021 and contains a 700 million euro ($843 million)
buy-out clause.
But according to the Spanish daily, it would also allow the
five-times world player of the year to leave the club where he
has spent his entire career for free if Catalonia's independence
push resulted in Barca exiting Spain's top flight and not
joining either the Premier League, the Bundesliga or Serie A.
A Barca spokesman declined to comment directly on the report but
added: "In the interests of confidentiality the club never
comment on contracts signed with players and never will."
Messi's management team could not immediately be reached for
comment.
The political crisis triggered by Catalonia's independence drive
remains unresolved after separatists won a slim parliamentary
majority in a regional election last month.
Argentinian Messi's latest contract was signed on Nov. 25,
before that vote but after an autumn referendum on independence
that authorities in Madrid declared illegal, dissolving the
region's political institutions after they ratified it.
The referendum had direct ramifications for Barcelona who, on
the day that it was held, chose to play their La Liga game
against Las Palmas behind closed doors in response to police
violence against would-be voters.
The president of La Liga, Javier Tebas, has repeatedly said
Barcelona would be booted out of the Spanish league along with
all other Catalan clubs in the event of independence, as only
teams from Spain and Andorra are legally entitled to compete in
the Spanish leagues.
Barca, who have won 24 Liga titles and lead this season's
standings by nine points, said after the referendum they would
not speculate on the future.
However, they were "not planning for any other scenario than
playing in the Spanish league. The club is competing in this
competition and wants to win it."
(Reporting by Richard Martin; editing by John Stonestreet)
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