The micro-economy spinning around Messi's Paris adventure
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[September 15, 2021]
By Richard Lough
PARIS (Reuters) - For Paris photographer Olivier Sanchez, there is
only one story in town: the new life of Lionel Messi.
Newspapers and magazines around the world harangue his Crystal
Pictures agency for images of the Argentine footballer, his wife and
children settling into the French capital a month after arriving.
"Today, for me, it is Messi and no one else," he said. "Everybody
wants a piece of him. He is king. Simple."
When Messi's childhood club FC Barcelona announced they could not
afford to keep the six-times Ballon d'Or winner, French club Paris
St Germain (PSG) swooped.
PSG agreed a staggering net salary of 71 million euros ($84 million)
over two years, according to media, but club chairman Nasser al-Khelaifi
said bluntly that people would be "shocked" by the revenue he would
fetch.
The money train extends far beyond the club.
From luxury real estate agents to Argentine restaurant owners, paparazzi
to private concierge, Messi represents a financial opportunity.
Sanchez said he had at least two photographers collecting tips and
following Messi and PSG for the first shots of the family when they
finally break cover from their hotel.
In Barcelona, he won the admiration of locals for his down-to-earth
lifestyle https://www.reuters.com/article/soccer-spain-fcb-messi-neighbours-idUKL8N2PF0FO,
waving at neighbours, enjoying seafront meals and taking his children to
bouncy castles.
"If we can get them in a park, or strolling in town, or out at
Disneyland Paris, the newspapers will lap it up," Sanchez said.
Luxury real estate agent Susie Hollands, meanwhile, is scouring the
market for a property worthy of a man listed by Forbes as the world's
second highest-paid athlete in 2021. Hollands, founder of boutique real
estate group Vingt Paris, has collaborated with PSG before and is
familiar with players' demands.
"Typically, they're going to want 1,000 square metres - that barely
exists in central Paris - and parking for their cars," Hollands said.
Top-notch security and privacy are also important.
One PSG player, whose housing Hollands worked on, was paying 35,000
euros ($30,000) per month, she said, adding that such a rental contract
would earn her 50,000-60,000 euros in fees.
"We're taking a look to see if we can find something. But you either
have it or you don't," Hollands said, adding that she was one of a
select group of agents the club worked with.
MESSI BOUNCE
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Paris St Germain fans celebrate as they await the arrival of Lionel
Messi outside Paris-Le Bourget airport REUTERS/Yves Herman/File
Photo
For several years after the Emir of
Qatar bought PSG in 2011, Yves Abitbol's concierge company helped
settle some of its highest-profile players, organising the house
hunt, dealing with banking and insurance paperwork, and finding
house staff.
Sometimes he catered for a player's fancier needs, including visits
to sports car dealerships and luxury watch boutiques.
Abitbol said his firm MyConcierge had
worked closely with PSG until it created its own internal team
several years ago, cutting the likes of him out.
Nonetheless, Abitbol's upmarket travel agency has seen a Messi
bounce. "I've got people around the world asking us to organise
three days in Paris with seats for match day to watch Messi," he
said.
The red-hot demand to see Messi in person - even when he was just
watching from the stands rather than playing - saw tickets for PSG's
first game after his signing, at home to Strasbourg, sell secondhand
for over 800 euros.
On Wednesday night, he was set to join fellow superstars Neymar and
Kylian Mbappe in a frightening attacking trio away to Brugge in the
Champions League.
His number 30 jersey, which retails at 108 euros, has sold faster
than any other, PSG said. Activity tracker Talkwalker said that from
the Friday Messi was first linked to the club in early August to the
following Tuesday when he signed, PSG gained 3 million followers
across social media platforms.
Again, the club was not alone
"We saw a jump on social media," said Enrique Tirigall, co-founder
of Volver, an upmarket Argentine restaurant chain in Paris.
Reservations for his flagship steakhouse, a popular haunt for PSG
stars including Messi compatriot Angel Di Maria, flooded in after
the Argentine sealed his deal.
"Everybody want to eat what he eats," Tirigall said.
($1 = 1.1814 euros)
(Reporting by Richard Lough; Editing by Andrew Cawthorne)
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