'I'm going to Miami' - Messi confirms move to MLS
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[June 08, 2023]
By Rory Carroll
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Lionel Messi on Wednesday announced that he
intends to join Major League Soccer side Inter Miami as a free agent
after parting ways with French champions Paris St Germain and
snubbing a lucrative contract offer in Saudi Arabia.
Messi, who played his final game for PSG over the weekend, was also
linked with a return to Barcelona, but the Spanish club have had
their hands tied due to LaLiga's financial fair play rules.
"I made the decision that I'm going to go to Miami," Messi said in
an interview with Mundo Deportivo and Sport newspapers.
"I still haven't closed it 100%. I'm still missing a few things, but
we decided to go ahead. If Barcelona didn't work out, I wanted to
leave Europe, get out of the spotlight and think more about my
family."
Messi, who led Argentina to World Cup glory in Qatar in December and
has earned a record seven Ballon d'Or awards, won the Ligue 1 title
in his two seasons with PSG as well as the French Super Cup in 2022.
"After winning the World Cup and not being able to go to Barca, it
was time to go to the U.S. league to experience football in a
different way and enjoy the day-to-day," Messi said.
"Obviously with the same responsibility and desire to want to win
and to always do things well. But with more peace of mind."
OWNERSHIP STAKE
The move is also a big win for MLS, which welcomed Messi while
adding that work remained to finalise the details of the formal
agreement.
"The (goat) is coming," MLS tweeted, with a goat animal emoji
standing in for the phrase "greatest of all time".
"Millions of MLS fans all over the world welcome you, Leo."
Messi had wanted to go to a club where he could eventually have an
ownership stake, a source with knowledge of the negotiations told
Reuters this week, and his contract is expected to pave the way for
him to do so after he retires.
He will also receive a cut of the revenue from Apple TV's MLS Season
Pass, which broadcasts the league's games, and be able to maximize
his existing sponsorship deal with Adidas.
MLS earns a flat fee of around $250 million per year from Apple
until it reaches a certain threshold of subscriptions, after which
point it will earn a share of the revenue from those subscriptions.
Messi's move to MLS is expected to drive viewers to the Apple TV
streaming platform given he is the world's most recognisable soccer
player.
The forward was also linked with a move to Saudi Arabian side
Al-Hilal after he received a formal offer.
The Gulf country has been looking to bring the game's biggest
players to its league and was successful in convincing Portuguese
forward Cristiano Ronaldo to join Al Nassr soon after the World Cup.
French striker Karim Benzema joined Al Ittihad this week.
[to top of second column] |
Soccer Football - Ligue 1 - Paris
St Germain v Clermont - Parc de Princes, Paris, France - June 3,
2023 Paris St Germain's Lionel Messi during the warm up before the
match REUTERS/Benoit Tessier
"If it had been a question of money, I would have
gone to Arabia or elsewhere where they offered me a lot of money,"
Messi said.
Inter Miami are co-owned by former England captain David Beckham,
who was one of the first major European stars to move to the United
States to play in the MLS, winning the MLS Cup twice with Los
Angeles Galaxy.
Messi will have his work cut out in Miami, however, with the club at
rock bottom of the Eastern Conference standings - six points from
ninth place, the final spot which would give them a chance of
qualifying for the playoffs.
The team sacked coach Phil Neville last week after a dismal run of
10 defeats and five wins this season, a stark contrast to last
season when they finished sixth and qualified for the MLS Cup
playoffs.
PSG EXIT
Once the crown jewel of European football, Messi has effectively
been let go by two super clubs in two years - for free.
At Barcelona, Messi has several records to his name at the club he
did not want to leave, in a city he had called home since he was a
teenager.
But Messi had no choice in the manner of his exit from Barcelona in
2021 as the club failed to make it financially feasible to retain
his services.
His move away from PSG, however, is of his own volition as he felt
the French club lacked a project for the future while fan unrest
hastened his exit.
The highs after winning Argentina's first World Cup in 36 years were
quickly offset by the lows he experienced in Paris.
Even before he could rest on his World Cup laurels he found himself
in the eye of a storm when, for the first time in his illustrious
career, his club's fans turned against him amid PSG's troubling
form.
Supporters of PSG, owned and funded by Qatar Sports Investments,
have become accustomed to winning domestic titles in the past
decade. They won their ninth title in 11 seasons last month.
But the holy grail - the Champions League - remains elusive after
yet another meek exit in the last 16.
(Reporting by Rory Carroll in Los Angeles, Rohith Nair in Bengaluru,
Amy Tennery in New York and Janina Nuño Rios and Angelica Medina in
Mexico City; Editing by Ed Osmond, Toby Davis and Jamie Freed)
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