Fans of Lionel Messi’s hometown club, Newell’s Old Boys, tried to tempt the unsettled Barcelona icon to Argentina with a street parade on Thursday.
The initiative to bring the Rosario native home started on social media and led to hundreds of supporters taking to the streets to express their hope that Messi moves to Estadio Marcelo Bielsa. The attacker reportedly told Barcelona on Tuesday that he wants to leave the club.
“Olele, Olala, Messi is Newell’s, he’s not going to City,” the fans chanted, according to Reuters. The song was in response to reports that Messi will reunite with his former Barca boss, Pep Guardiola, at Manchester City.
The 33-year-old has also been linked with a move to Paris Saint-Germain, Inter Milan, Juventus, and other European giants.
Messi has made no secret of his support for Newell’s, saying in 2017 that representing the club “is what I dreamed about since I was a kid.” He left Argentina at the age of 13 for the opportunity to join Barcelona and has since only played for the Catalonian club.
Some of the clothing and flags at the parade carried the slogan, “Your dream, our desire,” ESPN’s Tom Marshall reports.
“As a Newell’s fan, I want him to come here but we know it’s impossible,” 65-year-old fan Daniel Valvi told reporters in Rosario, as quoted by Reuters.
“If he does come, he’ll come in four years or so when he’s almost done so he can say, ‘I’m playing a few games for Newell’s and then I’m retiring.'”
Messi’s final match for Barcelona could be the humiliating 8-2 loss to Bayern Munich in the Champions League quarterfinals earlier this month.
If you think what happened in the NBA on Wednesday can’t happen in the NFL, you don’t know what year this is.
Old rules are out the window in 2020. Long-held expectations are outdated. The Detroit Lions canceled practice Tuesday so they could stand outside of their team facility and talk about police brutality in front of reporters. Nine NFL teams canceled their practices Thursday so they could discuss larger societal issues among themselves.
Ostensibly, this week’s sports protests sprouted in response to an incident in which Jacob Blake was shot seven times by police Sunday in Kenosha, Wisconsin. But if you’ve been listening and paying attention for the past several months, you’re well aware that this is about much more than just the latest police shooting of a Black man. Players aren’t simply outraged that this happened, they’re outraged that it keeps happening. And they want us to know they aren’t going to just keep playing basketball or baseball or football or soccer on our televisions as if it’s not.
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The NFL is well aware of this. Thursday morning, two weeks before the scheduled season opener between the Super Bowl-champion
The biggest story in football history is unfolding before our eyes.
Reports that Lionel Messi wants to leave Barcelona sent Twitter into overdrive Tuesday.
Carles Puyol, the former Barcelona captain, seemed to confirm Messi’s impending exit, writing in Spanish, “Respect and admiration, Leo. All my support, friend.” Luis Suarez, Messi’s friend and teammate, apparently approved of Puyol’s message.
Here are some of the best reactions to the unbelievable news: