Lionel Messi publicly apologized to Paris Saint-Germain and his teammates Friday for skipping training at the beginning of the week and going to Saudi Arabia without the club’s permission.
Messi said he believed he and the rest of the team had Monday off, but PSG coach Christophe Galtier ordered training following Sunday’s 3-1 defeat to Lorient.
The club reportedly suspended Messi for two weeks without pay after denying his request to leave. He apparently can’t play or train with teammates during that time.
“First of all, I apologize to my teammates, to the club,” Messi said, according to The Athletic’s Mario Cortegana. “Honestly, I thought we were going to have a day off after the game, as had been happening in previous weeks.
“I had this trip to (Saudi) Arabia organized, and I couldn’t cancel it. I had already canceled it before.
“I repeat again and apologize for what I did. Here I am, waiting for what the club decides.”
Hundreds of PSG fans sang vulgar chants about Messi in front of PSG’s headquarters Wednesday. Fans also targeted Neymar outside of his home in a nearby suburb.
The club beefed up security at its training ground and the players’ homes in response to the protests, sources told Agence France-Presse. PSG condemned the “insulting actions” of the individuals who gathered outside their offices.
News of Messi’s suspension prompted reports of his eventual departure from the club in June. His contract with PSG expires at the end of the season, and his father, Jorge Messi, reportedly informed sporting director Luis Campos about a month ago that he wouldn’t renew it.
The 35-year-old has been linked with a return to Barcelona even as his former club contends with financial constraints in La Liga. He’s also said to have a €400-million offer on the table to play in Saudi Arabia.
Messi agreed to become Saudi Arabia’s tourism ambassador last year. His most recent trip to the country was his second in an official capacity.
PSG manager Christophe Galtier said Friday that he’s unsure if and when Messi will play for the club again.
“We will see when Leo comes back,” Gatlier told reporters. “We will see what happens. Obviously, there will be discussions with the club as a whole but also with Leo because this concerns him first and foremost.”
Lionel Messi will leave Paris Saint-Germain when his contract expires at the end of the season, according to transfer insider Fabrizio Romano.
Wednesday’s bombshell comes a day after PSG suspended Messi for two weeks without pay over an unauthorized trip to Saudi Arabia.
PSG had reportedly denied his request to carry out sponsorship duties in the kingdom.
However, BBC Sport’s Guillem Balague reports Messi’s father Jorge had informed PSG sporting director Luis Campos weeks ago that the seven-time Ballon d’Or winner won’t renew his contract.
Messi, 35, has been linked with a return to Barcelona even as his former club contends with financial constraints in La Liga. He left the Catalan giants as a free agent in August 2021 because they couldn’t find a way to pay him under their salary cap.
Messi could stand to make as much as €400 million if he decides to play in Saudi Arabia, according to Balague. Al Hilal, rivals of Cristiano Ronaldo’s Al Nassr, is reportedly interested, as is David Beckham’s Inter Miami of Major League Soccer.
Messi met with Beckham at PSG’s training facility last week.
Messi signed a two-year deal with PSG worth around €30 million per season after leaving Barcelona. Despite scoring 31 goals in 71 appearances, the World Cup winner has failed to live up to expectations and become a target of derision among hardcore supporters.
PSG manager Christophe Galtier reportedly promised the players would have Monday and Tuesday off if they beat Lorient on the weekend. However, PSG ended up losing the game 3-1, and Galtier ordered his team to train Monday. Messi had already left for Saudi Arabia by then.
While serving the suspension, Messi can’t train or play with the first team, a source told Agence France-Presse. He’ll also be fined an undisclosed amount and miss upcoming games against Troyes and Ajaccio.
Lionel Messi may have played his last game for Paris Saint-Germain.
Less than 21 months after his surprise switch to the French capital, Messi has reportedly decided to let his contract expire in June before moving elsewhere. It appears the reigning Ligue 1 champions suspending him for two weeks without pay after he took an unauthorized trip to Saudi Arabia partly triggered the Argentine’s decision.
So, let the transfer saga begin. Here, theScore picks five potential landing spots for Messi this summer.
Saudi Pro League
Messi’s controversial jaunt to Saudi Arabia inevitably led to rumors that he was discussing a lucrative transfer to the Middle East.
His longtime rival, Cristiano Ronaldo, has become the world’s highest-paid athlete since moving to the Saudi Pro League at the turn of the year, beating Messi to the top spot by $6 million. Riyadh-based club Al Hilal, rivals of Ronaldo’s Al Nassr, are apparently willing to tempt Messi with a salary package worth over €400 million per year.
The superstar strengthened his ties to Saudi Arabia in May 2022 when he was named a tourism ambassador. The country is also desperate to raise its profile while it tries to earn hosting rights for the 2030 World Cup.
Ronaldo’s transfer to the Middle East proves that a hefty pay packet can remedy a league’s relatively low quality, but the Portuguese attacker’s experiences since leaving Europe do sound a warning. The 38-year-old has occasionally appeared frustrated with the standard in Saudi Arabia – both on the playing and officiating sides – and is less visible while trying to help his team rise from second place in the Pro League table. Rather than adding another enthralling chapter to his magnificent career, the conclusion of Ronaldo’s playing days may be little more than an unimpressive and unfortunate footnote.
Is that really the way Messi, who turns 36 in June, wants to enjoy his swan song?
Barcelona
Messi has a difficult relationship with Barcelona. He reluctantly stayed at Camp Nou in 2020 when Barca seemingly refused his request to leave the club. Less than 12 months later, Messi tearfully announced his departure from the Blaugrana because La Liga’s financial rules meant they couldn’t afford to keep him. He said he wanted to stay at Barcelona “more than anything” before his move to PSG was confirmed a few days later.
Despite the club and player’s undeniable love affair, Messi’s father and representative, Jorge Messi, has cast doubts over his son returning to Barcelona as recently as February, saying that “the conditions aren’t right.”
But since Messi left Barcelona, the club, with the assistance of various loans, has performed some scarcely believable financial gymnastics to remain competitive while keeping its expenditure at a more reasonable level. Barca are on the verge of finishing top of La Liga after offloading a number of expensive (and largely ill-advised) signings from recent years, including Antoine Griezmann and Philippe Coutinho. They also called it quits on some players who were with the team for a relatively short period, like Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang and Memphis Depay.
Still, it’s unlikely the club has resolved enough of its 2021 debt of €1.173 billion to approach Messi right now. The fleet-footed forward was apparently willing to accept a 50% pay cut before effectively getting nudged in PSG’s direction. But even with that financial relief, it would be difficult to imagine Barcelona brokering a Messi deal without others – like Raphinha and even Ansu Fati – getting moved before his triumphant return.
Premier League
The Premier League is the wealthiest domestic competition under UEFA’s umbrella. English top-flight clubs splurged £2.8 billion on transfers this season and represented 79% of the total spending across Europe’s major leagues during January’s business.
Money isn’t an issue for many Premier League clubs.
Manchester City appear to be the most natural fit for Messi. The manager who helped propel him to superstardom, Pep Guardiola, is in his seventh season at the Etihad Stadium, where he’s formed a domestic juggernaut that’s potentially three matches away from its first Champions League crown. Some of the club’s biggest names include fearsome striker Erling Haaland and playmaker Kevin De Bruyne.
City appeared closest to signing Messi in the summer of 2020. The Premier League giants reportedly offered an intriguing package that included three years with City before having the option of representing Major League Soccer’s New York City FC, who are part of the same ownership group, after that spell. However, Messi stayed with Barcelona for one more season while then-president Josep Maria Bartomeu insisted interested clubs must pay his prohibitive €700-million release clause to sign him.
Chelsea and Manchester United are among other heavy hitters who could try to tempt Messi to England. Newcastle United are also an emerging option. The Magpies, now bankrolled by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, are expected to spend big during the summer transfer window. Messi’s marketability and on-field experiences should appeal to Newcastle while they prepare to return to the Champions League group stage after a 21-year absence.
Major League Soccer
MLS has almost moved on from shopping in Europe for household names in the twilight of their careers, preferring to bring aboard young talent that can develop and bring potential profits into the league. However, any of its clubs would dream of reaching an agreement to sign Messi.
“If it could happen, it would be terrific for MLS, it would be terrific for Messi and his family,” MLS commissioner Don Garber said in March. “Like everything with us, we try to run every opportunity down.”
New York City FC were previously linked with approaches, but Inter Miami have dominated the Messi conversation since their inaugural season in 2020. A report in October indicated that officials at David Beckham’s MLS franchise expected Messi to sign terms ahead of the 2023 season after being in talks with the Barcelona icon and his father for “a couple of years.” That deadline passed, but expect Inter Miami to join the race to sign Messi this summer, using the area’s strong Latin American flavor and the fact that the player already owns property in Miami as major selling points.
Newell’s Old Boys
This, undoubtedly, is the romantic choice – the club Messi supports and represented as a youth-team player before being brought to Barcelona at age 13.
“I’ve said many times that my dream is to play at Newell’s, but I don’t know what will happen, and a part of that doubt is due to the way the country is at the moment,” Messi told TyC Sports, with translation from Marca, in 2017.
Sadly, Argentina hasn’t improved much over the ensuing years. The country’s annual inflation rate soared to 104.3% in March, according to Reuters’ Horacio Soria and Juan Carlos Bustamante, creating a cost-of-living crisis that has left almost 40% of the population in poverty and increased public anger ahead of October’s elections. The financial emergency worsened when one of the worst droughts in Argentina’s history killed off crops, resulting in billions of lost export revenue and increases in domestic prices.
“I have a family, and my children come first, and then me. I want them to grow up in a calm place, being able to enjoy life with security,” Messi added in that interview from six years ago.
Still, fans of the Rosario-based club have some hope of seeing Messi play for Newell’s this summer. Newell’s legend Maxi Rodriguez, who played for Argentina 56 times between 2003-14, said last week that Messi is invited to play in his retirement match at the Estadio Marcelo Bielsa on June 24.
UEFA president Aleksander Ceferin is open to the idea of holding the Champions League final, as well as other matches from the world’s most popular club tournament, in the United States.
“It is possible,” Ceferin told Roger Bennett on the “Men in Blazers” podcast, according to ESPN.
“We started to discuss about that, but then one year it is World Cup, 2024 is Euro, this year (the Champions League final) is Istanbul, ’24 in London, ’25 in Munich. And after that, let’s see.”
The topic of playing Champions League games outside of Europe and in the U.S. was reportedly discussed at UEFA Executive Committee meetings in Croatia last fall. But Ceferin later denied that such talks took place.
However, the 55-year-old acknowledged he was intrigued after highlighting the potential financial benefits of playing in a “promising market” like the U.S.
“Football is extremely popular in United States these days,” he added. “Americans are willing to pay this amount (gestures high with hand) for best and nothing for the less. So they will follow European football as basketball lovers in Europe follow NBA.
“It’s a very important, promising market for the future. The thing is that we are selling rights very well. Sponsorship is so-so for now from the U.S., but here (in the U.S.), commercialization is completely different than in Europe. They (Americans) are much more talented for that than us (Europeans).”
There were reports last September over a potential four-team super cup being played in the U.S. to open the season in 2024. It would feature the three winners from UEFA’s cup competitions and the Major League Soccer champion.
Ceferin was re-elected UEFA president for a third term after going unopposed during the 2023 election.