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⚽ Could Messi Really Leave Barcelona?

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Thu, Feb 6, 2020 10:56 PM

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Lionel Messi’s frustrations with his team are boiling over. Could the unthinkable actually happ

Lionel Messi’s frustrations with his team are boiling over. Could the unthinkable actually happen? [View in browser]( [FOX SPORTS INSIDER WITH MARTIN ROGERS] In today’s FOX Sports Insider: Messi might be heading for splitsville with the only team he’s ever known ... Colin Cowherd has a big idea for Tom Brady’s destination ... and the spirit of Kobe Bryant lives on around the world. Lionel Messi has never talked about leaving Barcelona; he has never even hinted at it. The longer the career of one of soccer’s all-time greats has continued, the more it has seemed certain he would complete his time in the game as a “one-club” man, save for perhaps a couple of farewell seasons back in his native Argentina at the very end, once his legs had slowed. However, these are unusual times in Spanish soccer and the most startling development of all has come over the past week, with the fractures in the relationship between Messi and key figures at Barcelona laid bare. All of which has prompted a previously unthinkable possibility: after two decades of loyal service — ever since moving overseas at the age of 12 — could Messi really take his talents elsewhere? The ruckus came to a head when Barcelona sporting director Eric Abidal gave an ill-advised interview in which he claimed that certain players were to blame for the sacking of former head coach Ernesto Valverde, then insisted that those same players had not worked hard enough to prevent the coach’s firing with their on-field performances. [STORY IMAGE 1] That prompted Messi to do a most un-Messi-like thing. On his Instagram account, he posted the interview’s relevant quote, circled in red, and challenged Abidal to name those he felt had not given their all. “Many thought (Messi) was right and even those who thought Abidal might be did not consider it a good idea to say so,” wrote Sid Lowe in The Guardian. “The damage was done and it awoke the greatest fear: Messi leaving.” Such theatrics are somewhat rare in European soccer but totally unheard of from Messi, whose shunning of the spotlight has been a recurring theme throughout his career. A devoted family man, he is not one for glitzy occasions and the Barcelona high life, nor one to give more of his time to the media than absolutely necessary. “Honestly, I don’t like doing these things but I think that everyone has to be responsible for his acts and take responsibility for their own decisions,” Messi wrote. “The players [are responsible for] what happens on the pitch, and we have been the first to recognize when we were not good. The people in the sporting directorate should also assume their responsibility and above all take ownership of the decisions they make.” [STORY IMAGE 2] The idea of Messi in another club’s jersey has long been thought so improbable as to not even be worth considering. Yet the longer things rumble, the left-footed wizard, now 32 and with a record six World Footballer of the Year awards to his name, may feel that the waning years of his career are not being maximized to their fullest potential. Barcelona is currently second in the La Liga standings but is coming off a shaky patch, including three draws and a defeat in its last seven league games. The club has not won the Champions League for five years (hated rival Real Madrid has lifted it three times in that span) and a revolving door of sporting directors (akin to a general manager in American sports) has caused regression rather than progress. When it was revealed several months ago that Messi had a clause in his contract allowing him to leave at the end of this season for free, no one thought much of it. They’re certainly thinking of it now. At an awards ceremony in December he also hinted that retirement may not be far off and it is far from certain that he will seek to play towards the age of 40 like Cristiano Ronaldo, the only other player to have come close to the same level of individual excellence this past decade. [STORY IMAGE 3] There have been growing signs of Messi’s frustration. He wasn’t pleased when the team failed to land Brazilian superstar Neymar for a return or to sign a recognized forward to make up for the prolonged injury absence of Luis Suárez. And while even up until a couple of years ago Messi enjoyed comfort and familiarity, so much that a switch from the Catalan region where he has made his home all this time was unthinkable, it is now a little less so. He has matured, with recent public appearances showing a more relaxed state in the public eye and even some humor in television interviews. If he was ever going to go and try something new, like a stint with Manchester City in the English Premier League or even to Italy to renew his head-to-head with Ronaldo, the time is probably now — or at least this summer. [STORY IMAGE 4] Many thought Barcelona would try to mitigate the current damage by either forcing Abidal to issue a public apology or by firing him; such is the level of influence Messi wields and how devastating his departure would be. Instead, it was reported on Wednesday that team president Josep Maria Bartomeu had spoken separately with the men in an attempt to secure some kind of truce and believed he had been successful in getting one. The crisis may have been averted, or merely put on hold for a while. The real crescendo of the situation may come at the end of the season. That’s when a player capable of making the soccer world gasp with his skills could pull off the biggest stunner of them all — by leaving. [STORY IMAGE 5] Here’s what others have said ... Sid Lowe, The Guardian: “Since Neymar left there has been a sense of the club reaching for something that has gone, desperate for a solution that never arrives. The only solution, it often felt, was Messi. He was a shield behind which many hid, a reason for complacency, conditioning everything. He wanted to share that burden, have a team constructed around him. Instead, he must have wondered what else he had to do, why it always seemed to come down to him. In the last few weeks even his best friend Suárez has been absent, with Messi cutting an even lonelier figure.” Ben Grounds, Sky Sports: “A departure from the Spanish champions has often been spoken about but the rhetoric has changed, in so much as club legend Lobo Carrasco told Spanish TV this week: ‘It's the first time Messi has looked to me like he has one foot out of the door.'” Rob Dawson, ESPN: “Manchester City are monitoring Lionel Messi's public fallout with Barcelona and believe they would be in the running if the Argentina star decides to leave Camp Nou, sources have told ESPN. The Premier League holders privately admit his departure remains unlikely, but they would be interested if he decides to move either this summer or at the end of his current deal in 2021. City maintain they would be at the head of the queue for Messi's signature because of his strong relationship with director of football Txiki Begiristain, chief executive Ferran Soriano and manager Pep Guardiola." [IN OTHER WORDS] - Yahoo Sports’ Jeff Eisenberg [on how Kobe Bryant changed the life of WNBA player Reshanda Gray](. - [The Mookie Betts trade is unprecedented in baseball history](. Ben Lindbergh explains over at The Ringer. - Shauna Farnell profiles [a one-of-a-kind, 75-year-old uphill skier]( for The New York Times. [THE BRADY HUNCH] [THE BRADY HUNCH]( Colin Cowherd put forward an interesting hypothesis on Wednesday’s episode of The Herd. Cowherd believes that if Dak Prescott continues to inflate his price tag this offseason, Jerry Jones may just let him go and instead spend on that money on a proven winner and the biggest name on the market. Tom Brady to the Cowboys? Cowherd believes it just feels right. [THE INTERNET IS UNDEFEATED] [THE INTERNET IS UNDEFEATED]( The Kobe Bryant tributes will continue to pour in from all over the world. The latest incredible tribute to his legacy comes from Italy, where Bryant grew up. A long-abandoned basketball court is now alive and thriving once again, thanks to a fresh coat of paint in honor of the Black Mamba. [VIEWER'S GUIDE] Houston Rockets at Los Angeles Lakers (TNT, 10:30 p.m. ET) Bitter Western Conference rivals will go at it in the Staples Center on Thursday night. Can the Rockets keep their three-game win streak going as they run up against the Lakers? Loyola Marymount at No. 2 Gonzaga (CBS Sports Net, 11 p.m. ET) WCC action! Catch the 23-1 Gonzaga Bulldogs as they get a chance to strut their stuff and show a national audience why they are the No. 2 team in the nation. [BET OF THE DAY] [BET OF THE DAY] Odds provided by [FOX Bet]( Dustin Johnson to finish Top 5 in the Pebble Beach Pro-Am: +163 Dustin Johnson is just beginning play in his second tournament of 2020 thus far, coming off a 2019 where he finished second at both the Masters and the PGA Championship. In his only tournament in 2020, he ended up in a tie for seventh place, so if there’s some rust, he isn’t showing much of it. If you prefer longer odds for the pro-am, Johnson is the odds-on favorite to win at the moment, at +650 to win the tournament outright. A new FOX Sports app and website is coming. [Click here]( to be notified when the reimagined app is available. [WHAT THEY SAID] "Believe me; the reward is not so great without the struggle" — Wilma Rudolph [FOLLOW FOX SPORTS] [Twitter]( [Facebook]( [YouTube]( [Instagram]( Download the FOX Sports app for live scores and streaming [App Store]( [Google Play]( Available on: [tvOS] [Roku] [fireTV] [androidtv] [XBOX] [Google chromecast] [tvOS] [fireTV] [androidtv] [XBOX] [Google chromecast] Forwarded this message? [Sign up](. Trademark & Copyright Notice: ™ and © 2020 FOX Media LLC and FOX Sports Interactive Media, LLC. All rights reserved. Please do not reply to this message. If you do not wish to receive emails like this in the future, please [unsubscribe](. FOX Sports respects your privacy. Click [here]( to view our Privacy Policy. FOX.com Business & Legal Affairs - Manager Digital Media P.O. Box 900 Beverly Hills, CA 90213-0900

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