How has Messi’s life-altering shift to Paris panned out?
The Hindu
The footballing world changed after the Barcelona icon left Spain last year. Has he come to terms with a new city and a different league?
It has been a challenging eight months for Lionel Messi. Despite savouring sweet success — Argentina’s Copa America triumph, after which he said, “I needed to remove from myself the thorn of achieving something with the national team”, and a record-extending seventh Ballon d’Or — the 34-year-old has dealt with the most tumultuous period of his professional career: the end of a 20-year relationship with Barcelona, his boyhood club.
“This is all like a bucket of cold water has been poured over me and we are still coming to terms with it,” Messi said at his teary Barcelona exit last year even as hundreds of fans, many wearing his No. 10 jersey, massed outside Camp Nou to bid farewell. “I tried to behave with humility and respect and I hope that is what remains of me when I leave the club.”
The move to Paris Saint-Germain was a consequence of the financial mess Barcelona found itself in — its debt had risen to €1.35 billion, the player-wage bill had ballooned out of control and it could not give its biggest global icon a new contract that would fit within LaLiga’s strict financial fair-play regulations. This was even after Messi had reportedly agreed to a 50% pay cut.
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