Messi reluctantly staying at Barcelona, rages against FC club
Lionel Messi has announced that he will stay at Barcelona, insisting he could never go to court against "the club of his life."
Lionel Messi has ended speculation about his future at Barcelona by announcing that he would reluctantly stay for another season rather than tackle his career-long club in court.
A week after saying he wanted to leave the Liga side, and with a contract row still raging, the 33-year-old six-time player of the year gave the news Barca fans were hoping for on Friday.
In doing so, however, the Argentinian forward took a big swipe at the club's hierarchy.
Lionel Messi insisted he could never go to court against "the club of his life" but he launched a stinging attack on president Josep Maria Bartomeu.
READ MORE: Lionel Messi reportedly tells Barcelona he wants to leave club
"I wasn't happy and I wanted to leave. I have not been allowed this in any way and I will STAY at the club so as not to get into a legal dispute," he was quoted as saying by Goal.com.
"The management of the club led by (president Josep Maria) Bartomeu is a disaster."
He accused Bartomeu of going back on an agreement to let him leave for free at the end of last season.
"The president always said that at the end of the season I could decide if I wanted to go or if I wanted to stay and in the end he didn't end up keeping his word," Messi said in an interview with Goal, released on Friday.
Contract
The 33-year-old striker believed he had a clause in his contract that allowed him to leave for free at the end of the season but Barcelona said that option expired on June 10.
"I told the club, the president in particular, that I wanted to leave. They knew this since the start of the past season. I told them during all (of the) last 12 months. But I will stay here because I don't want to start a legal war."
By remaining at the Catalan club for the fourth and final year of his contract the six-time world player of the year is in line for a $83.38 million loyalty bonus and will be able to leave without a transfer fee.
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"I will continue at Barca and my attitude will not change no matter how much I have wanted to go," he said. "I wanted to go because I thought about living my last years of football happily. Lately I have not found happiness within the club."
Earlier on Friday, Messi's father and representative Jorge had insisted in a letter to La Liga that a 700 million euros ($828.03 million) release clause in the player's contract was not valid and his son could leave for free.
However, despite the standoff between the Messi camp and Barcelona and La Liga, the player has ended the impasse and will see out his contract with the club with whom he has won more than 30 major trophies and scored over 600 goals.
Barcelona crashed out of the Champions League last month with an 8-2 demolition by eventual winners Bayern Munich, and hired Ronald Koeman to replace sacked coach Quique Setien.
Clubs disappointed
The news that Messi will be staying at the Nou Camp, albeit reluctantly, will disappoint the clubs who were hoping to sign the iconic forward, including Premier League Manchester City, managed by his former Barca boss Pep Guardiola.
Argentinian pay TV station TYC Sports, which has close links with Messi, had reported earlier on Friday that Messi was poised to stay with the Catalan club he joined as a teenager.
The situation was further complicated when Jorge Messi wrote to La Liga president Javier Tebas dismissing their claim that the release clause still applied if his son wished to leave.
He accused La Liga, who on Sunday backed Barca's stance, of making an error in their interpretation of the contract.
La Liga responded to Jorge Messi's letter by saying it stood by a statement in support of Barcelona issued on Sunday.
Messi dropped the bombshell last week that he wanted to leave the club and that he could do so on a free transfer.
On Sunday he failed to show up for a pre-season medical, making a move away look even more likely.
His lawyers wanted to invoke a clause in his four-year contract, signed in 2017, which would have allowed the forward to leave the club for free if he had requested it by June 10.
They argued that that date – nominally the end of the season – was irrelevant after the novel coronavirus pandemic forced an extension of the La Liga campaign deep into August.