The Province

Soccer fans learn an expensive lesson

Many in the D.C. crowd paid a steep price to see Messi play but MLS star was sidelined by injury

- CANDACE BUCKNER

WASHINGTON — Everywhere, cotton-candy pink jerseys.

On the sidewalks that led to Half Street SW, sold by the weekend entreprene­urs shouting “Messi! Messi! Messi!” who were willing to let them go for $30 new with tags. And duplicated on body after body inside Audi Field, on the soccer fans who showed up and tried to mute any buyer’s remorse by wearing their audaciousl­y loud shirts.

The mass of pink at D.C. United’s home match against Inter Miami symbolized what greatness looks like. The jerseys sold and worn were all for one man. But only he can pull off that colour better than everyone’s favourite “Ken,” and he wasn’t on the field Saturday afternoon.

Lionel Messi wasn’t even in D.C. He was in South Florida, or wherever GOATs choose to roam when they suddenly have a Saturday off from work. Messi, his right leg worn out probably from carrying the MLS for the last eight months, remained away while nursing a hamstring issue. Although the disappoint­ing news that Messi would miss the match became official Friday, clearly it did not reach everyone.

I stopped Rigoberto Sosa, his young son and Sosa’s friend Fernando Benitez for an interview about not being able to witness the singular talent who might be the greatest player of all time. Accidental­ly, I broke the news to Sosa.

“Messi’s not playing?” Sosa responded with shock.

Oops.

“No, it’s OK if Messi doesn’t play today. But I like to see (Luis) Suárez and Jordi Alba and (Sergio) Busquets,” Benitez said an hour before the match before discoverin­g that the majority of Inter Miami’s “Fantastic Four” would not be in the starting lineup either.

Welp.

Sosa said he paid US$800 for the three tickets. Santiago Haag, a native Argentine with his two sons in full black Inter Miami kits, told me he dropped about a thousand bucks after taxes and fees. His boys Andres and Leo — who are not named after Lionel Andrés Messi — seemed content with their pre-game treats. Their tongues turning blue from ice cream and clearly unbothered the man whose No. 10 jerseys they were wearing was nowhere to be found. But Haag tried masking his frustratio­n with resignatio­n.

“It is what it is,” said Haag, who has never witnessed Messi play in person.

Haag doesn’t blame the 36-yearold for not showing up. Keeping Messi healthy is understand­able. The steep ticket prices, however, are not.

“He’s a little older now, so I get it that they need to take care of his legs. I don’t think that it’s about Messi. I’m more disappoint­ed with the MLS — they should put a cap on the prices,” Haag said. “Maybe you see him, maybe you don’t, but this whole jacking up of the price ... at the end of the day, they’re trying to make a buck, and it’s not about growing the game.”

This might be the worst hazard attached with being a sports fan. The one that should have come with a warning during our childhoods before any of us could dive headfirst into this lifestyle. There’s nothing quite like witnessing sports greatness in person, and that experience can be ours for the right price. However, it’s a gift, never a right.

Last month, Messi was dealing with a different injury, so he sat out an exhibition match in Hong Kong. His absence caused an internatio­nal incident. Fans at the match reportedly booed and chanted “Refund!” A government official wrote on X that “Hong Kong people hate Messi ... for the deliberate and calculated snub to Hong Kong” and later claimed — without evidence — Messi must have been following a “political directive” not to engage with fans. And the Global Times, a newspaper controlled by the government, editoriali­zed how Messi’s snub granted Western media the opportunit­y to “smear” Hong Kong.

I highly doubt any of our D.C. Council members will rage-post about Messi’s absence. And if Messi ends up playing next weekend against the New York Red Bulls — as he did three days after the Hong Kong no-show when he stepped on the field in Japan — chances are he won’t have to post another awkward video to explain to fans why he missed the United match.

No. No one dressed like a flamingo at Audi Field appeared to be ready to revolt Saturday. There were no audible boos when Inter Miami starters took the field without Messi or Suárez or Alba. Only cheers when Suárez did enter the match in the 62nd minute.

He’s a little older now, so I get it that they need to take care of his legs.” Messi fan Santiago Haag

The fans missed out on Messi, but they got a pretty good consolatio­n prize — seeing Suárez score a goal. Suárez, 37, may be past his prime, but he used to be one of the best strikers in the world, and he helped lead Inter Miami to the 3-1 win.

There’s an icky feeling in expecting — no, demanding — our sports heroes to show up and entertain us like windup toys. Still, this is the reality in which Messi lives. Since soccer is the world’s game, and he is its brightest star, Messi finds himself in the middle of representi­ng many things to so many people, nations and federation­s.

He is the stimulus igniting America’s top men’s profession­al soccer league. Also, the one-man regime launderer for the Saudis. He’s either the pro-Palestinia­n advocate or pro-Israel supporter, depending on the leaning of the amateur Photoshop artist who manipulate­s and alters his photos. He is public enemy No. 1 (and possibly Nos. 2, 3 and 4) to Chinese state media.

And in D.C., he was missing. Somehow, however, the world still kept spinning.

 ?? TIM NWACHUKWU/GETTY IMAGES ?? A fan carries a stuffed doll of Lionel Messi into the Saturday’s game between Inter Miami and D.C. United. Unfortunat­ely for fans, Messi was unable to play because of an injury.
TIM NWACHUKWU/GETTY IMAGES A fan carries a stuffed doll of Lionel Messi into the Saturday’s game between Inter Miami and D.C. United. Unfortunat­ely for fans, Messi was unable to play because of an injury.

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