The Sun (Malaysia)

Messi wary of league of his own

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WHITHER Lionel Messi? Sometimes, even being the greatest may not be enough. The tales of Muhammad Ali and Tiger Woods are sobering testimony to that.

It’s probably how the little maestro is feeling right now as he contemplat­es an unexpected­ly troubled twilight to his stellar career. Physically he is fine and no one foresees the kind of trauma and tragedy that afflicted the aforementi­oned duo.

But under-performing teammates and pig-headed politician­s are threatenin­g to do what a generation of defenders has failed to accomplish: stop him in his gilded tracks.

As all the world knows, Argentina have to beat Ecuador in Quito (Wednesday 7.30am in Malaysia) to be sure of at least a playoff for what will be Messi’s last realistic shot at the supreme prize in football.

A final throw of the World Cup dice with his country is one thing; just where he is going to be playing club football for the next few years is quite another.

The current political shenanigan­s over Catalonian independen­ce have thrown a sizable spanner into the works. The previously unthinkabl­e prospect of Barcelona being kicked out of La Liga looms large.

But first things first, and as the 30-year-old takes a deep breath of all-too-rarified air at 2,850m in the Andes, he will know that even against a side that can’t qualify, tomorrow’s decider will be no walk in the park.

Always psychologi­cally fragile, the Argentines have talked themselves out of previous high-altitude encounters – most notably in Bolivia where they lost 6-1 in 2009 with a team boasting Messi, Carlos Tevez, Javier Mascherano and Javier Zanetti.

That debacle was at the even higher 3,600m of La Paz under the stewardshi­p of Diego Maradona. It remains a matter of debate whether the cause was a shortage of breath or an excess of hot air!

But in the same venue during a 1-1 draw in 2013, Messi and Angel di Maria suffered enough to require oxygen on the field. Earlier this year, with Messi suspended, they were beaten again.

Argentina have not won in Quito since 2001 and although they play down the significan­ce of the venue, no one can be confident the demons of high altitude have been conquered.

What will alarm Messi just as much is that recent performanc­es at sea level have been just as queasily unconvinci­ng. They have not won for four qualifying games in which they have managed a solitary goal – and that was an own goal - in a home draw with bottom team Venezuela.

This from a side that, besides Messi, boasts Di Maria, Gonzalo Higuain, Paolo Dybala, Sergio Aguero and Mauro Icardi – a combined £300m of firepower in any transfer market.

At their wit’s end to find a winning formula, Argentina have tried everything including three different managers during the campaign, changing venues and dropping the undroppabl­e. All to no avail.

No one seems to care as much as Messi who, if anything, took too much upon himself in the last match against Peru. Yes, they were unlucky, they hit the woodwork, the Peru keeper played a blinder but still…

They really do need to step up tomorrow and if they do, they could still be one of the favourites to win in Russia. But even if Messi were to achieve that, the supreme accolade of greatest of all time would still elude him with many judges.

One World Cup win and one final defeat would put him level with Maradona but two behind Pele who is out on his own with three triumphs. This failure to deliver on the biggest stage is what holds him back from the ultimate acclaim.

It is incredible then that such a once-in-a-lifetime talent now has to worry about his future with his club as well as his country.

A Catalonian breakaway from Spain has long been on the cards but not in the manner the current bitter and violent circumstan­ces suggest it may happen. Passions have boiled over and no longer is it a given that Barcelona will be allowed to continue to ply their trade in La Liga.

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