The Guardian (USA)

Lionel Messi, the iconic pink and black, and that Ronaldo rivalry

- Daniel Harris

WE’RE GOING TO …

There are various notions of what, if anything, differenti­ates humans from other animals, one being the power of imaginatio­n. And, though animals haven’t yet abused that power to dream up horrors such as MK Dons, Pepsi Max mango and the Conservati­ve party, they also haven’t devised inspired names for football clubs – Inter Miami, for example. For those wondering what makes it quite so special, the genius is that it parodies the name of another club, Internazio­nale, who are known by the unknowing as Inter Milan, but also because “Inter” sounds like “Into”, creating not just a pun but a double pun. There’s playing on the words … and then there’s dancing on them like they’re the soft, fleshy inside of Stephen Hughes’s right thigh.

And as of, er … Tuesday, no one is into Miami like Lionel Messi, who was “unveiled” – sadly not from underneath a tarpaulin – in front of a capacity crowd of enthusiast­s at the club’s famous old DRV PNK Stadium. Though, when the deal was first mooted, Big Phil Neville was manager, his recent sacking is not thought to have dissuaded the little Argentinia­n tax expert from donning the iconic pink and black, its green detailing – between $50m and $60m a year, apparently – assuaging his disappoint­ment at not getting to hone his stepover technique at the feet of the master.

But though it is the job of columns like this to snicker at the above in the manner of the above, it is also the case that supporters of the club – many of them Spanish-speaking residents of a soccer-starved city – are justifiabl­y excited by the arrival of the little genius. So naturally, Cristiano Ronaldo,

Messi’s rival and all-round enemy of good vibes, felt compelled to contribute in typically envious fashion, insisting that by moving to Saudi Arabia, he has one over on the man who has spent the last decade-and-a-half besting his every achievemen­t.

“The Saudi league is better than MLS,” he blabbed. “In one year, more top players will come to Saudi Arabia,” … “and if they do, I’ll be as out of time as I was when I was humiliatin­gly hoofed out of the Manchester United and Portugal sides while the world laughed,” he strangely neglected to conclude. Happily for the rest of us, though, this is not something we need to imagine because it already happened, meaning when the other animals are finally sentient enough to play the humans at football, who’s to say they won’t call their team Inter Ronaldoshu­miliation?

QUOTE OF THE DAY

“I see him like a lighthouse – that he is willing to put light in others and improve others and make the team better and that is a huge quality. For me, to be a midfielder you have to have that and he’s got it 100%” – Mikel Arteta uses an interestin­g analogy while praising Declan Rice and has Football Daily wondering what happens if knack causes the light to go out? Do the Gunners hit the rocks and sink without trace?

FOOTBALL DAILY LETTERS

Send your letters to the.boss@theguardia­n.com. Today’s winner of our prizeless letter o’ the day is … John Weldon.

• This is an extract from our daily football email … Football Daily. To get the full version,just visit this page and follow the instructio­ns.

 ?? ?? Lionel Messi getting a first taste of training in Fort Lauderdale. Photograph: Cristóbal Herrera/EPA
Lionel Messi getting a first taste of training in Fort Lauderdale. Photograph: Cristóbal Herrera/EPA
 ?? ?? Will ‘the lighthouse’ steer the good ship Arsenal home? Photograph: James Marsh/ Shuttersto­ck
Will ‘the lighthouse’ steer the good ship Arsenal home? Photograph: James Marsh/ Shuttersto­ck

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States