Messi looking forward eagerly to La Liga restart
Barcelona and Argentina captain Lionel Messi said he was eager to start playing again but thought La Liga games behind closed doors would feel “weird”. Messi, who after a few weeks confined like the rest of Spain by the coronavirus pandemic, is training with Barca again ahead of a planned resumption of La Liga behind closed doors on the weekend on June 12. “We cannot think about what we are leaving behind this year. It is better to think about the future,” said Messi on the website of sports brand Adidas. “Like going back to day-to-day training, seeing your teammates, playing your first few games. No doubt it will be strange at first, but I am looking forward to competing again!
He said playing without fans “implies a series of challenges. The preparation at squad level is the same as for any other match, but it is true that individually you have to train and get mentally prepared to play without people because it is very weird.” “It will be like starting over,” he said. “Technically it will be the same season, but I think all teams and players will experience it differently.”
Messi was due to lead Argentina this summer in the Copa America, where his country are joint hosts with Colombia, but in March, the competition was postponed to
June and July next year. “Postponing the Copa America was a huge disappointment, but of course it was reasonable and most logical,” Messi said. “The Copa was going to be a big event for me this year and I was looking forward to playing in it again,” he said. “It was hard when I heard about the postponement, but I understood it perfectly,” he said.
The Spanish Football Federation (RFEF) won a legal judgement yesterday handing it control over league scheduling and then said it would allow La Liga to play every day when this season resumes. The two Spanish football bodies have been battling since last summer after the league decided to add games on Mondays and Fridays for this season.
The RFEF objected, saying it was standing up for fans who would have trouble going to games on those nights. La Liga accused the federation of wanting a bigger cut of the increased television revenues and went to court. The two played to a draw in August, when a court allowed the league Fridays but not Mondays.
The legal replay ended on Wednesday in complete victory for the RFEF as Madrid judge Andres Sanchez handed down a ruling which potentially gives the federation the power to stop the league playing any day except Saturday and Sunday.