The Standard (Zimbabwe)

Will the world's greatest footballer move to Saudi Arabia?

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PARIS Lionel Messi is a name that transcends football. The Argentine is a household name all around the world after a fairytale career that peaked with last year's World Cup triumph.

So when someone like Messi transfers between clubs, it's never likely to be a quiet, straightfo­rward switch.

It looks like the 35-year-old will be one the move again this summer and his likely destinatio­n is causing plenty of controvers­y.

Even though Messi has the option of an extra year at his current club Paris Saint-Germain [PSG], he is set to leave after just two seasons with the French champions.

The club where he made his name, Barcelona, are desperate to re-sign the player they let go in 2021, but they are crippled by nancial problems and simply cannot a ord him.

Messi's stunning wife Antonela Roccuzzo has been by his side for every one of his major footballin­g triumphs - but moving to Saudi Arabia could prove a step too far

There has been interest from Inter Miami, a club in the North American Major League Soccer [MLS] but the most likely destinatio­n is cash-rich Saudi Arabia and the Riyadh-based Al-Hilal team.

When Messi lifted the glistening World Cup trophy into the night sky of Qatar back in December, after Argentina beat France on penalties after a thrilling 3-3 draw, it was the completion of a life's work.

Messi had now won everything his heart desired with the World Cup being the nal piece of the puzzle.

Despite the fact he only has a few years left in his playing career, that triumph only served to raise the amount of money clubs must pay to sign him.

It's why this week saw reports out of France that Al-Hilal are o ering him a contract worth an eye-watering £522million to come and play in Saudi Arabia.

A source told the AFP news agency it was a 'done deal' that Messi would sign a two-year contract with the option of a third. If he sees that out, he will be 38.

Given he currently earns £103.4mper-season at PSG, that represents a mind-blowing nal payday in his career.

Messi's father, Jorge, quickly shut down the AFP report and insisted no decision has yet been made about his son's next move.

But it's obvious the way the wind is blowing. The money on the table, Messi's existing ties to Saudi Arabia, and the lack of clubs elsewhere who could a ord him means all roads lead to Riyadh.

It raises the intriguing scenario of Messi playing at a rival club in the same league and the same city as Cristiano Ronaldo next season.

The pair have spent most of their careers locked in a competitio­n who can score the most goals, win the most trophies, break the most records?

Now Messi could be with Al-Hilal and Ronaldo could play for Al-Nassr, who are their local rivals. They were last in direct competitio­n when Messi was at Barcelona and Ronaldo at Real Madrid in Spain at the peak of their powers.

Ronaldo earns £175m-a-year to play for Al-Nassr, so Messi would be on more money, not that either is exactly cash-strapped.

It would make Messi the world's highest-paid athlete, moving back above Ronaldo as well as NBA stars such as Lebron James and Steph Curry.

The Portuguese star, 38, is attempting to lead Al-Nassr to the Saudi Pro League title having signed for the club after his acrimoniou­s departure from Manchester United

But how did it come to this point for Messi?

His rst season at PSG was a little slow by his standards but the current campaign has been very productive Messi has scored 20 times and made 19 goals for team-mates.

PSG, who are bankrolled by a branch of Qatar's sovereign wealth fund, are on course to win the league title but Messi's hopes of winning the Champions League, the top European prize, ended with defeat to Germans Bayern Munich.

Barcelona have been in contact with Messi's camp over what would be a romantic return to a club and a city that is very close to his heart.

Messi would prefer to stay in Europe, where he can potentiall­y win more prestigiou­s honours, but the Spanish club are in enormous debt and will be again squeezed by the Spanish league's nancial rules this summer.

In order to register new players or even get existing ones onto new contracts, Barcelona must make savings of £175m, so their chances of a ording Messi are slim.

Regardless of his a ection for the club, Messi isn't going to play for nothing.

Meanwhile, Saudi Arabia views the prospect of him playing in their league as a 'unique opportunit­y which is impossible to pass up' and the authoritie­s there - both football and in government - have been preparing the groundwork for months.

But there could be one snag. The French newspaper L'Equipe reported last week that Messi's wife Antonela is wary of moving the couple's three young sons - Thiago, 10, Mateo, 7, and Ciro, 5 - to Saudi. L'Equipe said she 'can't imagine' family life in the Kingdom.

Antonela - who is the cousin of one of Messi's childhood friends and team-mates, Lucas Scagilia, and hails from the same Argentine city of Rosario - was his childhood sweetheart.

Their relationsh­ip solicited in the late 2000s, when she gave up postgradua­te studies in dentistry to join Messi in Barcelona.

Antonela, who boasts more than 37 million Instagram followers, is an active philanthro­pist and owns a children's fashion label in Argentina, will surely have a say in the move.

There has already been a backlash from fans who adore Messi after the news of the Saudi deal emerged.

Some believe it to be a disappoint­ing end to an illustriou­s career when Messi can clearly still perform in Europe's top leagues.

Others have a strong distaste of Saudi Arabia's so-called 'sportswash­ing' project to cover up its shoddy record on human rights.

They have already split the world of golf by launching the LIV tour, which enticed some of the best players with enormous sums of prize money.

High-pro le boxing such as the Anthony Joshua vs Oleksandr Usyk ght was staged in Jeddah in 2022.

And in football, the Saudi Public Investment Fund (PIF) took a controllin­g 80 per cent stake in Premier League club Newcastle United in a £300m takeover back in 2021.

The buy-out was sanctioned after the Premier League said it received 'legally binding assurances' the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia itself would not control Newcastle.

Their next ambition is to host the 2030 football World Cup, becoming the second country in the Middle East after Qatar last year.

Messi and Ronaldo could be drafted in as ambassador­s during the bid process.

It remains to be seen if Riyadh is big enough for the two rivals. - Daily Mail

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