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Barcelona was forced to let Argentina superstar Lionel Messi leave the club because his wage demands could have jeopardised its financial situation and its future, President Joan Laporta said on Friday.
The club and Messi, 34, had both wanted to sign a new contract but the Argentineโs deal would have taken salaries to 110% of the clubโs earnings, a financially risky move given the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, Laporta said.
โThe club is above everything โ even above the best player in the world,โ Laporta told a news conference.
โWe reached agreement but couldnโt formalise it, because of the clubโs economic situation, which means we canโt register the player due to salary limits,โ he said.
Without Messiโs wages, salaries would account for 95% of Barcelonaโs income, he said.
Messi had wanted to sign a new contract at Barcelona on reduced terms but the club was unable to come up with an arrangement that also complied with the financial rules of Spainโs La Liga competition.
Messiโs last contract, signed in 2017, was the most lucrative in world sport according to a January report in newspaper El Mundo. Forbes has listed him as the athlete with the worldโs second-highest earnings in 2021, at $130 million.
โTo suddenly end like this when you thought he was already contracted againโฆ Itโs really sad, really really sad,โ said 36-year-old student and Barca fan Jose Rivero earlier, standing on the street in the Catalan capital.
Even fans of arch-rivals Real Madrid were sorry to see Messi leave. โIโm a Real Madrid fan but I consider Messi one of the best, if not the best player of all time,โ said newsstand owner Roberto, 63, at his kiosk in the Spanish capital.
Laporta said the club had lined up two new deals with Messi, firstly a two-year deal made payable over five years, and then a separate five-year deal, but could not get either deal done because of La Ligaโs Financial Fair Play (FFP) rules.
Messiโs father and agent Jorge Messi did not reply to Reutersโ requests for comment.
Laporta said that they would have been able to get Messiโs new deal over the line if they had agreed to La Ligaโs proposed 2.7 billion euro injection from CVC, adding however that he was not willing to gamble on that for the short-term gain.
โIn order to meet FFP, Barca had to agree to an operation, essentially re-mortgaging the club, which would affect us for the next 50 years in terms of TV rights, and I had to make the decision,โ he said.
La Liga president Javier Tebas wrote on Twitter however that the CVC deal would not mortgage Barcaโs TV rights for 50 years. โWhat it does is ensure they are more valuable for all clubs โฆ Or so you understood it a few hours ago,โ he wrote.
Laporta said the club considered CVCโs investment well below what 10% of La Liga was worth.
โWe wonโt make short-term decisions that could harm us in the long run,โ Laporta said.
WAGE BILL WORRIES
Salaries should ideally account for 65%-70% of the clubโs income, โso thereโs still a lot of work to be done,โ Laporta said.
โLast season will end with double the losses that we predicted โ over 400 million (euros),โ he said.
Messi has been at the club for all of his playing career, but Barcelona announced on Thursday that the six-time Ballon dโOr winner would leave after 18 years.
Barcaโs all-time top scorer and appearance maker technically ended his 21-year association with the club at the end of June and is currently a free agent after his previous contract expired.
Messi, who joined Barcelona aged 13, has helped the club claim 10 league titles, four Champions Leagues and three Club World Cups during a glittering career.
The Argentineโs next move remains unclear and for now he remains without a club ahead of the 2021-2022 season.
He has long been linked with a move to Manchester City, where he would be reunited with his former Barcelona boss Pep Guardiola or Franceโs Paris St Germain.
Franceโs Le Parisien paper reported on its website on Friday that the directors of PSG were working on a financial plan for any possible move for Messi.
Still, some observers believe that the announcement of Messiโs departure is actually Barca boldly calling La Ligaโs bluff over its financial rules.
Laporta said that the coronavirus-impacted 2020-21 seasonโs financial losses would be double what had been expected.
โWe need to move on. We wonโt just try to meet FFP criteria by putting the club at risk for the next 50 years,โ he told reporters.
The Barca chief lamented the financial situation that he had inherited from former club president Josep Maria Bartomeu, describing it as โfar, far worseโ than anticipated.
โI donโt want to go on and on about the situation we inherited, and the awful decisions that were made in the past. We have gone from bad to worse,โ he said.
REUTERS