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FC BARCELONA

"Barcelona are in stronger position" than Messi, says lawyer

After consulting all the available evidence thus far, a Spanish sport lawyer suggests that the club may still have a big say on Lionel Messi's future.

Update:
(FILES) In this handout picture taken and released on May 19, 2014 by FC Barcelona Barcelona's Lionel Messi (L) shakes hands with FC Barcelona's president Josep Maria Bartomeu after signing his new contract with the Catalan club at the Camp Nou
MIGUEL RUIZAFP

Lionel Messi's shock announcement that he wants to leave Barcelona looks like the opening salvo in negotiations around the fine detail of his contract and the all-important get-out clause, a Spanish sports lawyer said on Wednesday.

Barcelona in ‘stronger position’ than Messi

The 33-year-old Argentine has declared his wish to leave the club whose academy he joined at the age of 13, beginning a glittering career which has soured over the past 12 months under the management of president Josep Maria Bartomeu. Messi's lawyers have referred to a clause in the four-year contract he signed in 2017 which would have allowed him to leave the club for free, but only if he requested it by June 10. They will argue that that date - nominally the end of the season - is now irrelevant after the coronavirus delays that led to the season's extension and the team playing deep into August. The club will argue that the May date is the relevant one and so his departure now would trigger a monster 700 million euros ($827 million) release payment from any interested club.

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'I think Barcelona is in a stronger position but Messi has certainly showed the weakness Barcelona might have,' sports and business lawyer Santiago Nebot, who has acted as general counsel for Spanish soccer players' union AFE, told Reuters. 'If he says to Barcelona I want to go, give me a free transfer and Barcelona says no, there is absolutely nothing he can do,' said Nebot, who has not seen Messi's contract and based his assessment on media reports.

'He is showing this weapon, saying I want to leave if you don't sit down and negotiate, I will try to use this clause, saying that it extends over time and that you could interpret it as being applicable now. 'Because of Covid, what they need to assess as well as the date is the intention of the parties,' he added. 'Why June 10? Because June 10 is 10 days after the last match or because it is 20 days before the transfer window opens on July 1?'.

Earlier on Wednesday, Barcelona's technical secretary Ramon Planes said 'our idea at the club is still to build a new winning cycle around the best player in the world...we are working internally to convince Leo'.

Nebot agreed. 'They need to negotiate so that he stays, convince him to stay this year and wait for a really good season, bring him a good team and lots of victories so that he wants to finish his career at Barcelona,' he said. 'I think that is their plan.'