Current:Home > ContactLionel Messi and Inter Miami are in Saudi Arabia to continue their around-the-world preseason tour -WealthMindset Learning
Lionel Messi and Inter Miami are in Saudi Arabia to continue their around-the-world preseason tour
View
Date:2025-04-17 19:09:18
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP) — Inter Miami played six preseason matches last season. Most were behind closed doors with few people watching, all took place in Florida and the biggest news probably came when some fans prematurely set off fireworks and got ejected from the exhibition-season opener.
It’s wildly different this season.
Such is life in Lionel Messi’s world.
The soccer icon and Inter Miami have a two-game tour of Saudi Arabia this week, the first match on Monday against Al-Hilal and the second match coming Thursday against Al Nassr — one where Messi may share the pitch again with longtime rival and fellow great Cristiano Ronaldo, assuming the Portugal star has recovered enough from a calf injury to play.
The club already has played two exhibitions this year — one in El Salvador, one at Dallas’ Cotton Bowl — and has matches in Hong Kong and Japan still to come after the Saudi swing is complete. It’s basically an around-the-world, big-crowd, big-money, bright-spotlight batch of preseason games for Inter Miami, which instantly became a global brand when Messi announced last summer that he was joining the Major League Soccer club.
“It’s incredible,” said DeAndre Yedlin, the Inter Miami defender who was captain until Messi arrived. “Obviously, it’s not just one guy, but I think most of the focus is on Leo. So, it shows just kind of the influence that he’s had on the game and has had on the game. People want to know what he’s doing. People want to know anything that he’s involved with, what’s going on. It’s great for the league. It’s great for us.”
Inter Miami is in Saudi Arabia because of Messi, plain and simple. There is no bigger name in the game than the eight-time Ballon d’Or winner and captain of reigning World Cup champion Argentina, and Messi — who had an offer to play in Saudi Arabia, which he turned down to join MLS and come to Inter Miami — is a Saudi ambassador to help promote tourism.
He was even suspended once by one of his former clubs, Paris Saint-Germain. for making an unauthorized trip to the country. But Inter Miami not only understands the value of having Messi, it welcomed this massive preseason stretch in advance of an MLS season that starts Feb. 21.
“Having the possibility of seeing Messi up close in this circumstance is really very valuable,” Inter Miami coach Gerardo “Tata” Martino said in Spanish last week before the team departed on its 13 1/2-hour charter flight to Riyadh. “You have to see how many times these people are going to have this possibility.”
The financial benefit of Inter Miami and Messi playing in Saudi Arabia hasn’t been revealed. It’s reasonable to think it’s a big number, enough to help the MLS club offset at least some of Messi’s salary — he’s on a 2 1/2-year contract that will pay him around $150 million — and what the team spent to land the likes of Sergio Busquets, Jordi Alba and Luis Suarez to play with him.
The Saudis have made clear that they’ll spend big for what they want; some have used the term “sportswashing " when it comes to how the kingdom has spent billions bankrolling LIV Golf and attracting Formula One, boxing, horse racing, even BMX racing and professional wrestling. Much of this comes with great criticism. Messi’s fame hasn’t taken a hit from his association with the Saudis. Such is his power.
“What I love about Saudi,” Messi says in a marketing campaign for the country, “is that I always discover what I never expected.”
The trip itself speaks to how different everything for Inter Miami has become. The club faced Florida International University with no fans allowed in one of its preseason matches last season; this season, it’s facing Ronaldo with the soccer world watching for a result that won’t even count. The team had less than 1 million followers on Instagram; it has 16 million now, many of them no doubt driven there by the half-a-billion followers Messi has on that site.
An around-the-world trip for a whole new world makes sense.
“It’s a bit different and I think the upside to that is we get to experience some different teams, different kind of competition,” Inter Miami goalkeeper Drake Callender said Sunday. “We’re looking at it as a challenge in a way to kind of develop as a team, exposing ourselves to different teams, different leagues. So, I think for us it’s still new, but I think everybody has a good feeling around it.”
___
AP soccer: https://apnews.com/hub/soccer
veryGood! (8)
Related
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- U.S. winter outlook: Wetter South, warmer North and more potential climate extremes, NOAA says
- UAW chief to say whether auto strikes will grow from the 34,000 workers now on picket lines
- Israeli writer Etgar Keret has only drafted short notes since the war. Here's one
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- Israel pounds Gaza, evacuates town near Lebanon ahead of expected ground offensive against Hamas
- Where is Tropical Storm Tammy heading? This controversial graphic has answers.
- U.S., Israel say evidence shows Gaza militants responsible for deadly hospital blast
- A White House order claims to end 'censorship.' What does that mean?
- Hurricane Norma heads for Mexico’s Los Cabos resorts, as Tammy becomes hurricane in the Atlantic
Ranking
- Small twin
- Teen Mom's Kailyn Lowry Ate Her Placenta—But Here's Why It's Not Always a Good Idea
- Biden, others, welcome the release of an American mother and daughter held hostage by Hamas
- Taylor Swift reacts to Sabrina Carpenter's cover of 'I Knew You Were Trouble'
- Intel's stock did something it hasn't done since 2022
- High mortgage rates push home sales decline, tracking to hit Great Recession levels
- University of Georgia student dies after falling 90 feet while mountain climbing
- Lawmakers Want Answers on Damage and Costs Linked to Idled ‘Zombie’ Coal Mines
Recommendation
Travis Hunter, the 2
Costco hotdogs, rotisserie chicken, self-checkout: What changed under exiting CEO Jelinek
Youth football team suspended after parent allegedly shoots coach in front of kids
For author Haruki Murakami, reading fiction helps us ‘see through lies’ in a world divided by walls
How to watch new prequel series 'Dexter: Original Sin': Premiere date, cast, streaming
Israeli reservists in US leave behind proud, worried families
Juveniles charged with dousing acid on playground slides that injured 4 children
New York woman comes forward to claim $12 million prize from a 1991 jackpot, largest in state history