Current:Home > MyMessi speaks publicly for 1st time since joining Inter Miami and says he’s happy with his choice -Achieve Wealth Network
Messi speaks publicly for 1st time since joining Inter Miami and says he’s happy with his choice
View
Date:2025-04-15 10:58:13
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP) — Fans line up outside Inter Miami’s practice facility to watch Lionel Messi’s car drive away after training sessions. Players from opposing teams wait after matches to get his signature or just a simple handshake. His No. 10 jersey is everywhere in South Florida.
For Messi, these are reminders that he made the right choice. He could have continued his acclaimed career with another stint in Barcelona, where he rose to stardom. He could have signed a lucrative deal to play for Al-Hilal in Saudi Arabia. He chose the unfamiliar — to travel stateside and play soccer in the United States, and he’s glad about it.
“From the beginning, from my arrival, it’s been an impressive welcome that we’ve received,” Messi said through an interpreter. He spoke publicly Thursday for the first time since announcing on June 7 that he’d join Inter Miami of the MLS.
“Today I can tell you that I am very happy with the decision we made,” Messi said at Miami’s DRV PNK Stadium in a room so full of reporters that some sat on the floor.
The 36-year-old said he’s still adapting to his new surroundings. His family is in a temporary place in South Florida while they search for a permanent home. His three sons will start school soon.
He’s still getting used to “hot and humid” Florida, but overall, the transition has been “much easier than expected” compared to his move from Barcelona to Paris Saint-Germain, where he played the past two years.
“Me going to Paris was neither planned nor desired,” Messi said. “I did not want to leave Barcelona, and it became difficult. But it is the opposite of what is happening to me now, thanks to God.”
Since Messi’s announcement, Inter Miami hired former Barcelona and Argentina national team coach Gerardo “Tata” Martino and signed former Barcelona captain Sergio Busquets and veteran defender Jordi Alba.
The club’s rise since has been meteoric.
Messi has scored nine goals in six matches with his new club, which is in last place in the MLS Eastern Conference with a record of 5-14-3. Now on a six-match winning streak, Inter Miami will compete for its first title Saturday against Nashville in the Leagues Cup final.
“Ever since the competition started, we knew that we would be starting from scratch because there was a new coach with the team and other new players,” Messi said. “From the very beginning, we’ve done very well thanks to all the new teammates that are here. This was a nice opportunity to start to change and to set hard goals for us, but goals that we were prepared to achieve.”
Miami defeated Philadelphia — a top-three team in the Eastern Conference — in the semifinal round on Tuesday. Messi ripped a shot from 30 yards past three Philadelphia defenders in the 20th minute of the 4-1 victory.
In his debut on July 21, the seven-time Ballon d’Or winner sent a free kick into the upper left corner of the net in the 94th minute to give Inter Miami a 2-1 win over Mexican club Cruz Azul in the Leagues Cup opener.
He followed it with a two-goal performance in another Leagues Cup game against Atlanta a few days later.
In his first road game, a Leagues Cup elimination match against FC Dallas, Messi’s free kick again snuck past the goalkeeper into the upper corner of the net for a tying tally that led to a victory on penalty kicks.
“He’s at the stage of his career where he’s done everything that any soccer player can do in a sport as one of the greatest players, if not the greatest player to ever play the game,” Inter Miami co-owner David Beckham said last month. “So he’s still hungry. I’ve seen him on the training pitch. I know he’s still hungry.”
Following the path of some of the game’s biggest names who have come to the U.S. toward the end of their careers — Pelé, Franz Beckenbauer, Thierry Henry and Beckham himself — Messi has certainly vaulted American soccer onto a global stage.
He’s a four-time Champions League winner with 10 La Liga titles. His 129 goals in the top club competition are second to Cristiano Ronaldo’s 140.
More than 17 years in and just a few months removed from hoisting a World Cup, Messi appears to still be at the pinnacle of his soccer powers. But for him, this stage of his career isn’t about being the sport’s ambassador in the U.S. or even accumulating more individual accolades.
“I simply came here to play and keep enjoying football,” he said.
___
AP soccer: https://apnews.com/hub/soccer
veryGood! (48285)
Related
- The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
- Robert De Niro's former assistant awarded $1.2 million in gender discrimination lawsuit
- Review: 'Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes' is the best 'Hunger Games' movie of them all
- Oakland A’s fans are sending MLB owners ‘Stay In Oakland’ boxes as Las Vegas vote nears
- Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
- Liberation Pavilion seeks to serve as a reminder of the horrors of WWII and the Holocaust
- Taylor Swift's full Eras Tour setlist in South America: All 45 songs
- Tuohy family paid Michael Oher $138,000 from proceeds of 'The Blind Side' movie, filing shows
- Intellectuals vs. The Internet
- Ransomware attack on China’s biggest bank disrupts Treasury market trades, reports say
Ranking
- Residents worried after ceiling cracks appear following reroofing works at Jalan Tenaga HDB blocks
- NASA, SpaceX launch: Watch live as Falcon 9 rocket lifts off to ISS from Florida
- 2023 Veterans Day deals: Free meals and discounts at more than 70 restaurants, businesses
- Formatting citations? Here's how to create a hanging indent, normal indent on Google Docs
- The Louvre will be renovated and the 'Mona Lisa' will have her own room
- 2023 Veterans Day deals: Free meals and discounts at more than 70 restaurants, businesses
- When do babies start crawling? There's no hard and fast rule but here's when to be worried.
- Jury finds man not guilty of assaulting woman at U.S. research station in Antarctica
Recommendation
US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
Abortion providers seek to broaden access to the procedure in Indiana
AP Week in Pictures: North America
The Great Grift: COVID-19 fraudster used stolen relief aid to purchase a private island in Florida
DeepSeek: Did a little known Chinese startup cause a 'Sputnik moment' for AI?
Arkansas man receives the world's first whole eye transplant plus a new face
Congress no closer to funding government before next week's shutdown deadline
Portugal’s president dissolves parliament and calls an early election after prime minister quit