News

Bye Neymar and Mbappé, PSG receives the worst news and paralyzes Europe

The man from Rosario made it clear that he is still the most influential figure in football.

By William Estrella

The man from Rosario made it clear that he is still the most influential figure in football.
The man from Rosario made it clear that he is still the most influential figure in football.

In just a handful of days, Inter Miami taught PSG a lesson on how the best player in the world should be treated. Not only because of the reception that the city and the club gave to Lionel Messi, but also because of the way the managers declare every time they refer to the number '10', something very different from what Nasser Al-Khelaifi did.

The head honcho from Paris not only did not renew the contract for Rosario, but also did not organize a commensurate tribute after winning the Qatar 2022 World Cup (they barely gave him a trophy in training). In addition, at the end of Leo's stage in France, the Parisian president sanctioned him excessively for a business trip to Saudi Arabia, something that ended up decanting the final departure of the captain of the Argentine National Team.

Now, in MLS, Messi made it clear that he is still the most important figure in soccer worldwide even though PSG wanted to ignore him and he demonstrated it with the 3.5 billion viewers that he captured during his presentation at Inter Miami. This franchise not only took the top winner of the Ballon d'Or (7), but also began to generate more revenue than ever.

The fortune that PSG loses after letting Messi out

As expected, interest in Ligue 1 fell sharply now that Lionel left and up to six sponsors left the club with the Rosario. In addition, there was a downward renegotiation of television rights and there was a 10% drop in sales of T-shirts.


William Estrella

William Estrella

I'm a Mexican sports journalist with more than 8 years of experience, especially in digital media. I cover breaking news and investigative articles on current soccer events worldwide. I currently write for El Futbolero USA. Previously, I worked as a radio announcer in my country, covering Mexican soccer.

More news