News

The new humiliation of Lionel Messi to Cristiano Ronaldo that goes viral throughout the United States

The audience data for Leo's debut at Inter Miami was released.

By William Estrella

The audience data for Leo's debut at Inter Miami was released.
The audience data for Leo's debut at Inter Miami was released.

Three days have passed since Lionel Messi's official debut with Inter Miami, but the repercussions continue to amaze everyone. The top winner of the Ballon d'Or (7) had a dream debut worthy of a Hollywood movie: he entered the second half and converted a great free-kick goal at 94 minutes after executing a free kick that he himself generated. Soccer fans were waiting for the first performance of the '10' dressed in pink and now the audience data was released.

 

The first meeting of the captain of the Argentine National Team was tuned in by 12.5 million viewers. This made it the most watched soccer match in the United States in history, all this without mentioning that Leo started as a substitute and without mentioning the large number of fans who watched it through pirate pages for not having the Apple TV subscription.

For dimension, the 2022 NBA Finals between the Golden State Warriors and the Boston Celtics had a television audience of 12.4 million. Thus, it was demonstrated that Messi continues to move large masses despite his decision to have gone to the MLS, something that Cristiano Ronaldo did not achieve when he signed for Al-Nassr.

Messi's presentation was seen more than Cristiano Ronaldo's

Another of the milestones that Lionel achieved in terms of viewers was in his presentation with Inter Miami. That event, in which they also announced Sergio Busquets, had 3.5 billion views, thus exceeding the 3 billion that Cristiano had hoarded when he did the same in Al-Nassr.

Topics


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