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The Messi Effect meets the Club World Cup: Inter Miami's legend scores game-winning goal to upset Porto

The Messi Effect meets the Club World Cup: Inter Miami's legend scores game-winning goal to upset Porto

Yahoo7 hours ago

Lionel Messi scored his first goal of the 2025 Club World Cup, a stunning free kick that proved to be the difference against Porto. (Photo by Robbie Jay Barratt - AMA/Getty Images)
ATLANTA — For more than 20 years, one rule has governed international soccer: the more Messi, the better. Whether you're fighting for eyeballs, relevance or legitimacy, having Leo Messi's godlike stature — and 500 million Instagram followers — in your corner solves a whole lot of problems.
So it wasn't a real surprise to anyone paying attention that FIFA turned to Messi as a way of kickstarting interest in the 2025 Club World Cup. Last October, FIFA announced that Messi's Inter Miami club would host the Club World Cup's inaugural match, despite not qualifying under any established criteria. FIFA's reasoning was obvious, cynical and — judging by the 60,000-plus in attendance at Saturday's CWC debut — highly profitable.
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The real test of Messi's drawing power came five days later, on a rainy Thursday afternoon in Atlanta. Inter Miami faced a favored FC Porto in the second match of their group stage, jumped out to a 2-1 lead, and hung on through a furious finish, plus seven long minutes of stoppage time, to leave Atlanta with an impressive, crucial 2-1 victory.
Porto struck first, thanks to a penalty against Miami's Noah Allen that gave Samu Aghehowa a penalty kick he drove home. That 1-0 lead held up through the first half, with FC Porto keeping the older Miami squad in check.
'In the second half we changed and said, let's compete, let's try to play our game,' Messi told DAZN in Spanish after the match. 'We know we were the underdogs today, but we have our weapons.'
Just two minutes into the second half, Inter Miami's Telasco Segovia scored the equalizer on a brilliant cross from Marcelo Weigandt:
And then came one of those Messi moments that make soccer so compelling and Messi himself so magnetic. In the 58th minute, Messi fired a free kick that seemed piloted by a drone, well outside the reach of Porto goalkeeper Claudio Ramos:
Those are the moments why Messi's armada watches, the moments soccer fans admire, the moments FIFA craves. Messi's kick might be the moment so far of the still-young tournament — admittedly, a low bar to clear — and if this tournament can harness more of the jolt that Messi's goal sent through the crowd, the Club World Cup will be on a much more solid foundation.
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'We already know the player he is,' Inter Miami winger Fafá Picault said of Messi afterward. 'We all do our best to make sure that we can support him in the best way and we all have to do our part as well. He's a great leader and an amazing player obviously, like we all know, and it's great that he's on our side.'
'He's the player who guides us in how to compete,' Inter Miami coach Javier Mascherano said in Spanish after the match. 'His hunger, his resilience, his desire to continue competing at any level, he guides us, he shows us where we need to go.'
Thursday's attendance still didn't approach anything near sellout levels, though the Mercedes-Benz Stadium seats were markedly more full than Monday's echoing, sparse Chelsea-LAFC match. Some of the same rationales applied for this match: high ticket prices plus a 3 p.m. weekday kickoff aren't exactly conducive to a full stadium experience.
On the other hand, if Lionel freaking Messi can't draw fans to the Club World Cup, who can? Messi has filled Mercedes-Benz before; his Inter Miami debut was a sellout despite the fact that he didn't play, and Messi and Argentina lit up Atlanta at last year's Copa América tournament. FIFA announced attendance at Thursday's match of 31,783 — almost 10,000 more than Monday — and about half seemed to be wearing Messi's Inter Miami or Argentina kits. Chants of 'MES-SI!' thundered through the stadium throughout the second half.
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That's the key to Messi's power: regardless of the results of any one match, he's transcended both the game and national loyalties the way few others have. You don't have to know a single other player on Messi's Inter Miami squad to root for them; their association with Messi is enough.
Off the pitch, Messi remains a PR force of nature. In the two years since he joined Inter Miami for a twilight-of-his-career payday, he's become a marketing behemoth in the United States, appearing in Super Bowl ads and crossing over with Patrick Mahomes and others in a bid to introduce American soccer skeptics to what the rest of the world has known for two decades.
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As Boardroom noted earlier this week, Messi rocketed Inter Miami's valuation and popularity into orbit; the club is now worth $1.2 billion, nearly double what it was before Messi signed in 2023. Inter Miami now ranks second behind only LAFC in valuation among MLS clubs, and its 17.3 million Instagram followers dwarf every other MLS squad. (LA Galaxy ranks second at 1.5 million.)
The vexing question now facing FIFA is just how long the Club World Cup will be able to leverage all that popularity. Messi and Inter Miami will enjoy a return to Miami for the conclusion of the group stage, though they'll face a significant challenge from Palmeiras. If Inter Miami manage to advance, they face either another date in Atlanta or a trip to Philadelphia, depending on their group standing.
The Messi Effect remains a powerful force in American soccer, but the Messi Effect can't solve all problems. Messi is the closest thing soccer has to a cheat code, but there are no shortcuts to establishing a soccer foundation in the United States. If the Club World Cup is going to take flight this year, and if the World Cup is to connect on a national scale in 2026, FIFA is going to need help from a whole lot more than just Messi. Even at age 37, he still can do virtually anything, but he can't do everything.

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Barry Sanders Is Excited About The Lions—And Heart Health

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Players including goalkeeper Jan Oblak and Julian Alvarez were at Casa Atleti for 'meet and greet' events with supporters. Ex-Atletico striker Fernando Torres, now coaching the club's B team, was in Venice Beach for a Nike event, along with fellow former greats of the game Ronaldinho and Ronaldo Nazario. A post shared by Atlético de Madrid (@atleticodemadrid) In Atletico's second group game, away from the noise and heat of California, Atletico easily outclassed Seattle Sounders 3-1, with two goals from young midfielder Pablo Barrios. That lifted the mood among the players, who thought they were back on track to qualify — and club executives who knew most of the prize money is awarded to teams who go deep in the competition. But during the journey back to LA, they all watched in disbelief as a heavily rotated PSG side were beaten 1-0 by the Brazilian team Botafogo. It was quickly apparent to everyone how the late lack of control against PSG had cost them. That now meant that, unless PSG slipped up against Seattle, Atletico needed to beat the Copa Libertadores holders by three goals in their final group game to remain in the competition. Advertisement It never looked possible as Atletico laboured through the first half in Monday's game back at the Rose Bowl. There was a glimpse of hope when Alvarez appeared to win a penalty just before the break but, after a VAR consultation, a push by Alexander Sorloth early in the move saw a free kick awarded to Botafogo instead. Simeone and his players were furious with the decision, just as they had been when another VAR call had led to a goal by Alvarez disallowed against PSG in their opener. An 87th-minute effort by substitute Antoine Griezmann on Monday night eventually gave Atletico a 1-0 win over Botafogo, but it was too little, too late. 'There's frustration but getting six points in a group with the Champions League and Copa Libertadores winners was not bad,' Simeone said afterwards. 'In the end, we paid for the game against PSG. None of the refereeing decisions went our way, against PSG or today. But that's part of football. 'This was a huge opportunity for us to keep evolving as a team and as a club. We know really clearly what we need to improve.' After a disappointing 2024-25, in which Atletico lost out to Real Madrid in the Champions League in controversial circumstances, finished behind Barcelona and Real in La Liga and exited the Copa del Rey semi-finals against Barca, Simeone is keen to improve his squad. Atletico's only signing ahead of the Club World Cup was the arrival on a free transfer of defender Clement Lenglet, who had been on loan at Atletico from Barca last season. The Frenchman was sent off during the team's meltdown against PSG. Atletico's targets this summer include Real Betis' U.S. international midfielder Jonny Cardoso, Tottenham's Argentina defender Cristian Romero, and Villarreal's Spain international playmaker Alex Baena. None of those will come cheap, which is another reason the early exit will hurt everyone at Atletico. They will take home about €30m from FIFA, given their mid-ranking status among the European participants, and €4m in total for their two group victories. Even making the semi-finals — not at all unreasonable for an Atletico squad boasting six players who have won World Cups with their countries — would have meant at least €40m more in prize money. Advertisement That is before counting the extra intangible benefits of being involved in the latter stages of the tournament in front of sponsors, fans and broadcasters. Instead, Atletico became the first European team to be eliminated from the tournament. They were hurt by many different factors beyond their control: the political protests, LA's midday heat, a tough draw, and especially Botafogo's shock win against PSG in the second round of games. But they also did not play well enough. They were completely outclassed by PSG and then unable to cause a very well-organised Botafogo team many problems in the decisive third game. So the Club World Cup turned out to be a missed opportunity for Atletico, both on and off the pitch. They had hoped that their much-anticipated appearance in the tournament would be like a Hollywood blockbuster for a club always striving to be taken as a serious rival to Madrid and Barcelona. Instead, it ended up feeling more like a horror movie for Simeone and company.

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