While with the passing of the hours it seems inevitable that Lionel Andres Messi go play Miami Intermany wonder why he did not reach an agreement to return to the Barcelonathe club where he spent most of his professional career, and to which he longed to return.
As stated, the Argentine 10 put all his will for the operation, and from the end of the month he will be a free agent, due to the end of his contract with the paris saint germain. Even his father and manager, Jorge Messimet with the leadership headed by Joan Laporta this week, to try to unlock the situation.
“It is difficult, I see an arrival of Messi to Barcelona. I don’t think it will happen, it’s quite complicated”, was the first statement that emerged after that meeting.
“Right now it depends on several things. Barcelona It is your home and always will be. There are many things at stake, many things that we are pending and it is not economic. He would play for free,” she added.
But, despite the goodwill of both parties, the Catalan leadership accepted that the club’s financial problems conspire against the agreement
Although they have already presented him with an offer, “in order to formalize it on paper, they first need to execute the feasibility plan that they presented to La Liga,” the Barcelona media detailed. So, what is the obstacle that prevents recruitment?
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@PSG_espanol
What is the Financial Fair Play and why it complicates Messi’s return to Barcelona so much
The regulations were created to prevent clubs from spending more than they earn and could be the reason why the soccer star cannot continue his career with the team that saw him shine.
But there is something that could block that historic pass, and it is the so-called Financial Fair Play. UEFA, which brings together European clubs, introduced the FPF regulations in 2009. However, they only came into force at the start of the 2011-12 football season. As explained, the measure was promoted to “improve the general financial health of European club football.”
He Financial Fair Play seeks to prevent clubs from spending more than they earn in revenue. This avoids debt processes in European teams.
Specifically, it establishes that teams cannot spend more than 5 million euros about what they earn in each three-year evaluation period.
To comply with the regulations, the Club’s Financial Control Body (CFCB) was created, the entity in charge of auditing each institution. Among the data taken into account are transfer areas, employee benefits, amortization of transfers, and financial costs and dividends.
Among the penalties for non-compliance are fines, deduction of points, withholding of income and even the prohibition to register these new players in international competitions.
In this specific case, Barcelona does not achieve a sufficient reduction in expenses, nor a substantial improvement in income, to achieve the arrival of Messi to the club. And we are already in the countdown…
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Source: Ambito

I am Pierce Boyd, a driven and ambitious professional working in the news industry. I have been writing for 24 Hours Worlds for over five years, specializing in sports section coverage. During my tenure at the publication, I have built an impressive portfolio of articles that has earned me a reputation as an experienced journalist and content creator.