Messi: I almost left Barcelona five years ago over tax fraud case

Tom Maston

Messi: I almost left Barcelona five years ago over tax fraud case image

Lionel Messi has revealed that he almost left Barcelona in 2014 after he and his father were charged with tax fraud.

The five-time Ballon d'Or winner was alleged to have used tax havens in Belize and Uruguay to conceal earnings from image rights, and as such defrauded Spain of €4.1 million between 2007 and 2009.

Messi was eventually found guilty and sentenced to 21 months in prison and a €2m fine before his prison time was amended to a €252,000 (£223,000/$288,000) fine in July 2017.

His father, Jorge, was similarly sentenced to 15 months' imprisonment and a fine of €1.5m, though his prison sentence was reduced on appeal.

And Messi has now admitted that, when the charges were originally made, he wanted to leave Spain and spoke to a number of clubs regarding a move away from Camp Nou, though he did not receive any concrete offers.

"I had it in my mind to leave at that time, not to leave Barcelona but to leave Spain," he told RAC1. "I felt that I was being mistreated and did not want to be here anymore.

"I had the door opened by many clubs but I never had an official offer because everyone knew of my previous desire to continue in Barcelona. The feeling I had went beyond what I felt for this club.

"There was a time when I ended up tired by a lot of circumstances, it has happened several times, especially in 2013 and 2014, with the problems with the treasury and everything that came out. It was difficult for me and my family, many people did not know what I was going through and I heard a sector of the press helped to make this happen."

Speculation regarding Messi's future continues, with the recent revelation that he has a clause in his current contract that would allow him to leave the Spanish champions for free at the end of the season should he so wish.

Lionel Messi Barcelona 2019-20

The 32-year-old, though, insists that he wants to see out the remainder of his career with the Blaugrana, for whom he has worn the captain's armband for the past two seasons.

"Obviously I will stay if you love me. I am delighted and my idea is to stay here - nothing has changed that at all. It is increasingly clear that I will end my career here. It is my idea and that of my family, first for how I am and what I feel for the club and the city. 

"I would not like to change the friendships of the children or their social circle, I would not like this to break. I had to live with it and I do not want it to happen to them."

Should Messi retire at Barca, it would mean not going back to his native Argentina to represent boyhood club Newell's Old Boys despite suggesting he would like to return and play in his homeland before he ends his career.

"I always dreamed since I was little, to live the experience of playing in Argentine soccer. Everything that surrounds it there is different, with the good and the bad, but sometimes you have to think more about the family than what you want."

Despite admitting his desire to remain with the club, Messi insists he has not spoken to club president Josep Maria Bartomeu regarding a new contract, adding: "Everything is fine with the board. The last time I spoke with President Bartomeu was after the [Champions League] elimination at Liverpool, but there is no problem with the president."

Tom Maston