A $7 million contract breach: Lawsuit filed against Messi for not playing against Venezuela

Messi

A $7 million contract breach: Lawsuit filed against Messi for not playing against Venezuela

 Argentine football star Lionel Messi, who plays for Inter Miami in the MLS, is facing a lawsuit from a Miami-based events company that accuses him of breaching a $7 million contract by failing to appear at an exhibition match last year. According to court records, Feed Music Group filed the lawsuit against Messi and the Argentine Football Association (AFA) in Miami-Dade County District Court last month, alleging fraud and breach of contract.

Neither Messi nor the AFA immediately responded to requests for comment. Considered one of the greatest footballers of all time, Messi plays for Inter Miami in the MLS and for the Argentine national team. Fans typically pay hefty sums to see him play.

According to the lawsuit, Fede signed an agreement with the Argentine Football Association last summer to obtain the exclusive rights to organize and promote the friendly matches played by the Argentine national team last October against Venezuela and Puerto Rico, in exchange for ticket sales, broadcasting and sponsorship revenues.

Fed claims that Messi was supposed to play at least 30 minutes in every match, unless he was injured. According to the lawsuit, Messi, 38, watched Argentina's 1-0 victory over Venezuela on October 10 from a private box at Hard Rock Stadium in South Florida.

The following day, Messi scored two goals in Inter Miami's 4-0 win over Atlanta in Major League Soccer. This match was crucial for Inter Miami, as it gave them home-court advantage in the first round of the playoffs. Then, on October 14, Messi played in Argentina's 6-0 victory over Puerto Rico. The game was originally scheduled to be played in Chicago, but poor ticket sales in the city, which saw more than a thousand arrests by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), led organizers to move the game to Florida.

The NFL blamed anti-immigration campaigns when tickets for the smaller stadium in Fort Lauderdale failed to sell out, even after the price was reduced to $25. Fede Sports did not specify the damages it is seeking in the lawsuit, but claims it lost millions of dollars due to Messi's absence from one game and low ticket sales for another.

Post a Comment

0 Comments