Messi Remains Silent after Bartomeu's Offer to Resign

Barcelona president Josep Bartomeu and Lionel Messi. (Getty Images)
Barcelona president Josep Bartomeu and Lionel Messi. (Getty Images)
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Messi Remains Silent after Bartomeu's Offer to Resign

Barcelona president Josep Bartomeu and Lionel Messi. (Getty Images)
Barcelona president Josep Bartomeu and Lionel Messi. (Getty Images)

While the wait to hear from Lionel Messi goes on, Barcelona continues to do everything it can to try to convince him to stay.

The club has told Messi that president Josep Bartomeu will resign if that is what it takes to keep the playmaker, but Barcelona said on Friday there was no word yet from Messi on the offer.

Bartomeu is willing to step down on the condition that Messi publicly says that the president was the reason for the Argentina star wanting to leave, Barcelona said while confirming reports from Spanish media.

Messi on Tuesday expressed his desire to leave by sending Barcelona a burofax — a certified document similar to a telegram — invoking a contract clause that allowed him to depart after the end of the season. Barcelona said the clause expired on June 10 and told Messi it wants him to stay until the end of his contract in June 2021.

Without directly accusing Bartomeu, Messi has been outspoken against the club’s decisions this season, the team’s first without a title since 2007-08. Messi publicly complained about former director Éric Abidal after he criticized the players’ efforts following a series of poor results in February. Abidal left Barcelona after the team’s 8-2 loss to Bayern Munich in the quarterfinals of the Champions League.

Bartomeu is not believed to have talked to Messi since the player announced his decision to leave. The president said after the loss to Bayern that he spoke to Messi’s father and was told that the player was frustrated and disappointed.

Messi reportedly later talked to incoming coach Ronald Koeman and told him he saw himself more out than in the club at that moment.

Messi also may not have been happy with some of Koeman’s early squad decisions, including the one not to keep using striker Luis Suárez, a longtime Messi teammate and friend.

Koeman also reportedly said he will not include Ivan Rakitic, Samuel Umtiti and Arturo Vidal in his plans.

Koeman’s arrival to replace coach Quique Setién was the beginning of what Barcelona said were “profound changes to the first team” and a “wide-ranging” restructuring of the club, which also included the call for new presidential elections in March.

Opposition members to Bartomeu, who has been in charge of the club since 2014, earlier this week presented a censure motion against him and called for his resignation. Hundreds of fans also have protested against Bartomeu in front of the club’s Camp Nou Stadium in recent days.

The squad is expected to return from its break on Sunday to undergo coronavirus testing. Training is scheduled to resume on Monday ahead of the start of the Spanish league.



Granollers and Zeballos Break Duck with French Open Men's Doubles Crown

Spain's Marcel Granollers (C-L) and Argentina's Horacio Zeballos (C-R) hold their trophy after winning their men's doubles final match against Britain's Joe Salisbury and Britain's Neal Skupski on day 14 of the French Open tennis tournament on Court Philippe-Chatrier at the Roland-Garros Complex in Paris on June 7, 2025. (Photo by JULIEN DE ROSA / AFP)
Spain's Marcel Granollers (C-L) and Argentina's Horacio Zeballos (C-R) hold their trophy after winning their men's doubles final match against Britain's Joe Salisbury and Britain's Neal Skupski on day 14 of the French Open tennis tournament on Court Philippe-Chatrier at the Roland-Garros Complex in Paris on June 7, 2025. (Photo by JULIEN DE ROSA / AFP)
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Granollers and Zeballos Break Duck with French Open Men's Doubles Crown

Spain's Marcel Granollers (C-L) and Argentina's Horacio Zeballos (C-R) hold their trophy after winning their men's doubles final match against Britain's Joe Salisbury and Britain's Neal Skupski on day 14 of the French Open tennis tournament on Court Philippe-Chatrier at the Roland-Garros Complex in Paris on June 7, 2025. (Photo by JULIEN DE ROSA / AFP)
Spain's Marcel Granollers (C-L) and Argentina's Horacio Zeballos (C-R) hold their trophy after winning their men's doubles final match against Britain's Joe Salisbury and Britain's Neal Skupski on day 14 of the French Open tennis tournament on Court Philippe-Chatrier at the Roland-Garros Complex in Paris on June 7, 2025. (Photo by JULIEN DE ROSA / AFP)

Fifth seeds Marcel Granollers and Horacio Zeballos bagged their maiden Grand Slam trophy as a pair by battling past British duo Joe Salisbury and Neal Skupski 6-0 6-7(5) 7-5 in the French Open men's doubles final on Saturday.

Playing in a fourth Grand Slam final together, Granollers and Zeballos looked on track to quickly break their duck when they blanked their eighth-seeded opponents in the opening set before being dragged into a dogfight in the next, Reuters reported.

Salisbury and Skupski, who won the only previous tour-level encounter between the two teams in the Rome quarter-finals last month, edged the second set tiebreak and were close to building a 4-3 lead in the decider before a moment of magic.

Zeballos hit the shot of the match to level at deuce in the next game, chasing down a dipping ball and squeezing it around the post at ground level to draw loud cheers from a small crowd on Court Philippe Chatrier.

Salisbury and Skupski, who became the first British men's doubles finalists at Roland Garros since 1936, were in no mood to fade away on the historic occasion as they fought on before being caught off guard in the 12th game.

Granollers and Zeballos broke to love to secure victory and fell to the ground in celebration.