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Lionel Messi welcomed by Inter Miami and Major League Soccer to South Florida

Messi mania reaches fever pitch with offical welcome of soccer star
Messi mania reaches fever pitch with offical welcome of soccer star 05:48

FORT LAUDERDALE -- When Inter Miami began floating the notion that it would be the team to land Lionel Messi and bring the World Cup champion to Major League Soccer, there were no shortage of people who were, to put it mildly, skeptical about how realistic a plan that was.

Among them: MLS Commissioner Don Garber. Yes, even the man running the league had a bit of doubt.

MLS Miami Messi Arrives Soccer
A person wears a Lionel Messi hat as fans wait to enter DRV Pink Stadium, home of the Inter Miami MLS soccer team, for an event to present international superstar Lionel Messi one day after the team finalized his signing through the 2025 season, Sunday, July 16, 2023, in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Rebecca Blackwell / AP

Not anymore. Messi to Miami isn't just crazy talk. It happened, with the team — currently with the fewest points in the MLS standings and mired in an 11-game winless streak — unveiling Messi at its home in Fort Lauderdale on Sunday night in a celebration that was delayed by a storm that sent thousands of fans running for cover and left puddles on the pitch where Messi will soon play.

The team released a schedule of events leading up to the official welcoming but prohibited a live broadcast of the feed from being streamed or shown on television while the event was happening.

>>>>>PHOTOS: Inter Miami, fans offically welcome Messi to South Florida

David Beckham and his family arrived at the venue for the event, which was temporarily suspended because of the severe weather moving through Broward County.

"Here we are today with a player that I think, without doubt, is not only a generational player but in my opinion the greatest of all time," Garber said. "Went through a process throughout his decision-making period over the last number of months, if not the last year, to determine where he was going to play. Many of you have heard us say that we want MLS to be a league of choice, a league of choice for players, for fans, for partners, and ultimately for investors.

"And when you have the best player of all-time making Major League Scocer his league of choice, I think it's a real testament to where MLS is and where it's going in the years ahead."

Messi mania sweeping South Florida soccer fans 04:00

The event billed as "The Unveil" was happening at the team's stadium in Fort Lauderdale. It comes one day after Messi, Major League Soccer and Inter Miami finalized his signing through the 2025 season.

It's the start of a busy week of events for Messi with his new club. His first official training session that will be open to reporters is set for Tuesday and — if all goes to plan — he will play Friday in a Leagues Cup match against Cruz Azul.

That could also be the Miami debut of World Cup winner Sergio Busquets, a Spanish midfielder who completed his long-awaited signing with the club Sunday through the 2025 season.

Busquets, who turned 35 on Sunday, and the 36-year-old Messi were teammates previously at Barcelona.

"This is a special and exciting opportunity that I'm very excited to take," Busquets said.

Messi, a World Cup champion for Argentina and seven-time Ballon d'Or winner as the world's best player in a given year, is joining a club that has the fewest points in MLS and is mired in an 11-match winless streak. Inter Miami opened the season with two wins and has gone 3-14-3 since. It has 12 MLS matches left this season, and is 12 points out of a playoff spot — so it's going to take a ton of wins just to have a chance.

The club previously announced that Messi's deal will be for 2 1/2 seasons and will pay him between $50 million and $60 million annually — putting the total contract value between $125 million and $150 million in cash alone. There are other factors, the value of which isn't known.

"This ought to be fun. ... This journey here in Miami has been an epic one," Garber said.

Messi's greatness is not in question; he led Argentina to the World Cup this past December and is still generally considered one of the very best goalscorers in the world — if not the best.

That said, not everyone believes Messi coming to MLS will be a cakewalk, even for a legend.

"He won't find it easy here," Wayne Rooney, the former England and Manchester United great who now coaches D.C. United, told The Times of London for a story published Sunday. "It sounds mad, but players who come in find it's a tough league. The travelling, the different conditions in different cities, and there's a lot of energy and intensity on the pitch."

But Rooney also knows how Messi playing here is huge for MLS, and huge for soccer in the U.S.

"Americans love winners," Rooney said. "Above all, they want to see skill and to be entertained, and Messi brings all that."

Messi announced his decision in early June, and the buildup to Sunday was growing ever since.

"That moment when he announced it, when he was sitting in Spain, that was a unique way to tell the world that it was coming to Major League Soccer and I just thought that that was really, really cool," Garber said. "And I am on a large chat with most of our league leadership and we just said, 'You better buckle up, 'cause this is going to be quite a ride."

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