Lionel Messi said he felt “much better” than he did a few days ago, leaving up the prospect of participating in Inter Miami’s friendly in Tokyo after disappointed hordes of fans in Hong Kong by failing to show up on the field over the weekend.
For both his Major League Soccer team and the local event organizers, the Argentine’s benching for the much-awaited encounter in front of a sold-out crowd at Hong Kong Stadium has become a public relations disaster.
For the first time since the squad and co-owner David Beckham were jeered off the pitch, Messi addressed the media on Tuesday and stated that it was “disappointing” that he couldn’t participate because of swelling in his adductor muscle.
“In Hong Kong, we had an open-door training session and I went out because there was such a big crowd there and there was a clinic with the kids, and I wanted to be there and participate,” the 36-year-old told a press conference at a Tokyo hotel.
“But the truth is that the discomfort was still there and it was very difficult for me to play.
“I can understand that people were looking forward to it and I hope that there will be another opportunity for me to play in Hong Kong.”
The Inter Miami skipper, who led Argentina to a World Cup triumph in 2022, was coy about whether he would play in Wednesday’s friendly against J-League champions Vissel Kobe.
“For tomorrow, I don’t know, we’ll need to see how it goes in training today,” he added. “We still don’t know if I would be able to or not, but I feel much better than I did a few days ago and really want to be able to play.”
Messi spoke at the press conference alone after appearances by Beckham, coach Tata Martino and team mates Sergio Busquets, Jordi Alba and Luis Suarez were cancelled at the last minute.
Unlike in Hong Kong, scores of tickets were still available a day before the Tokyo match, after going on sale in late December.
Many Japanese fans, though, were content simply to catch a glimpse of the eight-time Ballon d’Or winner in the flesh, braving the chill to watch him at a training session just outside the Japanese capital for special ticket-holders.
“I became a fan two years ago when my son started playing soccer,” said Miku Tomishima, 32, who said she was taking her son to the match as a gift for his 10th birthday this week.
Another mother-son pair travelled nearly 500km (310 miles) from Shiga, in western Japan, to check seeing Messi off their bucket list.
“When we found out they were coming, we decided right then and there that we had to go, even if he had to skip school,” said Yukie Uno, standing next to her son, Tairi.
“We weren’t able to do that when (Messi’s former club) Paris Saint-Germain came to Japan, and that was really disappointing. We thought, maybe this could be the last opportunity so we said, we have to see him.”
The match, at the Japan National Stadium, kicks off at 7 p.m. (1000 GMT) on Wednesday.