On a small rectangular piece of paper to clean the mouth and hands was written one of
the most important documents in the history of the sport.
Leo Messi's 'contract' was signed with Barcelona 18 years ago on a napkin, but where is it now? And who owns it?
In September of 2000
Messi, at only 13 years of age, arrived with his family in
Barcelona thanks to the Argentine representatives
Fabian Soldini and Martin Montero, and his contact in
Spain, Horacio Gaggioli.
The youngster dazzled everyone with the ball, and the
Messi family returned to
Rosario with the promise of a contract offer.
Joan Gaspart, president of Barcelona at the time, thought it would be risky to go through with any deal but
Gaggioli threatened the Catalans by suggesting that he would offer
Messi to other clubs, among them at
Real Madrid.
On December 14, some three months after the initial contact with
Barcelona, Gaggioli played tennis at the
Pompeia del Montjuic club with the
ex-football player and Technical Secretary of Barcelona, Carles Rexach.
After the game they stayed for lunch in the club's cafeteria, where
Josep Maria Minguella, a player agent who had brought many players to
Barcelona, joined them.
Gaggioli and Minguella pressed Rexach to make a decision about
Messi, a young player who promised so much.
It was then that
Rexach took a paper napkin and wrote:
'In Barcelona, on December 14, 2000 and in the presence of Messrs. Minguella and Horacio, Carlos Rexach, Technical Secretary of F.C.B. is committed under his responsibility and despite some opinions against signing the player Lionel Messi as long as we maintain the agreed amounts.'
The napkin was signed by
Rexach, Minguella and Gaggioli.
A week later,
Gaggioli and Rexach themselves gave official validity to that document before a notary and
Messi's story finally began with the
Blaugrana.
But what happened to that famous napkin?
As
Infobae has reported, it's in the hands of
Gaggioli, who today lives in
Andorraand has it stored in a safe of the
Credit Andorra bank.
Gaggioli is still dedicated to the representation of players, and he presently advises
Marco Asensio among other players.
The agent has received numerous millionaire offers from around the world for the document where the signing of
Messi was forged.
"I think the napkin should be in the
Barcelona museum," he's reported as saying.
"That piece of paper changed the modern history of the club."
Gaggioli
He still isn't planning on selling it, only loaning it to the
FCB museum.
"I think it should be there, in a preferential place next to
Messi's Ballon d'Or's," he continued.
Years ago the museum contacted
Gaggioli, but the conversations were frozen when the club told him that it was a "confidential contract" and that they preferred not to expose it to the public "until
Messi retires or leaves the club."
Today, he is the captain of the team and has achieved every title with
Barcelonaon a collective and individual level.
It'll be a few years yet before the safe in
Andorra can be prised open...