Miami Embraces Lionel Messi With Murals, Marketing and Milanesas


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Miami’s Messi madness — over the arrival of the soccer superstar Lionel Messi, one of the most famous humans on the planet — reached a fever pitch last week when he was spotted at a Publix grocery store near Fort Lauderdale, buying Lucky Charms and Fruit Loops.

Shoppers gawked and snapped cellphone pics. Casual outing? Publicity stunt? Who cared? Mr. Messi and his photogenic young family had landed in a soccer-crazy region that had been hoping to nab him for years. Already, Mr. Messi looked like a local, clad in shorts and flip-flops.

South Florida has been consumed with a frenzied fandom for Mr. Messi, the Argentine whose signing on Saturday represented a coup for Inter Miami of Major League Soccer and for Miami itself, the unofficial capital of Latin America, with a penchant for celebrity. When the team presented Mr. Messi to a packed stadium in Fort Lauderdale on Sunday night, following a violent thunderstorm, he thanked the crowd in Spanish “for helping us feel at home so quickly.”

“I’m very happy to have chosen to come to this city with my family,” he said. He is expected to debut in a match on Friday.

The team played a video montage of Miami celebrities welcoming Mr. Messi —Marc Anthony, DJ Khaled, Gloria Estefan — and then presented a concert with the Latin pop singers Camilo and Ozuna.

Not since LeBron James declared in 2010 that he would “take my talents to South Beach” (really, downtown Miami) to play basketball for the Miami Heat has the region been so infatuated with the impending presence of a sports figure. In the weeks since Mr. Messi announced last month that he would sign with Inter Miami, artists have raced to paint murals of him around town. Restaurants have redrawn their menus to offer versions of what is said to be his favorite dish, breaded meat known as milanesa.

European and Latin American soccer players, including Mr. Messi, 36, have bought properties and vacationed in South Florida for years, in part because they can enjoy a level of anonymity impossible elsewhere. But few expected Mr. Messi, who has played for club teams in Barcelona and Paris, to come to the last-place Inter Miami at this point rather than to Saudi Arabia, where he was offered a more lucrative contract to close out his storied career.

His arrival prompted a seven-page spread in The Miami Herald on Sunday. In a city once known for its part-time paparazzi — the actor Matt Damon, a former Miami Beach resident who is married to an Argentine, said in 2009 that photographers bothered him only on the weekends — Mr. Messi has been hounded by cameras.

He appears as a pink goat, a reference to Inter Miami’s team colors and his status as the “greatest of all time,” in a banner ad for Apple TV+, the M.L.S. streaming partner with which he signed a revenue-sharing agreement. A Hard Rock Cafe billboard has him hawking a new Messi Chicken Sandwich.

South Florida’s Argentine community, the largest in the United States, has…



Read More: Miami Embraces Lionel Messi With Murals, Marketing and Milanesas 2023-07-17 20:14:12

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