After one of soccer’s most destructive scandals, the task facing Barcelona and Juventus in the Champions League final on Saturday seems simple. Showing the sport at its best, with an entertaining demonstration of artistry, should ensure that the limelight swings back on the players for at least a couple of hours.
It seems a heavy burden but this will be a game starring Lionel Messi, who possesses the finesse and repertoire of goals to captivate the world in an instant.
“There are moments when Messi has the ball and what happens next is only down to him,” Barcelona teammate Javier Mascherano said. “No matter what his opponents do.”
Just look at the 10 goals he has already scored in the 12 games en route to the final in Berlin. He is now trying to become the first player to score in three Champions League finals after netting in Barca’s 2009 and 2011 triumphs.
Barcelona coach Luis Enrique cut straight to the point: “The best player in the history of football is beyond doubt.”
A fourth Champions League title would enhance Messi’s credentials to reclaim the Ballon D’Or trophy from Cristiano Ronaldo and become a five-time winner of soccer’s top individual award. Whether scandal-scarred outgoing FIFA President Sepp Blatter is handing out that trophy one final time in January remains unclear.
As the FIFA crisis rumbles on, here are some things to know about the Champions League final:
THE POLITICAL GAME
Behind the scenes in Germany, the intrigue surrounding European soccer’s showpiece will all be about who replaces Blatter at the helm of FIFA.
Blatter succumbed to the intensifying pressure on his presidency by announcing plans to resign on Tuesday — only four days after his re-election.
That sudden move put a halt to UEFA’s plans to hold an emergency meeting in Berlin to discuss whether to boycott FIFA and ultimately the World Cup.
Instead, Berlin could witness the start of unofficial electioneering, with UEFA President Michel Platini the favorite to succeed Blatter when the vote takes place sometime between December and March.
RESTORATION OF JUVE
The last week has exposed how soccer has been corrupted on a vast scale, but the Champions League finalists have not been without scandal of their own recently.
Juventus is back in the final for the first time since 2003 and the “Calciopoli” match-fixing scandal that emerged three years later.
After being revealed to have influenced refereeing, Juventus was stripped of its 2005 and 2006 Serie A titles and relegated from the topflight.
The reputation of the so-called “Old Lady” of Turin has gradually been restored, with the club winning the last four Italian tiles. It now has a shot at lifting the European Cup for the first time since 1996.
BARCA’S LEGAL WOES
Allegations of wrongdoing have come on two fronts recently at the Camp Nou.
The Catalan giants are banned from signing any players this year after being found by FIFA to have broken rules on registering minors as youth players.
The club is also facing a damaging court case. Barca president Josep Bartomeu and predecessor Alexandre “Sandro” Rosell are accused of tax evasion, including over the signing of Brazil striker Neymar in 2013 for around $120 million.
FORMIDABLE FORWARDS
Has Neymar’s contribution to the team been worth the legal strife? The outcome of legal proceedings could determine that.
On the field, the link-up between Neymar, Messi and $110-million 2014 recruit Luis Suarez has restored the attacking swagger that naysayers predicted had gone when the team failed to collect a single trophy last season.
With the league and Spanish Cup titles already secured, a treble could herald a return to the dominant era under Pep Guardiola between 2008 and 2012.
Barca has scored 28 goals in Europe this season to Juve’s 16, and the terrifying trio up front has combined for 120 goals across all competitions.