Could a Messi exit unlock Barca project?

Barcelona would be shattered if Lionel Messi left the club he has graced since he was a boy, but could the departure of arguably the world's top player create the financial conditions to rebuild?

The Argentinian maestro, who has been with the club since he was 13, handed in a transfer request after Barca's humiliating 8-2 thrashing by Bayern Munich in the quarter-final of the Champions League.

After all the highs of his 21 years with the club, this was one step too far for Messi. 

The focus, naturally enough, has been on the football ramifications for Barca: how would a Messi exit affect them on the pitch as they try to rebuild under new coach Ronald Koeman?

But equally important for the Barca board is the financial implication of allowing the 33-year old, who earns over 100m euros ($118m) in salary and bonuses per year, to take his brand to another club. 

The Catalans, however, are in deep financial difficulty. 

Quite apart from the 200m euros it claims to have "lost" since the start of the coronavirus pandemic, Barca have been carrying a net debt of nearly 200m euros since 2019.

The club has taken out a loan of 140m over five years with an American investment fund to help pay off the debt.

And it has a massive player payroll, reported to be 542m euros in the 2018-2019 season.

So, in simple commercial terms a transfer fee, even if well below the 700m euros quoted in his disputed release clause, would be a welcome windfall.

That may be harder done than said in the world of football, where passion often overrules economic pragmatism.

Not surprisingly the supporters do not want to see the player nicknamed La Pulga (The Flea) leave, even though his performances in the last year suggest a slight waning of his considerable powers.

But his transfer could be the real starting point on and off the field for the reconstruction of a club that not so long ago was the yardstick and envy of the world.

According to Football Leaks, Messi's annual gross salary in 2018, including bonuses, was more than 100m euros, almost double that of his former teammate Neymar.

The Brazilian, who left Barca for Qatari-owned Paris Saint-Germain in 2017 for a world record fee of 222m euros, is paid around 52m euros in salary per year.

So in simple terms, even if they recruit another high-profile replacement, Barca could slash a chunk of cash from the payroll. 

And that might give Koeman, who arrived in August to replace Quique Setien, some wiggle room in recruiting new players to fulfil his vision for the team. 

But the business of football is never as straightforward as that. 

Without Messi, Gay de Liebana believes that Barca's sponsorship contracts, including deals worth 55m per year with Rakuten and 19m euros with Beko, could be significantly reduced. 

And without Messi - and assuming a return to the days of pre-coronavirus attendances at La Liga matches - will there still be so many tourists travelling to watch a game at Camp Nou and buying a Messi replica jersey as a souvenir? 

The departure of the six-time Ballon d'Or winner - as well as the possible transfer of Luis Suarez who, according to the press, is not in Koeman's plans for the 2020-2021 season - would thus mark a major blow for Barca's marketing income while considerably reducing the club's payroll. 

With 100m euros per year more in its coffers and a relatively cut-price replacement in the dressing room Koeman's Barca may well be able to begin the reconstructive surgery the team so urgently needs if it is to bounce back from that mauling by Bayern and regain the Spanish title from Real Madrid.