Messi has undoubtedly raised the profile of MLS, but his decision to skip ASG could have lasting reverberations for the league
AUSTIN, Texas – Lionel Messi means the world to Jesus Rodriguez.
For the 22-year-old, who has Cerebral Palsy and developmental disabilities, the Argentine star is a light – a beacon of hope in an otherwise challenging life. Whether it's weaving through multiple defenders or beating goalkeepers with pinpoint precision on free kicks, Messi doesnât let obstacles stand in his way, and that inspires Rodriguez to keep fighting. So much so that his mother, Tanya Jasso, wanted to find a way for her son to finally see Messi.
She originally tried last season and was ready to take her son, husband, and Jesusâ stepfather, Javier Partida, to see Messi in Columbus, Ohio, for the 2024 MLS All-Star Game. But in the 2024 Copa America Final, Messi injured his ankle. The plan was scrapped. Then, in March, Jasso got the exciting news that the 2025 MLS All-Star would be held in Austin.
For the family who lives in Alamo, New Mexico, the Texas capital was within driving distance. They wanted to give Jesus the experience of a lifetime, saving money and then spending thousands of dollars to get tickets in the VIP section 7, row 3, behind the MLS All-Star bench. Everything was in motion, and when Jesus heard the news, he was brimming with excitement.
Then Wednesday happened.
Messi and Inter Miami teammate Jordi Alba had been no-shows for MLS All-Star training sessions earlier in the week, and on the morning of the All-Star Game, the league confirmed what had increasingly appeared inevitable – neither would play, both removed from the final MLS roster.
Jasso said that she and her family were devastated when they heard the news. Jesus sat motionless with his head drooping toward the concrete sidewalk, and Jasso was furious about the timing and the manner in which both MLS and Messi handled the situation.
âIâm very sad because I did everything I could so my son could come see Messi, especially since he has a disability,â Jasso told GOAL Wednesday before the All-Star Game. âI feel heartbroken for him. Itâs always been his dream to meet Messi, but heâs not going to be here. I made a lot of sacrifices⊠We drove 10 hours from Alamo, New Mexico, to get here, and weâre very tired.â
Jasso was perplexed as to why MLS waited until the day of the game – at 11:15 a.m. Central Time, to be exact – to reveal that the face of their league would not be playing in its midseason showcase.
âI think they should be more honest and give fans a heads-up so we donât go through so much for nothing,â she said. âI feel sad because [Messi] should think about his fans – and right now, heâs not. I believe Messi is partly to blame, as is the league, because he shouldâve made an effort to be here.â
Jasso wasnât alone in feeling let down by MLS and its Argentine superstar. Social media was flush with fans who said the league should have done more to hold Messi accountable, and some who cynically suggested the league was aware of Messiâs status ahead of the game, intentionally promoted his participation, and withheld the information to build buzz for the game.
Austinâs leading newspaper, , ripped Messi and MLS to shreds for the way the situation was handled, with Eric Goodman writing, âMessiâs decision not to show up for one night in Austin is a huge middle finger to MLS and its fans.â
Despite the very public angst, MLS Commissioner Don Garber, in his All-Star Game midseason address, declined to confirm whether the players would face discipline, saying only that the league should have been more proactive in determining Messi and Albaâs availability. In several unprompted moments, Garber appeared to gush over Messiâs positive impact on the league – noting his sizable social media presence and the credibility he brings to MLS.
Sports commissioners essentially work for team owners, which means occasionally having to tow the line. But considering the circumstances, Garberâs responses – and in some cases, lack thereof – seemed tone deaf. Failing to be firm and resolute could both set a precedent and have consequences, signaling to MLS fans that their role in All-Star voting effectively doesnât matter.
On Friday, two days after the All-Star Game, MLS finally announced a decision, suspending both Messi and Alba for Inter Miamiâs match against FC Cincinnati on Saturday. Garber praised Messi's overall contributions, but said the league had to follow its policies.
âThe most important thing is I know Leo Messi loves this league, and MLS is an entirely different league because of the years heâs been here helping to show the world what MLS is and what itâs capable of being,â Garber told the Athletic. âNobody has done more for Major League Soccer than Lionel Messi. Not just what heâs done off the field, but what heâs done on the field. Every game is a must-see match. I fully understand and respect and admire his commitment to Inter Miami.
"His decision is not one that I really can argue with whatsoever and I understand it. But unfortunately we have a longstanding policy relating to player participation in the All-Star Game and we had to enforce that policy. It was a very, very difficult decision, but one I hope both [Messi] and everyone else can understand and respect. He has shown up for his club, for his teammates, for our league time and time again and I respect his decision.â
Garber added that MLS plans to re-evaluate the policy.
âWe are going to take a very hard look at the rule moving forward," he said. "It is important to all of our players and all of our fans that we have a policy that reflects and involves the realities of our league and its players going forward. I am committed to working with all of our players and to start working with Leo Messi to adapt this rule so it makes sense going forward.â
Calling MLS rules for sanctioning players who skip its All-Star game "draconian," Inter Miami owner Jorge Mas on Friday said that Messi was "extremely upset' by the suspension. Mas claimed it was the club's decision to let both Messi and Alba skip the ASG, keeping their long-term health and fitness in mind amid a congested schedule, and that the players' were upset by the league's actions.
"I believe itâs a bad rule, but itâs a rule nonetheless," he said. "And itâs a bad rule because I think it puts the players in an untenable position to have to choose between participating in an All-Star festivity, which is an exhibition match, or choosing a regular-season game that I think matters. And I admire both Lionel and Jordi for always thinking of club first.â
Messi is the first MLS starter in the past 30 years to skip an All-Star game for non-injury reasons – the first being Zlatan Ibrahimovic. In most other major U.S. sports – the NBA, MLB, NHL and NFL, leagues that represent the best of the best in their respective games – it would generally be unthinkable for a player equal to Messiâs stature to skip its marquee match for reasons other than injury.
So how did MLS get to this point with the face of the league?
GOAL spoke to MLS All-Stars, former executives, and insiders to assess the fallout from Messiâs no-show and what it signals about the leagueâs present and future.
Get the MLS Season Pass today!Stream games nowAFPCompare and contrast, Beckham and Messi
Messi may be the most famous – and as an eight-time Ballon dâOr winner, the most accomplished – player ever to join Major League Soccer, but the way heâs avoided an active ambassador role for the league stands in stark contrast to the global icon who preceded him: David Beckham.
While Beckham was never as strong a footballer as Messi, he was arguably just as popular in the pre-social media era. From the moment Beckham joined MLS in a star-studded, Hollywood, celebrity-fueled arrival in 2007, he made it clear that his move to MLS was about more than just playing soccer – it was a mission.
âIâm coming there to make a difference,â Beckham said at his introductory LA Galaxy news conference. âI wouldnât be doing this if I didnât think I could make a difference.â
Beckham didnât just show up, he leaned into the responsibility of helping MLS grow – on and off the field. It wasnât enough to attract 66,237 fans to Giants Stadium, as he did when the Galaxy traveled to face the New York Red Bulls in a 5-4 loss, or to amplify attendance for opposing clubs by more than 40 percent during his first two years in the league.
He was also making media rounds, and serving as a highly visible face of American club soccer. Whether it was appearing on late-night talk shows, doing photo shoots for leading magazines, or surprising fans at sports bars, Beckham treated the leagueâs promotion as part of the job.
âOf course, being an ambassador of the league, being an ambassador of the game here is obviously important,â he said at an appearance in 2012 at the ESPN Zone, meeting individually with a group of 70.
Two former leading members of the LA Galaxy staff who worked closely with Beckham told GOAL that visibility was never optional for the England star, with one source saying, âI would say that media exposure and growth of the league was greatly important to Beckham and Ibrahimovic.â
That went far beyond what was written in any contract. Yes, Beckham wasnât initially as successful on the pitch as Messi – he didnât make the playoffs until his third year in the league. But as USMNT icon and former Galaxy GM Alexi Lalas summed it up in 2011, Beckhamâs arrival was monumental for MLS.
âHe brought relevancy and credibility,â Lalas said, âwhich is something that U.S. soccer – and maybe even more so Major League Soccer – has and continues to crave.â
And Beckham went to extreme lengths to meet obligations. Former teammate Landon Donovan recalled a moment during the 2012 Olympics when Beckham juggled personal and league duties with incredible effort.
âHe flew out right after our game – maybe Saturday or Sunday night – to London,â Donovan said in reaction to the news that Messi had skipped Wednesdayâs All-Star Game. âHe had to do preparations for the opening ceremonies, then got back on a plane, flew to wherever the All-Star Game was, played the game on Wednesday, and flew back to London that night.â
The irony is striking, considering Beckham is now a co-owner of Inter Miami. Messi, Beckhamâs hand-picked superstar and so-called âgiftâ to elevate MLS into a new era, chose not to show up for the leagueâs marquee summer event.
And while Messiâs global reach and on-field brilliance are unquestionable, his absence in Austin has pointed to what has become increasingly telegraphed over the past few months: There is a different set of rules for Messi.
AdvertisementGetty Images SportThe Messi Rules
This wasnât the first time Messiâs unique status bent the norms at MLS. Thereâs no denying Messiâs impact for Inter Miami. Since arriving in 2023, heâs tallied 64 goal contributions in 43 league matches (39 goals, 25 assists), led the Herons to the 2024 Supportersâ Shield with a record 74 points, and won league MVP.
Heâs also played the role of recruiter, helping bring former star teammates and friends Luis Suarez, Sergio Busquets, and Jordi Alba to MLS – and it appears Argentina midfielder Rodrigo De Paul will be next.
Off the field, Messi has transformed the clubâs profile. Inter Miamiâs valuation exploded from $585 million to more than $1.2 billion since his arrival. Attendance, too, has soared, nearly doubling from an average of 12,613 fans per game in 2022 to 21,245 in 2024 – second-best in MLS.
But has Messi had the same impact on the league overall? Heâs a guaranteed box office draw, selling out nearly every road match and helping teams such as Sporting KC move games to larger venues to capitalize on the draw and maximize attendance.
Yet beyond the gate, the returns are mixed.
MLS viewership, by most accounts, remains modest. Garber said this week that MLS games streaming on Apple TV average 120,000 unique viewers each, with about one million unique viewers tuning in across all matches on Saturdays. During Beckhamâs first two years in the league, MLS averaged 241,000 viewers for games and had a single-match high of 650,000. Of course, in Beckhamâs era, matches were broadcast on traditional cable TV, which has greatly declined over the past decade. Today, MLSâs matches are largely streamed via Apple TV.
And Messiâs voice, publicly, has been largely absent. Unlike past MLS stars such as Beckham, Thierry Henry, Zlatan Ibrahimovic, Wayne Rooney, or Kaka, Messi has limited his media opportunities, outside of his introductory news conference.
Yes, heâs done a smattering of one-on-one interviews, but they have generally been well-coordinated and structured – often lacking any real emotion. American sports fans are used to seeing passion. Due to the controlled nature of Messiâs limited interviews, fans have little insight into his thoughts on MLS, the competition level, or even life in the U.S. That might be normal for athletes in Europe, but in North America – where megastars such as LeBron James and Patrick Mahomes regularly speak to the media – itâs a missed opportunity.
Historically, MLS has fined players who skip media duties. Henry often grumbled about the requirement but still fulfilled it. Ibrahimovic stirred headlines with brash, unfiltered takes that MLS likely didnât always appreciate. Messi, by contrast, appears to operate under different rules.
The Athletic reported that Messi struck a handshake deal to avoid regular media obligations. Some within MLS circles have contrasted Messiâs silence outside of a handful of preselected opportunities to Cristiano Ronaldoâs outspoken promotion of the Saudi Pro League.
The question, ultimately, is how much impact Messi as a âbrandâ has lifted the league? MLS is now home to more of the highest valued soccer franchises than any other league in global soccer, according to Sportico's annual rankings. North America's top flight has 19 of the top 50, and five of the top 20, eclipsing every other top division in world football.
The leagueâs average valuation is $700 million, with LAFC and Inter Miami – Messiâs club – sitting at the top, both valued north of $1.2B.
âThereâs no doubt that thereâs a before and after Lionel Messi in this league,â Mas said. âLionel Messi, he is different. He has completely changed the economics of this league, for every single club, every team, every sponsor, the league, media, etc… Lionel Messi has created, for the first time in the league history, $10 million gates where he goes. Clubs change stadiums so Lionel Messi can perform and play, and Inter Miami can play. And thatâs an amazing asset and an amazing thing for the league."
Getty Images SportMarquee event no-show
What started as a question Monday became seemingly inevitable by Tuesday afternoon: Messi might skip All-Star week entirely. The league has generally accepted the âMessi rulesâ – flexibility in exchange for brilliance on the pitch. But this was uncharted territory, even by North American standards.
All-Star events, while rarely competitive, are marketing engines built on fan participation. They're celebrations of a sport and a league, and there is generally a kind of unspoken pact with fans. You vote, they show up.
The tradition runs deep. Babe Ruth was an All-Star. Michael Jordan was an All-Star. Even when selections spark debate, that debate fuels connection. Fans canât control lineups or referee decisions – but All-Star votes are theirs.
No story captures this better than John Scottâs in 2016. A journeyman NHL enforcer with just five career goals, Scott was voted by fans into the leagueâs All-Star game. The league reportedly tried to block him – even demoting him to the minors after a trade – but he played anyway, scored twice, and was named MVP. Thatâs the magic of sports: unpredictability and presence.
For the 28 MLS All-Stars who did show up in Austin, that mattered.
âWhen you have eyes on you, and to be able to have a voice and showcase yourself ⊠it's very important,â said U.S. international Diego Luna. âMLS is in a big year leading up to the World Cup – this brings more focus and attention.â
Chucky Lozano and Cristian Espinoza echoed that sentiment. Garber, meanwhile, downplayed Messiâs absence, citing Inter Miamiâs packed schedule and Club World Cup obligations.
"Miami has had a schedule that is unlike any other team," Garber said. "Most of our teams had a 10-day break. Miami hasn't. We had Leo playing 90 minutes in almost all the games that he's played."
But the numbers tell a more nuanced story. Inter Miami and LAFC each played 16 matches between the league and Club World Cup; Seattle played just one fewer. And of those three, Miami actually had the longest break – 14 days – between league play and the Club World Cup.
Getty Images SportWhere MLS goes from here
Now that the league has enforced its rules, suspending the two Miami players, the question remains: How can this be avoided next time?
It starts with expectation and accountability. Did MLS and Miami adequately outline expectations for Messi when he arrived in the league, including responsibilities at tentpole events such as the All-Star game? Media responsibilities arenât as critical as they were in the Beckham era, but skipping an MLS All-Star game both damages trust and could set a precedent for other stars in the league.
Zlatan skipped an All-Star game. Now Messi has done the same. How can MLS discourage repeat offenses? How does the league impart the value of its marquee game to its top stars, especially those who have previously played in Europe, where All-Star games are literally foreign concepts?
Does the league need harsher penalties? Neither Messi or Alba are likely to lose sleep because they didnât have a chance to play with Brad Stuver or Sam Surridge in the ASG – no offense to either – or the fact they must sit out one match, even if itâs against a contending Cincinnati side. Or as Garber suggested Friday – the league "working with Leo Messi to adapt this rule" – could MLS go the opposite direction, and forego future sanctions, thus potentially risking more players skipping out?
One suggestion that has gained traction within league circles is changing the scheduling for the ASG, or even canceling it in years in which there are other major tournaments, such as the Club World Cup or the World Cup. One insider suggested MLS follow the NHLâs lead and postpone All-Star the way the NHL did during the Olympics.
While Garber has already gone on record that he wants the 2026 Charlotte All-Star Game to be the best ever, riding momentum from the World Cup, the league might be better served by pressing pause.
"What I think is that if they want to do this type of event, it's great to do it, and the truth is that it's great for the league. There shouldn't be a date in the schedule. It's crazy,â Miami coach Javier Mascherano said Friday before the league announced the suspensions. âWe've been playing four of the last five games away. We've been playing four away. We've been playing practically every three days.â
While a one-game suspension might seem like a slap on the wrist, Garber and MLS arenât helped by Messiâs uncertain future in the league, a situation Donovan outlined.
âFrom the League's perspective, this is really frustrating because you have your best player, your partners want him there, the owners want him there, the sponsors want him there, the fans want him there, the other guys on the MLS All-Star team want the chance to play with Messi – that's a dream for them," Donovan said. âSo this becomes a really challenging situation, and from the league standpoint now, what do you do? … Inter Miami and the league are trying to renegotiate, so that he stays here – his contract is up at the end of the season."
Messiâs contract with Inter Miami comes to an end in December 2025, meaning the team and league have less than five months to extend the face of the league. Messiâs impact on MLS is undeniable – record crowds, global attention, Apple TV subscribers, he checks all those boxes.
But, make no mistake, Garber and MLS need to find answers to all of this soon. It canât risk fan trust all for the sake of revenue or reputational gains. Or fans will look elsewhere. As the Jasso and Partida family noted.
âHey, we might have better luck seeing [Messi] at the World Cup,â Partida quipped.
Moments like what happened – or didnât happen – in Austin this week remind us that the leagueâs future wonât be built on star power alone.
Itâll be built on trust. On showing up.