

Inter Miami’s woeful stretch continued into Sunday night as Lionel Messi’s side fell 3-0 in a rivalry match at home against Orlando City. The result marked Miami’s second consecutive — and second ever — three-goal defeat with Messi involved, following a 4-1 loss at Minnesota United.
After the match, Messi gave a relatively rare post-match interview, having spoken through Apple’s streaming platform only with infrequency since signing with Inter Miami in July 2023. To date, nearly all media availability involving the Argentine captain has been in news conferences or pre-recorded studio settings away from his matches. However, the latest loss spurred him to speak with MLS Season Pass reporter Michele Giannone.
Advertisement
“The truth is, yeah, it hurts to lose one more game,” Messi said. “We’re coming off a period of poor results but we have to keep working and think about what’s ahead of us. There are three or four more games to finish the month, and we have to finish in the best manner possible to take on the Club World Cup.”
Las palabras de Leo Messi tras el encuentro entre Inter Miami y Orlando City.
🎙️ @MicheleG3 pic.twitter.com/yyE3XWJA2P
— MLS Español (@MLSes) May 19, 2025
The loss brought Miami’s record to just 3-3-6 over its past 12 matches in all competitions. Most notable among the results was a pair of defeats in the Concacaf Champions Cup semifinal against the Vancouver Whitecaps, a club that finds itself atop the league-wide standings in spite of competing on multiple fronts.
In contrast, Miami has struggled to find the right balance in its first season under Javier Mascherano. An ex-teammate of Messi, Sergio Busquets, Luis Suarez and Jordi Alba during his playing days at FC Barcelona, Mascherano was appointed late in 2024 to his first senior head coaching role.
While the club started hot in league play, Mascherano has struggled to calibrate a roster teeming with technical veterans but lacking much of the physicality that has long proven necessary to flourish in MLS’s typical game state. Miami often hopes to dominate possession by keeping the ball moving with tidy passing, but concedes MLS’s highest rate of ‘big’ chances (32.8 percent; MLS’s average through Sunday is 20.3 percent) — defined as chances in which a shooter would be reasonably expected to score, such as one-on-one breakaways or unmarked shots taken in the box.
Messi also seemed to question MLS’s standard of officiating in his remarks on Sunday.
“I think we played a great first half,” Messi said. “We were attacking, creating situations they couldn’t get out of. They were kicking long balls. And there was a rare play where one of their players passed the ball back to the goalkeeper, and the referee said that, he himself told me he didn’t know the rule, that he didn’t think that happened, that he didn’t understand it. And, well, from that came another long ball, they scored, but, truthfully, there are times where specific mistakes, like in the last game – you see, these aren’t excuses.
Advertisement
“But something always happens with the referees, and specific plays. I believe MLS needs to look more into the referees they call up.”
Through May 18th, referees seemed to call Miami games similarly to any other. Miami has committed 11.8 fouls per game (just below the 12.2 league average, ranking 18th in the 30-team league) while it suffers 12.8 fouls committed by their opponents (ranking 10th of 30). However, Miami is the only team to have three players shown red cards in the season’s first few months — only one other team, Real Salt Lake, has drawn multiple red cards in 2025.
Last week, Miami signed 36-year-old left back Jordi Alba to a two-year extension which will keep him with the club through 2027. In mid-April, The Athletic reported the club was also nearing fresh terms to retain Messi beyond the end of his current deal, which is set to expire at the end of the season.
When asked by Giannone for any updates on his contract, however, Messi simply said “no, no.”
Miami was appointed the host team of the 2025 Club World Cup by FIFA president Gianni Infantino on the night they won the 2024 Supporters’ Shield. Their group draw was relatively favorable, facing Al Ahly FC, Palmeiras and Porto. Given their current form, however, Mascherano and his staff have plenty of work to do to ready themselves for the newly expanded tournament.
Until then, they’ll hope to stop their state of rot in the regular season, starting with next weekend’s trip to a Philadelphia Union side which is currently atop the Eastern Conference. Miami sunk to sixth with their latest defeat.
“To keep going, no?” Messi said regarding his message to the locker room as its captain. “To keep going because this is a complicated moment, but we’ll get through this together, now we’ll know if we’re really a team in these difficult moments, because in the moments everything goes well, it’s easy. But when these difficult moments come up, like now, we have to be more united than ever, be a true team and get through it.
“I think we have what it takes, so now, well, we have to think about what’s coming next and prepare for the game in Philadelphia.”
— The Athletic’s Paul Tenorio and Melanie Anzidei contributed to this report.
(Photo: Chandan Khanna / AFP via Getty Images)
This news was originally published on this post .
Be the first to leave a comment