Barcelona are unravelling dramatically as the vandalism of ex-president Sandro Rosell has put the marriage of Lionel Messi and sublime football on the brink of a divorce

Your perspective on the immediate situation at Barcelona probably revolves around how you view sleight of hand and misdirection in magic tricks like find the lady, three-card-monte or the shell-game.

It takes great confidence and skill from those who shuffle cards around to hide where the Queen of Hearts is, or to whizz the cups about so that the one with the shell under it is undetectable. ‘Magic’ couldn’t exist without it.

However, it’s usually just a con — aimed at robbing you of, at least, your attention, probably your common sense and, at worst, all your cash.

Lionel Messi (left) looks to advance past Elche's Chilean defender Enzo Roco on Thursday night

Lionel Messi (left) looks to advance past Elche's Chilean defender Enzo Roco on Thursday night

Messi scores from the penalty spot at the Nou Camp during the Copa del Rey last-16 match against Elche

Messi scores from the penalty spot at the Nou Camp during the Copa del Rey last-16 match against Elche

Messi celebrates after scoring Barcelona's third goal against Elche at the Nou Camp on Thursday night

Messi celebrates after scoring Barcelona's third goal against Elche at the Nou Camp on Thursday night

Thus it is that all attention is centred on the farcical did he/didn’t he? mini-drama concocted by a Catalan television station when they announced that Barcelona’s greatest-ever footballer Lionel Messi demanded the removal of current coach Luis Enrique.

By late on Friday night, Catalan journalists were running around in a frenzy. The rumours ranged from Enrique quitting, Messi staging some sort of putsch for power — to a decision for him to move to Chelsea already being taken.

All of which has served to neatly divert eyes away from the fact that this is very nearly the situation which the football vandalism of the Sandro Rosell era has been on target to create from the outset.

In case his name has slipped your mind, Rosell is the man who has always wanted to reinvent the wheel.

A vice-president when Joan Laporta came to power in a footballing renaissance fuelled by Johan Cruyff-ist philosophy back in 2003, Rosell always detested the Dutchman’s manner, legacy and influence at the Nou Camp.

Smack bang in the middle of Barcelona’s Field-of-Dreams vision and painstaking construction, Rosell walked away from the club in 2005, contending that everyone was out of step except for him.

He wanted big, athletic, preferably Brazilian footballers — he wanted physical power and powerful spending. He wanted power.

Barcelona were producing intelligent, balletic, technical geniuses like Xavi, Andres Iniesta and Messi while scouting, training and developing to a Cruyff/Ajax/Rinus Michels template.

Former Barcelona president Sandro Rosell is the man who has always wanted to reinvent the wheel

Former Barcelona president Sandro Rosell is the man who has always wanted to reinvent the wheel

Barcelona's ex-manager Gerardo 'Tata' Martino (right) shakes hands with then-Barcelona president  Rosell

Barcelona's ex-manager Gerardo 'Tata' Martino (right) shakes hands with then-Barcelona president Rosell

It yielded football which has taken its place in the all-time pantheon of excellence in this sport.

Laporta’s personal hedonism left a vacuum at the end of his final mandate into which Rosell stepped — winning a landslide presidential victory.

But, from 2010 onwards, there has been a steady drive towards this point when, having been nearly unstoppable as recently as the middle of 2012, Barcelona are now unravelling dramatically.

Under Rosell’s direction, a director of football Andoni Zubizarreta was appointed who has singularly failed to guide the club to an appropriate coaching appointment following the illness and death of Tito Vilanova, who repeatedly failed to re-stock Barca’s back four or midfield and who was a party to the rule breaking which has caused FIFA to ban the club from two transfer markets.

From the beginning of his regime, I predicted Rosell would dedicate himself to finding ‘his’ Messi — an iconic footballer who would, in theory, give Rosell his place in the history books and allow Barcelona to edge the Argentinian towards a vastly lucrative transfer to fund the vanity project of a new stadium.

Neymar is probably the guy who is now closest to Messi in the squad. However the at-any-cost pursuit of the Brazilian did two key things.

Firstly, Barcelona’s board became blind to the obvious need to reinvigorate the first-team squad with the kind of power, height and pace lost via the departures of Yaya Toure, Thierry Henry, Seydou Keita and Eric Abidal.

Secondly, given the club’s vomit of half-truths, the process via which Rosell dashed Real Madrid’s equally determined pursuit of Neymar cost him all credibility and also his position at the club.

Throughout Messi’s emergence as a true genius of football, Barcelona had repeatedly chosen to cosset and reassure him. It worked.

'Messi drives Barca to despair' ran the headline on the front of AS after he followed Chelsea on Instagram

'Messi drives Barca to despair' ran the headline on the front of AS after he followed Chelsea on Instagram

'Barcelona fall apart' ran the headline on Tuesday's edition of Marca after Messi failed to attend training

'Barcelona fall apart' ran the headline on Tuesday's edition of Marca after Messi failed to attend training

Catalan newspaper Sport devoted plenty of pages to dissecting the growing crisis at the Nou Camp

Catalan newspaper Sport devoted plenty of pages to dissecting the growing crisis at the Nou Camp

Ferran Soriano, now in charge at Manchester City, was part of a strategy, formed with fellow vice-president Marc Ingla and director of football Txiki Begiristain nearly 10 years ago now, to ensure that the player’s contract would be spruced up every 12-14 months.

The idea was firstly to ensure the Messi entourage would keep Barca abreast of which club was sniffing about this or that year.

Secondly, it emerged that improving his terms and his ‘sense of wellbeing’ regularly began to be wholly in step with the improvement in his performances, worth, and importance to the club’s trophy winning.

Rosell’s era became so different that his finance director felt free to moan publicly about having to increase Messi’s salary so regularly.

Why on earth break a successful formula? Why make sentiments like that public?

But here is the key thing which the recent media misdirection has helped keep in the background.

Barcelona were a repeat-Superbowl winning franchise with an almost perfect playbook — and Rosell burned the formula.

He launched an offensive against Cruyff so malignant that the club icon handed back his entitlement to be honorary president and hasn’t been to the Nou Camp since.

Chelsea boss Jose Mourinho has previously played down speculation linking his side with a move for Messi

Chelsea boss Jose Mourinho has previously played down speculation linking his side with a move for Messi

Messi fuelled speculation he could be keen on a move to Chelsea by following the club's Instagram account 

Messi fuelled speculation he could be keen on a move to Chelsea by following the club's Instagram account 

Here's what Messi would look like if he was to seal a move to the Premier League's west London outfit

Here's what Messi would look like if he was to seal a move to the Premier League's west London outfit

The Cruyff ideology becoming verboten inevitably coincided with Pep Guardiola beginning to feel a cold and distant relationship with president Rosell.

It all caused Barcelona to prematurely lose a tired, burned-out coach in whose hands lay the right way to progress and renew this era.

The abandonment of the ideals which had guided and created almost unparalleled footballing excellence gradually led to an erosion of the kind of daily intensity, hard-nosed competitiveness and crystal-clear philosophy of positional play upon which this squad depended.

So, admittedly, it is a legitimate news line to pursue whether Messi did or didn’t demand the removal of Enrique. But it isn’t the real issue.

The central problems include the fact that Rosell, who quit in disgrace, isn’t around to take the criticism for the horrendous botch he made of what he inherited.

The next key issue is that, while no player can be allowed to hold a club hostage and dictate their decision-making, Messi is wholly within his rights if he a) chooses to express his unhappiness and b) finally opts that he wants to leave.

Messi started Barcelona's defeat against Real Sociedad on the bench before coming on in the second half

Messi started Barcelona's defeat against Real Sociedad on the bench before coming on in the second half

Barcelona manager Luis Enrique future at the Catalan club is in doubt after a fall-out with senior players

Barcelona manager Luis Enrique future at the Catalan club is in doubt after a fall-out with senior players

Barcelona president Josep Bartomeu is reportedly already looking at candidates to replace Enrique

Barcelona president Josep Bartomeu is reportedly already looking at candidates to replace Enrique

DAVID MOYES 1-0 LIONEL MESSI 

Moyes beat Messi's Barcelona on Sunday night

Moyes beat Messi's Barcelona on Sunday night

It was as if David Moyes had borrowed some of the magic of the FA Cup on Sunday as Real Sociedad became giant-killers and took the scalp of Barcelona.

CLICK HERE FOR THE FULL REPORT 

Aged 27, it is feasible that the best is yet to come for him. Some will tell you that his best is in the past but such opinions are based on the performances of a genius in a declining team and at a club which has been turning wine into water.

If Enrique, who faces Spanish champions Atlético at the Nou Camp on Sunday night, is going to get things right then it will be a dramatic turnaround. He’s given few signs thus far.

Irrespective of how many years of his contract he has left, Messi could justifiably demand a summit with the incumbent president and assess the direction in which the club is headed.

To assess whether presidential elections in the summer might put Barcelona back on course.

Right now, I’m guided, his intention is to catalyse positive changes and stay. But leaving has never been so high on his agenda.

The financial behemoth of obtaining Messi’s registration via a forced buy-out, using the €250million recision clause and paying the €100m+ VAT, is unimaginable under current football regulations.

Thus, should Messi feel that he needs to leave then he’ll have to demand a transfer.

If he were to do that what would it tell you about his club? The club to which he owes a lifelong debt, the club via which he has become an all-time great, the club where he has been immensely happy and settled?

Precisely what the player did or didn’t say to a president whose days are numbered about a coach who is not up to the task is of less overall significance than how and why the perfect marriage of Barcelona, scintillating football and Messi is on course to end in the divorce courts.

Barcelona's main player Messi has been linked with a move to Premier League club Chelsea in recent weeks

Barcelona's main player Messi has been linked with a move to Premier League club Chelsea in recent weeks

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