BEIJING, FEB 20: Lionel Messi denied his absence from a match in Hong Kong two weeks ago that angered China was a political snub, but was caused by an injury.
The eight-time Ballon dOr winner is idolised by fans in China but stayed on the bench during Inter Miamis 4-1 win in a pre-season tour match against a Hong Kong select XI on February 4.
A near 40,000 sellout crowd, who had paid upwards of 1,000 Hong Kong dollars ($125) to see the 36-year-old superstar in action, chanted "Refund!", gave thumbs-down signs and booed Messi and the teams co-owner David Beckham after the final whistle. Some nationalist politicians interpreted Messis absence as a snub to China after the Argentina great was fit enough to take the field for 30 minutes in a friendly a few days later in Japan.
In a video posted on Chinas Weibo social media platform late on Monday, the World Cup-winning captain rejected claims that his no-show was "for political reasons".
If that had been the case, he said, he "would not have travelled" to Hong Kong in the first place.
"As everyone knows, I always want to play and be in every game," he said.
Messi spoke in his video of a "very nice and very close" relationship with China, a country with which he said he had "done a lot of things".
His reason for not playing was due to injury, he said, specifically "inflammation of an adductor" muscle.
Fans on Weibo reacted quickly to the video, some in support of Messi.
"I believe the player I have always loved would never look at his fans with any kind of prejudice," wrote one user, adding, "he always values every fan."
"I still can understand how such a supreme footballer, the greatest of all time, can be pilloried online to the extent that he is considered not to love China just for missing a friendly match," another fan wrote. —AFP