«He hit the wall, day after day»: Henry’s incredible Messi confession | OneFootball

«He hit the wall, day after day»: Henry’s incredible Messi confession | OneFootball

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·29 June 2026

«He hit the wall, day after day»: Henry’s incredible Messi confession

Article image:«He hit the wall, day after day»: Henry’s incredible Messi confession

Thierry Henry has access to a version of Lionel Messi that most people don’t know. The former French striker was Messi’s teammate at Barcelona, and from that privileged position he witnessed something that contradicts the image of perfection the world has of the Argentine: there was a time when his free kicks were not good. “I saw the beginning of his free kicks. He would come to training, take free kicks, and they weren’t good at first. At the time I thought: I don’t think he’ll ever master that,” Henry revealed in a conversation with former England defender Rio Ferdinand for his podcast, from Los Angeles during the 2026 World Cup.

What came next is well-known history, but the process that came before it is not. Henry describes it with a simple and powerful image: “He hit the wall, day after day.” And then came the transformation everyone eventually saw: “Now with his free kicks, either the goalkeeper saves them, or it’s a goal, or it hits the post or the crossbar.” For the Frenchman, that sequence illustrates something people often ignore when talking about the greats: “Yes, there is a gift. Yes. But you have to work on it.”


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Henry arrived at Barcelona in 2007 in the middle of a major rebuilding phase. That first year, Ronaldinho, Deco, Zambrotta, and Yaya Touré, among others, left. What remained was a team with Xavi, Iniesta, Eto’o, and a Messi who was still developing. “People forget that,” said the Frenchman.

Article image:«He hit the wall, day after day»: Henry’s incredible Messi confession

When asked whether Messi did things in training that no one had ever seen, Henry drew a key distinction between him and other great players: “Sometimes you see a great player score a goal, and because you played with him, I swear, what he does in training is ten times more. With Leo, it’s the other way around.” The conclusion was direct: “He did it in the match.”

Henry also spoke about Messi’s constant drive. “If he scored four, he wanted five. Five, six. Six, seven. Seven, eight.” And when Ferdinand asked whether Messi got upset when he didn’t score, the answer was: “Yes. He also got upset when he did score.” Henry compared that mentality to Cristiano Ronaldo and Bruno Fernandes. “Those who think differently, think differently. If you seek perfection, which is impossible, that’s what they want.”

This article was translated into English by Artificial Intelligence. You can read the original version in 🇪🇸 here.

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