Barcelona have been offered a whopping €10m to play a friendly in South Korea this summer but the cash comes with a logistical nightmare that has left the club’s planners scratching their heads.
According to Mundo Deportivo, the proposal is one of several lucrative bids landing on the Catalan giants’ desk. Organisers are increasingly willing to pay premium fees to host one of the biggest names in world football.
But accepting is far from straightforward.
The South Korea offer
Between €9m and €10m on the table. That is serious money for 90 minutes of football.
The problem? The journey alone would be gruelling. And Barcelona are not planning a traditional Asian tour this summer.
Instead, the club has already scheduled a focused training camp at St. George’s Park, the FA’s headquarters near Birmingham. The decision was made with the FIFA World Cup in mind, as the first team will be missing several stars during that period.
Flying across continents for a single match could completely disrupt those carefully laid plans.
Other offers on the table
South Korea is not the only option.
A proposal from Peru is already in the mix, offering between €7m and €8m. Another option in Morocco could bring in around €5m, though that one comes with less certainty at this stage.
Then there is the sporting option.
A potential clash against Napoli at the iconic Diego Armando Maradona Stadium on August 1. That one would offer genuine competitive value, a serious test just weeks before La Liga kicks off.
The Libya precedent
Barcelona have shown they are willing to turn down money when the circumstances are not right.
Last year, they rejected a €5m offer to play a friendly in Libya. Security concerns were cited. The cash was not worth the risk.
The question now is whether the South Korea offer, double the money, but with logistical headaches falls into the same category.
What comes next
The club are weighing up their options. The training camp at St. George’s Park is already locked in. Disrupting that for a one off friendly on the other side of the world would need to be justified.
But €10m is €10m. In Barcelona’s financial reality, that is not pocket change.
Whether they accept, negotiate or walk away entirely remains to be seen. One thing is certain, the offers are not going to stop coming.
Barcelona’s name still carries weight. And everyone wants a piece.
