What's clear, though, is that even if Barca do manage to get both Olmo and Victor back on the field for the conclusion of the 2024-25 campaign, the whole sorry affair has only further tarnished the club's reputation, and severely weakened Laporta's position as president.
"We want to express our total indignation and shame caused by the management of Joan Laporta and the board of directors regarding the registrations of Dani Olmo and Pau Victor, and we demand his resignation," supporters group Som un Clam said in a statement. "What we have experienced in the last hours of 2024 shows that the vicious circle in which the club's governing team has entered has fully exploded. Sooner than even imaginable, amateur and erratic management is beginning to affect the sporting performance of the first team, which could be deprived of two of its signings."
Its a fair point. Hansi Flick's team started to unravel just before the winter break, blowing a massive lead in La Liga in the process, and the possible unavailability of Olmo and Victor will hardly help ease the strain on an already overstretched squad.
According to Sport, Laporta has no intention of stepping down but Font is among the figures close to the club very blatantly attempting to make his position untenable.
"We cannot accept how the president of Barcelona, Joan Laporta, has handled this issue," the 2021 presidential candidate wrote on social media. "We demand the board and the president explain their actions and the consequences in detail, including:
"Why did we sign such an expensive player if we were already over the Fair Play limits and had no clear plan to fix it? Why did we take legal action if we knew it wouldn’t work, as the court rulings have shown? What is the club doing now to ensure we don’t lose Olmo and Pau Victor? What is the truth about the sale of Camp Nou’s VIP seats? Have they been sold? To which investors and under what terms?"
Font may well be motivated by the potential for personal gain, but these are all valid questions that Laporta needs to answer - and fast. He claimed only last February that "the darkest period" in the club's history was almost over and yet the future looks as bleak as ever, with Barcelona both broke and broken going into a new year.