FC Barcelona is the biggest football club in the world. Its 102,000 shareholder members have seats in the Camp Nou, the largest stadium in Europe, and have the right, every four years, to elect the president of the Club, the dream job of thousands of ambitious and patriotic Catalans. In 2003, thanks to poor domestic results and spiraling debt, the club plunged into the worst crisis in its 100-year history. Promising root and branch reform, a new regime was presented under the leadership of the charismatic Joan Laporta. With exclusive and unprecedented access, directors Webster and Hernández spent a year at the Camp Nou documenting the efforts of the new boards of directors to turn an old-fashioned Catalan family affair into a global soccer business.