Into the spotlight
Ever since breaking into the first team as a 15-year-old, becoming Barca's youngest-ever debutant in the process, the spotlight has been on Lamine.
For lovers of football, watching the emergence of the 'next big thing' has become something of an annual hobby, and for so many, the star has shone incredibly brightly to begin with, before fading just as quickly.
That's where Lamine is different.

Three years since his debut against Real Betis, the 18-year-old is arguably the first name down on the team sheet, and with good reason.
He's already one of those rare breeds of players who get supporters up out of their seats in anticipation of what comes next.
Unfazed by any opponent, Lamine appears at his most comfortable when driving deep into enemy territory and bamboozling defenders with body feints and dribbling skills par excellence.
Playing with purpose
It would be easy to frame Lamine as a cocky youngster if it were not for the fact that, behind the occasional showboating, there is a player who does everything with purpose.
Not for nothing is he Barca's main man in terms of goals (24) and assists (17) this season, and his reliability is often overlooked, too.
Only Eric Garcia and Pau Cubarsi have played more than his 3,700 cumulative minutes in 2025/26, and that, perhaps more than anything else, is an incredible endorsement of his work from Hansi Flick.
Before he injured himself scoring the winner against Celta Vigo from the penalty spot towards the end of April, Lamine had helped Barca to a 4-1 victory over local rivals Espanyol, a game in which he scored one goal and assisted for two more, and a pair of 2-1 victories over Atletico Madrid (one in LaLiga and one in the Champions League, the latter of which he scored in, as well as being man of the match in both games).
Los Rojiblancos' 2-0 victory in the other Champions League tie was the only blemish on his and Barca's copybook in the month.
Taking all of this into account, and not forgetting that he still missed the final game of the month at Getafe, he still recorded an excellent 8.9 rating in Flashscore's rating system.
More to come
There is sometimes a tendency to put so much pressure on younger players with enviable talent that burnout becomes a very real issue.
The thigh injury that will keep Lamine out until the end of the domestic season isn't his first, and one can only hope that the load on him, both mentally and physically, can be well managed.
Hansi Flick arguably summed things up best when he said, "Lamine is an unbelievable player, but he's only 18. And, of course, sometimes he's angry when I change him or maybe when he dribbles past four, five players and then shoots, and he misses. Sometimes it's also frustrating for him that he didn't score a goal.
"He's emotional, and that's good. I will always support him. He is a fantastic player, heading the right way, and we are helping him to develop in the right space. It's not good to make this noise around everything he's doing.
"I know everyone is looking to him because he's a fantastic player. But he's only 18. Every one of us makes mistakes. I said to him you can try things, no problem, I will always protect you.
"And on the pitch, he has to show everyone how good he is; that he will be one of the best, maybe the best player of the future."
View from the ground
As someone who follows FC Barcelona on a weekly basis, Flashscore features writer Jason Pettigrove gave his own thoughts on the young phenomenon.
"Given how important Lamine has become to this Barcelona side, it's difficult to forget that he's still not yet 19 years of age.
"Comparisons to Lionel Messi at this stage are, frankly, mischievous at best, even if one understands they're only coming from a place of respect for Lamine's craft.
"To put things into context, Messi had made fewer than 50 Barcelona first-team appearances by his 19th birthday, and would only go on to become the player he did over the next few years.
"Lamine became the youngest player to reach 100 competitive games for the club at just 17 years and 291 days old, and has already clocked up in excess of 150 first-team appearances.
"His place in the starting XI hasn't been in doubt for some while now, however, it's still far too early to judge just how high a bar he will set in his career.
"Let's just enjoy the immense talent he has to offer in the meantime."

