So I don't speak Spanish well,but this looks like a goodbye letter...?
So I don't speak Spanish well,but this looks like a goodbye letter...?
yes hes going to Torque, which we knew. If he comes here it will be until the tournament ends in Uruguay.
Santiago Rodríguez se despidió de #Nacional. El futbolista jugará en #MvdCityTorque hasta junio y luego partirá a la MLS de Estados Unidos. https://t.co/o9ktLMATFp
— Gianluca Lorenzut Sosa (@GianlucaLS98) January 14, 2021
Santiago Rodríguez se despidió de #Nacional. El futbolista jugará en #MvdCityTorque hasta junio y luego partirá a la MLS de Estados Unidos. https://t.co/o9ktLMATFp
— Gianluca Lorenzut Sosa (@GianlucaLS98) January 14, 2021
This guy (translated Twitter bio: Sports Journalist graduated from IPEP. Communication student at FIC) appears to think he'll be coming to MLS in June
According to Record. Franco Emanuel Cervi to join #NYCFC at €8M from SL Benfica.
— NYCFC Nation ⭐ (@NYCFCNation) January 17, 2021
Winger. 26 years old from San Lorenzo, Argentinahttps://t.co/2BUvQny1C7
According to Record. Franco Emanuel Cervi to join #NYCFC at €8M from SL Benfica.
— NYCFC Nation ⭐ (@NYCFCNation) January 17, 2021
Winger. 26 years old from San Lorenzo, Argentinahttps://t.co/2BUvQny1C7
I don’t pray. I might start after seeing this. pic.twitter.com/ISosL33FZx
— Colin (@COLINMOUTH) January 17, 2021
Do y’all know something I don’t? People are saying a Dubai vacation but maybe he signs for a club over there that helps us out.
I don’t pray. I might start after seeing this. pic.twitter.com/ISosL33FZx
— Colin (@COLINMOUTH) January 17, 2021
Do y’all know something I don’t? People are saying a Dubai vacation but maybe he signs for a club over there that helps us out.
I don’t pray. I might start after seeing this. pic.twitter.com/ISosL33FZx
— Colin (@COLINMOUTH) January 17, 2021
If the transfer fee is correct and it's $9.6 million, it would be the biggest transfer fee in club history and the 7th-higest transfer fee in MLS history per transfermarket.
I know nothing about this player, but for that money we're expecting him to be a star.
Sounds like Cervi is like mitri with much better work rate but much less final product.. why can't we have both in one player??
The three somewhat recent guys who in my mind came to MLS and then exploded significantly beyond what they did previously came from Serie A, Serie A, and La Liga (Giovinco, Martinez and Vela). Maybe Pozuelo (Belgium) belongs in that class but I would put him at least a half notch below in terms of his "where did that come from" factor. I think Ruidiaz actually scored more in his last 2 Liga MX seasons than he has in MLS. Which is not a knock -- he's been great -- but doesn't fit into the mold of what we're trying to discern. Generally, while plenty of players from Latin American leagues have done great in MLS, I don't think they tend to come here and wildly over-perform what they did previously. And not for nothing, but Maxi's MLS stats are beyond anything he did consistently in, again, Serie A. Heber's production is pretty much in line with what he was doing in Croatia.The Portugese league, I believe, is better than MLS. So would a player who struggled to finish against better defenses be better in a league where the defenses are far behind the attacks? I don't know the answer to this question, but what I would also say is that there is no perfect player who comes to MLS. Guys are in this league because they aren't perfect players. Kevin De Bruyne isn't walking through those doors any time soon.