Major League Soccer is a league that is an ongoing project. A project that American soccer fans should
be very proud of. I have always said it is and maybe always will be very hard for a domestic soccer league in the United States to thrive...I should know I did my college thesis on the very topic. Competition from other sports; your basketball, baseball and ice hockey will vie for America's attention and they more often than not will get it. This is known and it pains me to say will probably never change.The MLS doesn't need to be told what it can't do rather it should be praised for it's effort so far. Led by current MLS commissioner Don Garber, who has made wonderful steps in trying to lasso the attention of the American public. Soccer specific stadia has been popping up all across the nation, European teams make yearly ventures the country, television revenue is looking promising and most importantly an infant academy for player development is starting to shape.
Professional sports teams in the United States is fueled by colleges and a draft system and this is where teams grab the bulk of their players. Soccer is no different there either. Unlike other parts of the world where youth academies are pretty much the sole player producers,in the USA that kind of thing just wasn't happening. Major League Soccer is starting to align itself with the rest of the world by creating these club youth academies and some wonderful players are starting to emerge.
From all of that one wouldn't actually believe that this post is actually about now New England Revolution starlet Diego Fagundez but I try to educate as well as entertain. Fagundez is a talent that came into the MLS via New England Revolution's youth system. Born in Uruguay the forward came to the United States as a child. The son of a former professional soccer player, Fagundez took advantage of the grassroots soccer programs that Massachusetts had to offer having been on the books at FC United and FC Greater Boston Bolts, teams that prepped the player for the sterner MLS.
The Revolution's home-grown player if he continues to do well may have a heavy decision on his hands in the future. Fagundez has represented his native Uruguay at the U-20 level but having American citizenship also allows him play for the CONCACAF side if he may chose to do so and let's be honest has solid as the United States Men's National Team is right now as I speak every soldier is a plus for "Uncle Sam's Army," Fagundez is a lad I have already earmarked as a very viable option for America...again that's if he wants to play for them.
Even at the early stage at this career there is some magic moments on the highlight reel just with Diego Fagundez's name on it. A lot of young players are overhyped and everybody hopes they find a prodigy and I have to admit I do it too because of the promise youthful prospects hold. The player has the same stigma attached but what makes the Uruguayan poacher special to me is that he isn't a guy snatched up by the league from another talent pool , he is a kid thought how to play soccer not football, making him savvy to the ways of the how the game is played in this country. The "home-grown," tag as I said before is a new working concept. Sure young players have been attached to clubs for a while now but not many have actually infiltrated their first teams as yet.
On a personal level I think Fagundez is just nifty. A very quick player and never wastes energy and he makes smart plays constantly and I stress "constantly." I don't know if he will be a poster boy for Major League Soccer but I think definitely he will be an asset to the league one day...providing he stays.
Diego Fagundez
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