MLS will benefit most if Almiron thrives in England
11:02 am | February 3, 2019 | Go to Source | Author:
3:22 PM ET
There is plenty riding on Miguel Almiron’s progress in the Premier League now that he’s completed his move from Atlanta United; it’s bigger than Newcastle United and bigger than Paraguay. It has to do with the possibility of a shift in the architecture of the global game.
Almiron’s £20 million move from Atlanta United to Newcastle has surely rammed home one point to the Europeans: namely, that Major League Soccer is much more than a glorified retirement home for famous old names. There are other models at work. Over the past decade-and-a-half the MLS has made a point of looking south, especially to Argentina. Indeed, the model that took Atlanta from start up to champions came with an immense South American contribution. And now Almiron, one of the stars of the process, moves across the Atlantic.
Atlanta have done wonderfully well out of the deal. They picked up a young Paraguayan midfielder from Lanus in Argentina, used him to help establish their club and their city as a soccer venue, and now they’ve sold him on at a healthy profit. But this leads to the big question: is this a one-off deal or the birth of a regular stream of revenue?