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          <guid isPermaLink="true">https://bolavip.com/en/soccer/catching-up-with-flaco-fernandez-20210330-0002.html</guid>
          <title>Catching up with Flaco Fernández</title>
          <link><![CDATA[https://bolavip.com/en/soccer/catching-up-with-flaco-fernandez-20210330-0002.html]]></link>
          <pubDate>Mon, 05 Apr 2021 09:20:16 -0400</pubDate>
          <description><![CDATA[The former Seattle Sounder and World Cup veteran sat down with Bolavip and remembered his time in MLS and just how much the league has grown since he left. <p><strong>Álvaro Fernández </strong>(35) came to MLS in the middle of the 2010 season after a rollercoaster summer which saw him selected and play for <a href="https://bolavip.com/en/uruguay-t141787" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Uruguay</a> in the World Cup in South Africa. Uruguay would finish fourth in the tournament, the country’s best finish since the 1970 World Cup, and he signed to the unlikely destination of <a href="https://bolavip.com/en/soccer/seattle-sounders-jimi-hendrix-kit-funniest-memes-and-reactions-20210325-0018.html" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Seattle</a>, Washington and MLS to continue his career.</p>
<p><strong>Álvaro Fernández was signed as a designated player,</strong> and by his own admission, he had no real idea what the term meant. During his two stints in <a href="https://bolavip.com/en/mls-t16956" target="_blank" rel="noopener">MLS</a>, Fernández saw firsthand the potential of the sport in the United States and the bright future MLS was laying out for itself.</p>
<p>Now back home in Uruguay and playing for Plaza Colonia at the tail end of a well-traveled career, <strong>Flaco looks back at MLS as a time of immense personal growth and sees the league becoming a league of choice for younger international players as a springboard to Europe.</strong></p>
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<h2>“I still follow the Sounders”</h2>
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<figure class="image">   <img loading="lazy" data-height="412" data-width="740" data-size="w:740,h:412" hspace="5" vspace="5" src="https://bolavip.com/__export/1617112703852/sites/bolavip/img/2021/03/30/alvaro_fernandez_x15_of_the_seattle_sounders_celebrates_after_scoring_during_a_match_against_the_ka_crop1617112703466.jpg_22069893.jpg" width="740" height="412"><figcaption>    Alvaro Fernandez #15 of the Seattle Sounders celebrates after scoring during a match against the Kansas City Wizards at Community America Ballpark in Kansas City, (Getty)   </figcaption></figure>
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<p><strong>Bolavip:</strong> Well Álvaro thanks for sitting down with us, our first question is, what became of El Flaco Álvaro Fernández since his time in Seattle and Chicago in MLS?</p>
<p><strong>Álvaro Fernández:</strong> Well since my time in MLS, I am currently playing for Plaza Colonia here in Uruguay. A club that allows me to stay close to home, about 40 minutes from the training ground, so I am really happy. Enjoying the last years of my career and seeing how much farther I can go.</p>
<p><strong>B: </strong>Do you have any idea how much longer you will play? Or is it a day-by-day basis?</p>
<p><strong>AF: </strong>For now, I feel quite good, I have not had any major injuries during my career, physically I feel fine so for now I plan to continue playing until December and then see if I still feel like playing past that.</p>
<p><strong>B:</strong> Álvaro do you still follow MLS? Today the league has much more exposure from when you played back in 2010, do you still catch games?</p>
<p><strong>AF:</strong> Yes, of course I still follow the league, I follow the Sounders a lot, even though I played in Chicago, I follow the Sounders since it’s the team I most played for and had the luck of winning championships. In 2016 I got the chance to play for the Sounders again and I have a lot of friends that are still in the squad like Nico Lodeiro and Freddy Montero. So, I am always aware of what is going on with the team.</p>
<p><strong>B:</strong> How do you view the return of Freddy Montero to the Seattle? The prodigal son returns in a way.</p>
<p><strong>AF: </strong>Yes, you’re right in a way. I remember telling him in 2016 when (Montero) was in Vancouver, that it would have been great if he was with us that season, (Seattle) is his home, where he shined as a player, and won a lot of things with the club. Am curious to see how Lodeiro and Montero match up on the field.</p>
<h2>MLS Provided a piece of mind</h2>
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<figure class="image">   <img loading="lazy" data-height="412" data-width="740" data-size="w:740,h:412" hspace="5" vspace="5" src="https://bolavip.com/__export/1617114002284/sites/bolavip/img/2021/03/30/alvaro_fernandez_of_uruguay_during_the_2010_fifa_world_cup_south_africa_crop1617114001839.jpg_22069893.jpg" width="740" height="412"><figcaption>    Alvaro Fernandez of Uruguay during the 2010 FIFA World Cup South Africa (Getty)   </figcaption></figure>
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<p><strong>B:</strong> How did playing in MLS come about? You just finished being a semifinalist in the World Cup with Uruguay, the media in Montevideo said you were going to Washington, thinking it was DC United, how did the deal with the Sounders happen?</p>
<p><strong>AF:</strong> Funny thing is I really didn’t have much of an idea, I was just coming back from the World Cup and my mind was on that. To be honest what really motivated me to sign with the Sounders was the contract the team offered in terms of years on the deal. It provided me a peace of mind not only economically but moving my family as well. Then researching the club before I left, I thought it was the right place to continue my career.</p>
<p><strong>B: </strong>Your coach was Sigi Schmid, how was it like to have him as a coach?</p>
<p><strong>AF: </strong>I have the fondest memories of Sigi! Even though we used to argue a lot, because he would sub me out of games often. I used to get mad, but one day he pulled me aside and told me, “If I take you out it’s because your level is dropping off or you’re not providing me with what I need. No head coach subs a player out that’s playing good.” I learned a lot from him, and I was very saddened to hear of his passing. Sigi was a coach that left a mark in me and taught me a lot and I have the best memories of Sigi.</p>
<p><strong>B:</strong> How was Sigi with the group? How was his interaction with the players?</p>
<p><strong>AF:</strong> Sigi had two sides to him, during the week he was a very easy-going person, we used to joke with Sigi, but come game day and post-game, if we played badly or lost, the post-game speech was brutal! Sigi wouldn’t hold back, and at times as players we’d get taken a bit back, but the players understood what his role as a coach was and he was an excellent coach.</p>
<p><strong>B: </strong>You had a bit of a playing time “war” with Steve Zakuani, you guys would rotate often on the left, how was that like during the week, that competition week in and week out?</p>
<p><strong>AF:</strong> Yeah, I remember we would rotate, Steve would play and then I would play. When I first arrived, I was happy to see the high level the players had. Sometimes I’d be on the right and Steve on the left, in those years there was also Sanna Nyassi, he also played very well. It wasn’t easy to crack that starting eleven, and unfortunately when I started to find my groove and had that really good 2011 season, it sort of happened as a result of the devastating injury Steve (Zakuani) suffered in Colorado. I kept my spot on the team because of that, but that aside, we all got along quite well, it was a great group.</p>
<h2>“I didn’t want to go to Chicago”</h2>
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<figure class="image">   <img loading="lazy" data-height="412" data-width="740" data-size="w:740,h:412" hspace="5" vspace="5" src="https://bolavip.com/__export/1617112894153/sites/bolavip/img/2021/03/30/alvaro_fernandez_x4_of_the_chicago_fire_crop1617112893747.jpg_22069893.jpg" width="740" height="412"><figcaption>    Alvaro Fernandez #4 of the Chicago Fire (Getty)   </figcaption></figure>
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<p><strong>B: </strong>Was it strange to get traded to Chicago? You being from South America and falling victim to an American sports tradition of being traded from one day to the next?</p>
<p><strong>AF:</strong> To be honest it really hurt a lot, and when I returned in 2016, I said that to upper management. It really hurt me to leave Seattle at the time, how it all came about. I had a really good 2011 and started out well in 2012, then I get injured and a few weeks later I come back score a few goals and started finding my rhythm, then three days before an Open Cup final I get traded… It hurt a lot and I did not want to leave. In a way that contributed to my huge dip in form in Chicago. I simply did not want to leave Seattle. In the United States I was only interested in playing for Seattle. In a way I always wanted to come back after that trade and well, thankfully, I was able to play again for the club.</p>
<p><strong>B: </strong>Is it hard to carry the backpack of being a DP in MLS?</p>
<p><strong>AF: </strong>Well, I remember being one of the first Uruguayans to go the MLS… I was a bit unconscious of the whole thing, I remember hearing the phrase “DP” and had no clue what it meant. Until one day they told me that I was a franchise player and it’s a given that when one goes abroad, and those things are attached to the player coming in the expectations are high… Any player that is imported to a league and takes the spot of a local talent has to be better than those players, it’s an unwritten law.</p>
<p><strong>B: </strong>You have played in various leagues before and after MLS, in the Middle East, Argentina, Chile, and now in Uruguay. What did you see in MLS that these leagues can learn a bit from MLS or vice versa?</p>
<p><strong>AF:</strong> Well, I was surprised, well really not surprised by how organized MLS is. When you think about the United States you know you are going to an organized country. The MLS had strict guidelines which made things easier, a game starts at 4PM it starts at 4PM, here in South America a game has a certain kick off time and it might start 15 minutes later. The training fields were top class as well as the hotels we had to stay in. It was a top league in that regards. And honestly, I don’t think the MLS has anything left to learn from South America, the fans are just as passionate. I think it’s a league that will continue to grow.</p>
<h2>“Boca and River are selling players to MLS and that was unheard of a few years ago”</h2>
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<figure class="image">   <img loading="lazy" data-height="412" data-width="740" data-size="w:740,h:412" hspace="5" vspace="5" src="https://bolavip.com/__export/1617113118708/sites/bolavip/img/2021/03/30/alvaro_fernandez_crop1617113118364.jpg_22069893.jpg" width="740" height="412"><figcaption>    Alvaro Fernandez playing for Plaza Colonia in Uruguay (FocoUY)   </figcaption></figure>
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<p><strong>B: </strong>You said something interesting about South American soccer, is South American soccer behind the times? Today European clubs have set up academies in South America and players are leaving at younger ages not even playing for their local clubs.</p>
<p><strong>AF: </strong>I think economically it’s all a factor, here we need to sell to survive, if you look across all of South America even the big clubs need to sell players, and big clubs have a hard time keeping a team together. Boca and River are selling players to the MLS and that was unheard of a few years ago. You have players who won Copa Libertadores that have moved to MLS and that was simply not heard of.</p>
<p><strong>B:</strong> Of the Uruguayan’s that are in the MLS, what do you think about Diego Rossi’s future?</p>
<p><strong>AF:</strong> Diego has had a huge impact since going to MLS, he is a complete player, I have no doubts he will be the next big signing to go abroad. He has the typical traits of a Uruguayan player and great quality.</p>
<p><strong>B:</strong> How was it seen within the Uruguayan national team to go to MLS?</p>
<p><strong>AF:</strong> Well at first the boys used to joke about my vacation time! Three months that’s awesome! (laughs) They would say you can come home for the Summer. (In Uruguay the summer months are between November – February). You’re in the best league because of the vacation time! But they would always ask about the level how was it like to play in a such a big country.</p>
<p><strong>B:</strong> You came to MLS in a time when established South American players would come to the league are you shocked to see that players who are in that U-23 range from Uruguay, Argentina, even Brazil are going to MLS and view it as a springboard to Europe?</p>
<p><strong>AF:</strong> It’s incredible and there is no denying MLS is a springboard to Europe nowadays. Today MLS is seen all over the world, in Uruguay if you used to get 5 games it was a lot, today you can view the whole season from start to finish. The player sees the stadiums, fans, and the cities and as a player it’s very tempting. It’s a great destination to move up the ladder.</p>
<p><strong>B: </strong>That last year with the Sounders you were able to win MLS Cup was it a great way to finish your MLS career? Or would you have liked it to go on a bit longer?</p>
<p><strong>AF:</strong> Well, really, I knew I was going back to Seattle for 1 season. The reality was economically it was a one-year deal through and through. I went back not for the money but rather a chance to go back to a team I really have close to my heart and winning the cup was a great way to close the circle.</p>
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          <dc:creator><![CDATA[Kelvin Loyola]]></dc:creator>
          <category><![CDATA[Soccer]]></category>

          

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          <guid isPermaLink="true">https://bolavip.com/en/soccer/the-top-7-all-time-best-uruguayan-players-in-mls-history-20210329-0005.html</guid>
          <title>The best Uruguayan players in MLS history</title>
          <link><![CDATA[https://bolavip.com/en/soccer/the-top-7-all-time-best-uruguayan-players-in-mls-history-20210329-0005.html]]></link>
          <pubDate>Mon, 04 Aug 2025 11:15:52 -0400</pubDate>
          <description><![CDATA[The small South American country has recently begun to provide a lot of national team caliber talent to the league. Here are the best Charruas to play in MLS. <p>The small country of <a href="https://bolavip.com/en/uruguay-t141787" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Uruguay</a>, with a population of just over 3.5 million is a soccer paradise, it has produced great players like<strong> <a href="https://bolavip.com/en/soccer/garra-charrua-the-top-25-greatest-uruguayan-players-of-all-time-20221028-0057.html" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Luis Suárez, Diego Forlán</a>, and MLS great Nicolás Lodeiro.</strong>More and more players from Uruguay have begun to grace the fields of MLS teams with Facundo Torres being the latest big name addition.</p>
<p>Recent arrivals such asGastón Brugman and Martín Cácerescontinue the influx of players from the two-time FIFA World Cup champions. <strong><a href="https://bolavip.com/en/soccer/lafcs-diego-rossi-the-next-big-mls-outgoing-transfer-20201013-0001.html" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Diego Rossi</a></strong>, the 2020 MLS Golden Boot winner, is by far one of the best imports from Uruguay and recently one of the league’s best exports.</p>
<p>While not always being represented by huge numbers, Uruguayans have played in every era of <a href="https://bolavip.com/en/topic/mls" target="_blank" rel="noopener">MLS</a>. <strong>Here are the top Uruguayans to play in Major League Soccer!</strong></p>
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<h2>Adrián Paz</h2>
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<figure class="image">   <img loading="lazy" data-height="412" data-width="740" data-size="w:740,h:412" hspace="5" vspace="5" src="https://bolavip.com/__export/1617025226054/sites/bolavip/img/2021/03/29/adrixn_paz_xas_deportesx_crop1617025225717.jpg_22069893.jpg" width="740" height="412"><figcaption>    Adrián Paz (AS Deportes)   </figcaption></figure>
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<p>The first Uruguayan signed by the league, <strong>Adrián Paz</strong>, played one season for the Columbus Crew and later two years with the Colorado Rapids. Paz was a quick and elegant winger that scored 12 goals in 80 games in MLS. Paz also scored a fantastic goal for the Rapids in the 2-1 MLS Cup defeat to DC United in 1997.</p>
<h2>Cristian Techera</h2>
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<figure class="image">   <img loading="lazy" data-height="412" data-width="740" data-size="w:740,h:412" hspace="5" vspace="5" src="https://bolavip.com/__export/1617025179743/sites/bolavip/img/2021/03/29/cristian_techera_xmlsx_crop1617025179392.jpg_22069893.jpg" width="740" height="412"><figcaption>    Cristian Techera (MLS)   </figcaption></figure>
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<p>The little winger, <strong>Cristian Techera</strong> might not have been a big name, but he certainly surprised many with his finishing and hustle. 23 goals in 101 games for the Whitecaps, he was a pest for opposing defenders and was nicknamed “the bug”.</p>
<h2>Nicolás Mezquida</h2>
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<figure class="image">   <img loading="lazy" data-height="412" data-width="740" data-size="w:740,h:412" hspace="5" vspace="5" src="https://bolavip.com/__export/1672081079189/sites/bolavip/img/2022/12/26/nicolxs_mezquida_crop1672081078871.jpg_22069893.jpg" width="740" height="412"><figcaption>    Nicolás Mezquida(Getty Images)   </figcaption></figure>
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<p><strong>Nicolás Mezquida</strong> was a journeyman player in Uruguay before coming to MLS and playing for the Vancouver Whitecaps. The tricky midfielder played 101 games and scored 12 goals for the Canadian team, at times being a sub. Later from 2019-2022 Nicolás Mezquida played 80 games and scored 6 goals for the Colorado Rapids. Never a true starter but always ready when called upon, Mezquida would leave MLS to play in Greece at 30 years of age.</p>
<h2>Vicente Sánchez</h2>
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<figure class="image">   <img loading="lazy" data-height="412" data-width="740" data-size="w:740,h:412" hspace="5" vspace="5" src="https://bolavip.com/__export/1617025127534/sites/bolavip/img/2021/03/29/vicente_sxnchez_crop1617025127036.jpg_22069893.jpg" width="740" height="412"><figcaption>    Vicente Sánchez (Getty)   </figcaption></figure>
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<p><strong>Vicente Sánchez</strong> came to MLS to be a role player and lead by experience. He took that and ran with it as Sánchez became a fan favorite at Colorado. 13 goals in 76 games in MLS his leadership was what you got, while in Houston his play was limited the Uruguayan’s best body of work was with the Rapids.</p>
<h2>Marcelo Silva</h2>
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<figure class="image">   <img loading="lazy" data-height="412" data-width="740" data-size="w:740,h:412" hspace="5" vspace="5" src="https://bolavip.com/__export/1672081144981/sites/bolavip/img/2022/12/26/marcelo_silva_crop1672081144487.jpg_22069893.jpg" width="740" height="412"><figcaption>    Marcelo Silva(Getty Images)   </figcaption></figure>
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<p>Building a quiet career as a solid defender for RSL, <strong>Marcelo Silva</strong> came to the league after stops in Valladolid and Zaragoza. Since 2017, Silva has been one of the top defenders and leaders for Real Salt Lake and will continue to play for them this season. </p>
<h2>Álvaro Fernández</h2>
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<figure class="image">   <img loading="lazy" data-height="412" data-width="740" data-size="w:740,h:412" hspace="5" vspace="5" src="https://bolavip.com/__export/1617025028244/sites/bolavip/img/2021/03/29/xlvaro_fernxndez_crop1617025027881.jpg_22069893.jpg" width="740" height="412"><figcaption>    Álvaro Fernández (Getty)   </figcaption></figure>
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<p><strong>Álvaro Fernández</strong> was one of the first DPs in Seattle Sounders history, coming fresh off of Uruguay’s 2010 semifinal run in the World Cup. Flaco did not disappoint, 13 goals in 59 games, he was an integral part of the club’s two US Open Cups in 2010 and 2011. Fernández later went to the Fire where he was loaned out to various teams and in 2016 he returned to the Sounders to win the 2016 MLS Cup.</p>
<h2>Santiago Rodríguez</h2>
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<figure class="image">   <img loading="lazy" data-height="412" data-width="740" data-size="w:740,h:412" hspace="5" vspace="5" src="https://bolavip.com/__export/1672081210788/sites/bolavip/img/2022/12/26/santiago_rodrxguez_crop1672081210440.jpg_22069893.jpg" width="740" height="412"><figcaption>    Santiago Rodríguez (Getty Images)   </figcaption></figure>
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<p>Arriving to NYCFC via Montevideo City Torque in Uruguay, the speedy winger has improved tenfold in MLS. <strong>Santiago Rodríguez </strong>really took on a different level in 2022 and at the moment he is out of contract and with offers to play in Brazil and Europe. In MLS Santiago Rodríguez scored 7 goals in 53 games with 2022 being his best season, earning him a call up to the Uruguayan national team.</p>
<h2>Facundo Torres</h2>
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<figure class="image">   <img loading="lazy" data-height="412" data-width="740" data-size="w:740,h:412" hspace="5" vspace="5" src="https://bolavip.com/__export/1672081261709/sites/bolavip/img/2022/12/26/facundo_torres_crop1672081261339.jpg_22069893.jpg" width="740" height="412"><figcaption>    Facundo Torres (Getty Images)   </figcaption></figure>
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<p><strong>Facundo Torres</strong> may only have one year under his belt in MLS but already he is leaving a lasting legacy, instrumental in Orlando City’s first ever championship the 2022 US Open Cup, Torres has drawn interest from Arsenal of the Premier League and was on Uruguay’s 2022 World Cup squad. Look for 2023 to be Facundo Torres’s big year and most likely a big money move to Europe.</p>
<h2>Mauricio Pereyra</h2>
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<figure class="image">   <img loading="lazy" data-height="412" data-width="740" data-size="w:740,h:412" hspace="5" vspace="5" src="https://bolavip.com/__export/1672081374258/sites/bolavip/img/2022/12/26/mauricio_pereyra_crop1672081373805.jpg_22069893.jpg" width="740" height="412"><figcaption>    Mauricio Pereyra (Getty Images)   </figcaption></figure>
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<p>The former Nacional of Uruguay talent came to Orlando City after seven years in Russia and has been excellent as the team’s creative leader for The Lions. <strong>Mauricio Pereyra</strong> has 6 goals in 96 matches for the club and was also a big part of their US Open Cup triumph in 2022. </p>
<h2>Diego Fagúndez</h2>
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<figure class="image">   <img loading="lazy" data-height="412" data-width="740" data-size="w:740,h:412" hspace="5" vspace="5" src="https://bolavip.com/__export/1617024949264/sites/bolavip/img/2021/03/29/diego_fagxndez_xsportsyoux_crop1617024948858.jpg_22069893.jpg" width="740" height="412"><figcaption>    Diego Fagúndez (Univision Deportes)   </figcaption></figure>
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<p><strong>Diego Fagúndez</strong> is only 27, but he seems to have been around forever. Born in Montevideo, he and his family moved to Massachusetts when Diego was 5 years old. The homegrown talent made his big-league debut in 2011 and would play 280games and score 54goals for the Revs. In 2021 Fagúndez was traded to Austin FC to revitalize his career, he did and has 14 goals in 71 games.</p>
<h2>Diego Rossi</h2>
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<figure class="image">   <img loading="lazy" data-height="412" data-width="740" data-size="w:740,h:412" hspace="5" vspace="5" src="https://bolavip.com/__export/1617024905862/sites/bolavip/img/2021/03/29/diego_rossi_crop1617024905497.jpg_22069893.jpg" width="740" height="412"><figcaption>    Diego Rossi (Getty)   </figcaption></figure>
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<p>The former Peñarol youth product was nothing but money in MLS, 48goals in 104games, Rossi was recently called up to various Uruguay national team squads for World Cup Qualifiers. <strong>Diego Rossi</strong>was eventually sold to Turkish club Fenerbahçe for a reported $10 million.</p>
<h2>Nicolás Lodeiro</h2>
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<figure class="image">   <img loading="lazy" data-height="412" data-width="740" data-size="w:740,h:412" hspace="5" vspace="5" src="https://bolavip.com/__export/1617024850311/sites/bolavip/img/2021/03/29/nicolxs_lodeiro_crop1617024849906.jpg_22069893.jpg" width="740" height="412"><figcaption>    Nicolás Lodeiro (Getty)   </figcaption></figure>
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<p><strong>Nicolás Lodeiro</strong> is by far the greatest player to play in MLS from Uruguay. The former Nacional product came to MLS after a successful stint at Boca Juniors and immediately became a game changer for the Rave Green. Lodeiro has won 2 MLS Cups and the league’s first ever Concacaf Champions League. Heis the team captain and one of the league’s best midfielders. The only thing Sounders fans regret is that he did not play more with Clint Dempsey as they were forming a lethal one-two punch.</p>
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          <dc:creator><![CDATA[Kelvin Loyola]]></dc:creator>
          <category><![CDATA[Soccer]]></category>

          

          <media:content url="https://media.bolavip.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/10/2024/08/28045034/nicolxs_lodeiro_coverjpg_242310155-1200x740.webp" type="image/jpeg" medium="image" width="1200" height="740">

                <media:description type="plain"><![CDATA[Nicolás Lodeiro (Getty)]]></media:description>

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