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Juan Agudelo on Atletico's radar; let's hope he makes good choices

Juan Agudelo's celebrates earlier this year after beating Seattle's Kasey Keller in MLS.

Juan Agudelo will soon have a choice. Check that. If the young Red Bulls forward keeps improving, keeps trending upward, he’s got a career full of choices ahead. He, like all pro athletes, will settle into a professional life that requires constant evaluation, market valuation and re-evaluation.

Word is out that Atletico Madrid has Agudelo on its radar. This is a development every bit as surprising as mint in my back yard turning into mojitos – something that happens a lot.  Agudelo is a promising young striker, with two goals in his first four U.S. national team appearances. He has just one MLS goal this year but continues to look dangerous.  Last week against Philly the 18-year-old striker banged one off the post and another off the crossbar in the first 31 minutes. That ain’t bad.

So … he’ll have big choices to make soon.  Europe beckons, with fame, fortune, high fashion, high speed trains, too many unflattering stereotypes … and its ample soccer culture. There’s a lot of attraction there. But the Sirens of Greek mythology were attractive, too. So, read on for a few things I desperately hope the young man considers.

Star-divide

First, New York is no bad place to be for a promising young player. For all of you MLS snobs who will say Agudelo simply MUST haul ass to Europe for his game to improve, I say this: playing in MLS is infinitely more productive than riding the pine anywhere in the world. Period.

New York will potentially play 40-45 competitive games this year. Agudelo will feature in most of them if he’s healthy. The way he’s performing, he’ll be a starter in most of them.

Hans Backe has already shown himself to be a worthy coach in MLS, so that’s a plus for a young player. Agudelo can learn a lot from the man. Speaking of learning, Thierry Henry isn’t getting the job done at the moment, but who can deny the man’s wealth of knowledge? And the famous Frenchman seems willing to share, to pass the wisdom down to any eager deputies.

If all that isn’t enough, let’s quickly discuss a few other young, promising attackers who prowled MLS grounds before Agudelo.

We all remember little Freddy Adu. Quick, where’s he playing? Oh, yes … Caykur Rizespor.  Ahem.  You knew that, right?  Two things you should know about Caykur Rizespor. First, it might make your spell check collapse. And second, they play in the SECOND level of Turkish soccer.  Anyone think that’s better than MLS?

Jozy Altidore is earning his wages in Turkey, too. He’s at Bursaspor. At least that club is in the top flight.

Anyone remember Chris Rolfe? He’s in Denmark playing for Aalborg BK. Actually, he’s not playing much. He was on the bench once again over the weekend.

Sacha Kljestan is playing a little more regularly at Anderlecht in Belgium, but he’s hardly a lineup staple.

Look, the point is this: Major League Soccer isn’t a bad place to be, especially when playing time in actual matches is so important for ongoing development. Nothing is guaranteed, of course.  He could drop in form, or some bad habits could infect his ways on the Red Bulls training ground. But his chances of featuring regularly fall dramatically if he takes a dash for the cash abroad.

Yes, he’ll make more money if he does make a move across the Atlantic. So, in that regard, it’s tough to say, “Don’t go.”  Then again, if you want to see Agudelo continue to develop, and if you want him in the best position to play in World Cup qualifiers over the next two years, with an eye toward Brazil 2014, then you’d better hope he remains right where he is today … in a Red Bulls uniform, playing in a beautiful MLS stadium.

By the way, if he does stick around, and is able to play at World Cup 2014, he’ll be 22 years old as the World Cup finishes. At that point, the conversation is very different. The calculus of whether he should or shouldn’t take his game abroad is altered dramatically. And again, he’s only 22 at that point! Plenty of time to rise, 8-10 good years ahead, at least.

Personally, I hope he gets good advice and sees all that. Some call it “the big picture.”

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If it was pretty much any team but Aletico, I would agree...

The recent history of Aletico and developing strikers is quite strong. This is the one team that I wouldn’t argue against a young forward moving to at this stage in his career.

Managing Editor for Brotherly Game, SBNation's Philadelphia Union blog and contributor for SBN Philly. // @scottdkessler
"College is only 4 years, but the Eagles are for life." - Ironhank

by Scott Kessler on Apr 12, 2011 1:13 PM EDT reply actions  

You have a good point about Atletico

… but that only moves the needle a wee bit in my book.

by Steve Davis on Apr 12, 2011 4:51 PM EDT up reply actions  

I'll never be fully for someone of his age/stature leaving so young.

(Boy did I spell Atletico wrong in my first comment. Wow)

Atletico is one of those clubs that instills confidence in me, rather than despair, in terms of building up young players. He’d see playing time at some point with them, possibly sooner than one might think. One striker is going to be gone from the team after this season (I’m not counting on him being Forlan) and Agudelo would be a great complement to whomever remains.

That being said, your plan of not caring as much post 2014-World Cup is something I can agree with.

Managing Editor for Brotherly Game, SBNation's Philadelphia Union blog and contributor for SBN Philly. // @scottdkessler
"College is only 4 years, but the Eagles are for life." - Ironhank

by Scott Kessler on Apr 12, 2011 8:44 PM EDT up reply actions  

No way they can sell him...

With a permanently injured Henry and few other good options up front, I cannot see the Red Bulls even considering a sale at this time, unless the transfer fee were enormous.

by Matthew Conroy on Apr 12, 2011 2:28 PM EDT reply actions  

To me there was one line in this more important than anything else
playing in MLS is infinitely more productive than riding the pine anywhere in the world. Period.

He’s not going to hurt his development by staying in MLS a year or two. An unfortunate injury forced Holden back to the states. Would he have had as much success when he finally made it to the EPL if he didn’t spend a few years refining his game in Houston? I doubt it. Holden needed that time to develop. Would Adu have developed more if he had stayed in MLS rather than bouncing around lower level European Clubs? There’s no way to know for sure, but it probably couldn’t have hurt.

Even if Aguedelo does become the transcendent superstar that US soccer has been looking for a year or two developing his game here is only going to make the learning curve a little easier when he does move. It will also probably rake in a higher transfer fee for Red Bulls if Aguedelo can become a consistent force for the USMNT.

"Well, at least our players kept their helmets on, so that showed some intelligence"-Bob McNair

by papabear on Apr 12, 2011 2:50 PM EDT reply actions  

The youngster has talent!

I think Juan Agudelo is the next Landon Donovan for the U.S. Men’s National Team. The 2014 FIFA World Cup (pending qualification) will be as bright for Juan as the 2002 tournament was for Landon in Korea and Japan, where he became a breakthrough star.

by jdoro63 on Apr 12, 2011 8:02 PM EDT reply actions  

I Think the Reality of the Situation

Is that He Is Going to Play Where there is the Most $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ for him, just like 99.9% of every other professional athlete who has not yet gotten their pay day.

The reality is there just is not that much money in MLS.

But if its just a 5% difference in pay and the playing time is going to be significantly more with the less money, sure, that makes sense.

by Cool Dudes on Apr 16, 2011 9:52 PM EDT reply actions  

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