If America has been ‘stealing’ Liga MX for a year and a half, it’s because they have world-class players, right?
Considering how dominant and historic the Azulgrema have been in the last three short matches, one would think that their squad is far superior to the other top contenders in Mexican football, but are their players good enough to shine? Even in Europe?
with Artificial intelligence from the platform Comparator‘Transfer’ the best players from the 16-times Liga MX winners to the four biggest leagues in Europe and check if their status (their code) is enough to make them transcendent elements.
This is what America’s stars look like in Spain, England, Italy and Germany.
Luis Malacon, 167 as goalkeeper
· 14th place in La Liga
· 14th place in Serie A
· 15° a Bundesliga
· 23° in the Premier League
Henry Martin, 167 as a center forward
· 20th place in La Liga
· 24th place in Serie A
· 24° A Bundesliga
· 26° in the Premier League
Brian Rodriguez, 230 as a winger
· 7th in Serie A
· 7th place in La Liga
· 9° A Bundesliga
· 23 in the Premier League
Alejandro Zendejas, 175 as a midfielder
· 11° A Bundesliga
· 12th place in Serie A
· 18th place in La Liga
· 27° in the Premier League
Alvaro Fidalgo, 155 as a midfielder
· 24th place in Serie A
· 27° in the Premier League
· 28th place in La Liga
· 28° A Bundesliga
Ramon Juarez as the 175-year-old security guard
· 44th place in La Liga
· 48° in the Premier League
· 55° A Bundesliga
55° in Serie A
Disappointed? No matter how much the US devours Mexican football, the truth is that its players are the only superstars in Liga MX (that’s their status), because when it comes to trying to measure it against the world’s elite, ’Roito’ and Zendejas are the only ones in Europe.
The U.S. was the winning team in Mexico and became the first team in history to win three titles, but that doesn’t mean Liga MX is bigger or more deserving individually.