Talent available but MLS draft diluted with clubs developing homegrown players
Talent is available Thursday but the MLS SuperDraft does not pack the punch it once did, with clubs focusing on developing their own talent via homegrown players.
Still, Canadians Ryan Raposo (Syracuse), Alistair Johnston (Wake Forrest) and Dayonn Harris (UConn) hope to be front and centre when 26 MLS teams, including expansion Inter Miami and Nashville, make their picks.
“I think the draft has substantially changed over the years, because teams have invested so much in their own player development systems — in terms of their academy and their reserve teams,” said Toronto FC GM Ali Curtis, who went second overall to Tampa Bay in the 2001 draft.
“If you looked at the crop of young players that are becoming pros, a lot of those young homegrown players would otherwise be top draft picks,” he added. “In that sense, the draft is somewhat diluted.”