Sports

Building Atlanta United: Pros and cons of Miroslav Klose

By Doug Roberson
June 20, 2016

This is another in a series in which AJC reporter Doug Roberson will begin to look at Atlanta United’s possible player signings ahead of their 2017 inaugural season in MLS. Some potential signings, like Zlatan Ibrahimovic, may be considered fanciful, and rightfully so. Some may be so practical as to be obvious.

You can follow Roberson for news about Atlanta United on twitter @DougRobersonAJC, and bookmark the paper's Atlanta United page.

Here is the series so far:

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A few months ago, Goal.com compiled a list of players whose contracts will expire at the end of this European soccer season, which is just about done.

That means those players are available on free transfers, a much cheaper way of filling key spots on a team, and a possibly great way for Atlanta United to start to fill out its roster.

However, buyer beware.

There are usually pretty good reasons why some players haven’t had contracts extended or renegotiated.

Other players, such as Zlatan Ibrahimovic, simply wanted their contracts to run out.

These are players who I think may fit the criteria that Atlanta United president Darren Eales and technical director Carlos Bocanegra have laid out:

Some may be players who probably fall into the level below the Designated Player level and into the Targeted Allocation Money group.

I’m not going to differentiate between those two groups in this series.

I again remind you this reflects my opinions only:

Miroslav Klose, forward

formerly of Lazio

The Cris Carter of soccer: all he does is score goals, with more 200 in his career, including 64 for Lazio. He reportedly has an interest in MLS.

Pros: Scores, scored and scores. A valuable commodity for any team. He has also won World Cups, a fine line on any resume'.

It seems that he still wants to play, telling ESPN: “I don’t know what I will do next. I’ve told my agent that I just want to enjoy myself right now and then we will evaluate what to do next.”

He has the size to be a target forward and a strong ability to read the game. You don’t score that many goals simply by being lucky.

Cons: Will soon turn 38 years old and is no longer as quick as he once was. As MLS teams are discovering, bringing in aging stars from Europe doesn't always result in expected benefits.

About the Author

Doug Roberson covers the Atlanta United and Major League Soccer.

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