Following
the disastrous U-17 World Cup in India for a Mexican side unable to win one
single of its four matches, fans and pundits alike began fearing for Diego
Lainez's future. Should the Club America bright prospect head as soon as possible
to Europe to raise his game?
The idea
which underlies that question is whether Liga MX can currently help develop
young Mexican players and increase the pool of talent for the national team.
So far, the
Apertura 2017 is demonstrating that no club can afford to line-up more than one
or two players younger than 20 years old. Even coaches as different as the
experienced José Manuel 'Chepo' de la Torre and the rookie Jaime 'Jimmy' Lozano
struggled getting results while handing opportunities.
'Chepo' did
lose his job. And 'Jimmy' could be the next one to get the sack.
With De la
Torre on the bench, Santos Laguna would have up to four youngsters in their starting eleven:
Gerardo Arteaga and Jorge Sánchez (both full-backs), Gael Sandoval (a fine
midfielder) and Ulises Rivas (a quite interesting deep-lying playmaker).
Having
managed Gallos Blancos' U-20 side, Lozano was promoted after Víctor Manuel
Vucetich's dismissal last season. The youngest of all Liga MX coaches
immediately promoted in his turn the likes of Jordi Cortizo and Paolo Yrizar, both of them
born in Querétaro, both of them attackers.
However,
neither Santos Laguna nor Querétaro have been doing well in the Apertura. Pumas and
Chivas, which also have relied on their youth ranks for this season, occupy the
bottom of the table.
Perhaps the
blueprint on how to handle youngters belongs to Antonio Mohamed's Monterrey.
Jonathan González is indisputably the rookie of the Apertura, being the only
starter whose age is below 20 years old within a midfield which boasts Paraguayan
international Celso Ortiz, Uruguayan international Carlos Sánchez and Mexican
international Jesús Molina.
González is
yet to receive a senior call-up either from Mexico, or from the USMNT, and become
cap-tied internationally.
'Me la
jugaré con los chavos' ('I will dare handing chances to young players') is
something of a populist watchword nowadays in Liga MX: sounds great, but sorting
it out on the pitch, and get the results, is tough business.
Club
América requires serious internal discussions on the future of Lainez. Together
with González, he is one of the league's most talented prospects and, like
González, he will need to grow up within a squad of grown-ups.
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