The arrival of Lionel Messi in MLS marked a clear turning point for soccer in the United States, but not everyone agrees that he was the player who could have had the greatest overall impact on the league.
Brek Shea, a former Inter Miami player, has revived a long-running debate by claiming that Cristiano Ronaldo would have generated an even greater effect on the competition’s growth and exposure. The argument shifts the focus from results on the field to influence beyond it.
Speaking publicly, the former US defender explained that his assessment has little to do with sporting performance and far more with media reach and cultural presence. Shea argued that Cristiano Ronaldo’s personality, his command of the language and his constant visibility away from the pitch would have aligned instantly with the US market. In his view, the fit would have been immediate and natural.
The comments were amplified by Diario Olé, which highlighted how Shea’s words reignited the comparison between two figures who defined an era in world soccer. Shea stressed that the point was not to diminish Messi’s legacy, but rather to understand impact from a different angle – one tied more closely to entertainment and the US sports industry. It was a reminder that stardom can be measured in more than trophies.
“I think Cristiano Ronaldo would have had a greater impact on MLS than Lionel Messi. With no disrespect to Messi, but Messi seems like a homebody. He’s very quiet. He still doesn’t speak the language well. So I just think Ronaldo comes across as more extroverted and does more things in the public eye,” Shea said. The contrast he drew was as much about personality as popularity.
Messi, for his part, has already produced numbers and trophies that underline his influence in MLS, along with a clear commercial boost for Inter Miami and the league as a whole. Even so, Shea’s remarks reflect a recurring discussion in North American soccer about what type of superstar accelerates global visibility most quickly. Success, in this context, is not only counted in goals.
As a result, MLS once again finds itself at the center of a rivalry that stretches across continents. While Messi is already an undisputed figure in the league’s present, the comparison with Cristiano Ronaldo shows that the debate over total impact – on and off the field – remains wide open. And it is unlikely to fade anytime soon.
Scoba2468
69
No cap
Bright1Isaac
63
This is a wonderful impact to the Saudi league indeed
Dekclmnu
29
Never heard of this guy but good to hear his opinion anyway...
duhdelprtu
28
did he even see the most watched leagues in 2025 Saudi League was not in top 10 which impact do he mean , pain lent in his mind and heart
gm11
27
Messi joined the mls a already known league cause he wanted to be closer to home. Not cause he wants to grow the league. Like Ronaldo in Saudi league who's trying to grow the league. Worked a lil but lots of the Europeans have left already. Cause it's a bad league. And cultural differences nah not into ittttt.
Reublmnyz
25
and Saudi stadia are still empty🤣🤣
Mipabcmrsz
21
Hahaha 🤣🤣 nice joke Ronaldo doesn't have any impact for top seeded team in al nassar
DMICHAELSinc
8
No cap
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Don't kid yourself kid.👶🍼 They brought two players in focus as it concern branding You are busy coming with the leagues tv ratings. Is the debate about the league or about two player and who would have done a better job?? This how you fail in your exams, after instructions has been given.🤦 The players were bought to increase the ratings. That is the reason why MLS will make sure the officiating favors Messi to win games and win trophies, so that people can follow the league, America's ability to spin it to be attractive in that sense is unarguable, we have seen that in WWE, and we all know that they have the audience and tools to pull that off, which Saudi people can't do. PLS NOTE THAT THE LEAGUE RATINGS HAS BEEN THERE BEFORE MESSI GOT THERE, it's not Messi that made it so, therefore, you are wasting your energy on this, but they are still trying very hard to manipulate to make sure Messi is followed, but he's not that good off the pitch, so sorry guys this your post make no sense. Unlike Cr7, as soon as he stepped into Saudi league, everyone focused on that part of the world that people never thought it will be so, cos as he moves, everybody on socials Media moves with him, and you know the traffic that he has on socials. We never thought they play good football there. The best of Saudi, will beat the best of MLS right now, fact!. We saw that at the world club cup where other clubs find it difficult to beat the best of Saudi "Al' Hilal, even Man city fell to their fire power. CR7 is not even playing for the best of Saudi, cos he want competition. These is objectivity, not your emotional outburst.🤪