
Mark Delgado ready to embark on ‘next chapter' as part of LAFC roster overhaul
Mark Delgado was born and raised in Southern California and played six MLS seasons here. But last Friday, he joked, was the first time he worried about getting lost on his way to practice.
'I had to pull out the GPS and make sure I was going the right way,' Delgado said after his first training session with LAFC in a back corner of the Cal State L.A. campus.
The reigning MLS champion Galaxy, struggling to squeeze under the league salary cap, sent Delgado up the freeway last week when it traded him to LAFC for $400,000 in general allocation money. For Delgado, the deal was both a surprise and an opportunity.
'It was interesting how everything went down. But at the end of the day, there's rules in this league,' he said, referencing the salary cap. 'So no hard feelings. I said my goodbyes to close that chapter on a good note and it's on to the next chapter, right?'
That next chapter could be one of the best in what has already been a storybook career.
Delgado, who also spent seven seasons in Toronto, has won two MLS Cups, a Supporters' Shield and three Canadian Championships. Just 29, he's played 13 years in MLS and figures to be entering the prime of his career after setting a career high for appearances last season with 32 and matching his career high for starts with 29. With LAFC, Delgado's durability and versatility — he can play as both a defensive midfielder and a central midfielder — will help make up for the loss of veterans Ilie Sánchez, Eduard Atuesta, Lewis O'Brien and Mateusz Bogusz, who was second on the team in both goals and assists in 2024. Plus his passing ability could change the way LAFC plays.
In coach Greg Vanney's possession-based game with the Galaxy, Delgado ranked eighth in the league in passing last season, completing more than 91% of the nearly 2,000 passes he attempted. No LAFC midfielder attempted more than 1,311 passes and only one completed as many as 90% of his tries.
Delgado, general manager John Thorrington said 'has always been one of the most underrated players in our league. He is the type of guy that every successful team needs.'
Especially a team that finds itself in another transformative offseason. After reaching the MLS Cup final in each of the two previous seasons, LAFC won the regular-season Western Conference title in 2024 but was eliminated by Seattle in extra time in the second round of the playoffs.
Eleven players from that team are gone and though LAFC has already opened training camp, Thorrington is still filling out his roster.
'Once this group becomes more complete, you will see us two deep in every position,' he said. 'With the announcements to come, we're adding some real key additions that know the league, that know what it takes to win in this league.
'This will be up there with maybe the deepest group we've had to start a season.'
For Delgado, the change may take a bit of getting used to. For starters, he'll be playing under a coach not named Vanney for just the second time in 11 seasons. And he'll be switching sides in El Tráfico, the bitter crosstown derby between LAFC and the Galaxy that has quickly grown into the league's most intense rivalry. Only two other men — Raheem Edwards and John McCarthy — have played for both sides in that game.
'It's definitely a game you always want to be a part of. But for me there was never any bad blood,' he said. 'So I'm on the other side now. I'm excited for it but I will say the switch was a little nerve-wracking.
'I just want to forward and get as comfortable as I can as soon as possible.'
A contract extension would help. And though Delgado, who was entering the option year of deal with Galaxy, declined to talk about that, he is believed to be getting a multiyear deal with LAFC that will pay him more than the $876,250 he was guaranteed last season.
Regardless of what Delgado accomplishes on the field for LAFC, the trade is already an historic one because after beginning his career with Chivas USA at age 16, then spending the last three seasons with the Galaxy — both teams that trained and played at what is now Dignity Health Sports Park — suiting up with LAFC will make him the only man to play for all three of Southern California's MLS teams.
For someone who kicked a soccer ball for the first time as a 4-year-old in Glendora and has lived most of his life in Southern California, completing that triple crown is meaningful.
'That's honestly a really cool stat,' Delgado said. 'It makes me really proud.'
And it may not be the only history he makes with his new club. After winning league championships in Toronto — where he played on the only MLS team to win a treble — and the Galaxy, Delgado could become just the fifth player to win MLS Cups with three different teams if he earns a ring with LAFC.
'You just lit a little fire in my stomach,' Delgado said. 'Now I'm looking forward to it. Let's do it.'
⚽ You have read the latest installment of On Soccer with Kevin Baxter. The weekly column takes you behind the scenes and shines a spotlight on unique stories. Listen to Baxter on this week's episode of the 'Corner of the Galaxy' podcast.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CNN
2 hours ago
- CNN
African Voices Playmakers: Jamal Thiaré
At Major League Soccer side Atlanta United, Senegalese footballer Jamal Thiaré has been enjoying some Southern hospitality. Jamal moved to the U.S. from France, adapting to the culture and the language, and, as you'll see, he's brought energy and creativity to the team's attack, as Larry Madowo explains for African Voices Playmakers.


Fox News
5 hours ago
- Fox News
With World Cup exactly 1 year out, USMNT legends say pressure is turned up a notch
The United States Men's National Soccer Team will be the home squad in next year's World Cup, and they could make a big splash. Eleven of the 16 host stadiums in next year's tournament, which begins exactly one year from Wednesday, are in the United States, with New Jersey's MetLife Stadium hosting the final. After 1994, Major League Soccer was born, and it goes without saying that the immediate rise of soccer's popularity in the country was exponential. But it's seemingly hit a wall in recent years as the USMNT hasn't exactly given Americans a chance to grasp on. The squad got into the Round of 16 in 2010 and 2014 but failed to even qualify for the tournament in 2018. The USMNT returned to the Round of 16 three years ago but couldn't get out of the Copa América group stage on their own home soil last year. Team USA legend Landon Donovan, though, feels that soccer is "secure" in the country, even if Team USA disappoints, and its popularity can only go up from here. "There's going to be a lot of pressure, for sure, on this team. You play a World Cup in front of your home crowd, there's certainly going to be pressure. Is the state of soccer in trouble if they don't do well? No," Donovan said in a conference call with reporters this week. "There is a massive, massive opportunity [for this team]. In my experiences from the '02 World Cup, when we did really well, my life changed, and the trajectory of USA Soccer changed a little bit." But then again, Donovan scored one of the most famous goals in United States soccer history: his goal in stoppage time against Algeria put the U.S. through the group stage for the first time since 2002. "In 2010, it was that on steroids when we had an iconic moment. So if this team can do one of two things, either go far and/or have an iconic moment or two, it will catapult soccer through the roof in this country." Alex Lasry, the CEO of the NYNJ Host Committee, offered similar sentiments, saying the global stars coming to the United States will be enough to grow the sport itself. "If it ends up being not what we're hoping, I don't think that's going to dampen what the World Cup means to the United States," Lasry told Fox News Digital at Jersey City's Liberty State Park, which is the home of the official 2026 World Cup fan festival and hosted a one-year countdown launch party on Wednesday. "I don't think it's going to dampen how that 6-, 7-, 8-year-old looks at it. Having [Lionel] Messi, [Kylian] Mbappe, [Cristiano] Ronaldo, [Christian] Pulisic, the stars of the sport here, is what's going to lead to that next generation of athletes saying, 'I want to be a part of that.'" Fellow USMNT alum Alexi Lalas took the other side of the coin. While agreeing with Donovan in that all it takes is one special moment to get the country latched on, he said he isn't letting this squad "off the hook." "This is a generation that, over the last 30-plus years, everybody has worked to make sure that they have everything they possibly need in terms of the opportunities and the resources they have; and with that comes higher expectations and fair expectations," Lalas said. "Whoever is ultimately on that field next summer, I hope they recognize the opportunity and responsibility to further the game. What [does that look] like? It can come in a lot of different forms. But when that final whistle blows for the U.S. team, you want to leave thinking, 'That was something I'm going to remember. That made me proud to not just be a soccer fan in the United States, but to be an American.'" "You've got to be ready for that and embrace that opportunity with both hands and make the most of it," he said. "I don't want to let them off the hook, because I think they can do things we haven't seen before. They need the soccer gods to smile, but every team in the World Cup needs a little bit of luck going forward. And over the next year, they're going to have to work at what's going on, and I think the attitude off the field, to make sure they maximize next summer." The 2026 FIFA World Cup takes place in North America next year and will be featured on FOX Sports. Follow Fox News Digital's sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.


USA Today
5 hours ago
- USA Today
One year out from 2026 FIFA World Cup, NJ ready to be 'soccer central worldwide'
One year out from 2026 FIFA World Cup, NJ ready to be 'soccer central worldwide' 3-minute read Show Caption Hide Caption Phil Murphy talks 2026 FIFA World Cup at NJ budget address During his 2026 New Jersey budget address, Gov. Phil Murphy discussed the upcoming FIFA World Cup plans. It's official. The 2026 FIFA World Cup kicks off at East Rutherford's MetLife Stadium in one year. To celebrate the last 365 days of preparation, Gov. Phil Murphy and the regional host committee, including CEO Alex Lasry and board chair Tammy Murphy, were at Liberty State Park in Jersey City Wednesday morning to outline the FIFA Fan Festival experience set to take place next summer. Joined by fan favorites like Mr. and Mrs. Met, Giants legend Victor Cruz and representatives from most of the region's professional sports teams, a mini festival complete with food trucks and activities for kids was set up to show, on a small scale, what is coming in 2026. With lower Manhattan and the Statue of Liberty serving as a backdrop, the park will be the premier fan festival during all 40 days of next summer's global event. More than 100 matches, including the ones scheduled to be played at MetLife will be broadcast live for fans to enjoy along with entertainment presented by LiveNation, food and other cultural exhibits that represent the Garden State and our neighbors across the Hudson River. What did NJ officials say? Gov. Phil Murphy said that between this year's Club World Cup and the 2026 World Cup, the region will be 'soccer central worldwide, globally, for the next 15 months' and said there is a commitment to the legacy of the sport. 'MLS was born out of the 1996 World Cup. I can only imagine what will be born out of this World Cup and most importantly in the communities in the region on both sides of the Hudson,' he said. Lasry said Liberty State Park will serve as the 'central gathering place for fans from across the world' and explained it will be the largest and most visible fan festival of the tournament. Officials expect tens of thousands of fans to attend the festival during each of its 39 days and have partnered with LiveNation and DPS to produce the programming which will include concerts on rest days. Among those fans will be 'all six Murphys,' according to first lady Tammy Murphy. More: What has NJ spent — so far, at least — to fund the 2026 FIFA World Cup? 2025 FIFA Club World Cup gives NJ a preview of 2026 Fans get a little taste of the global soccer experience starting this weekend at MetLife when the 2025 FIFA Club World Cup kicks off. This year's tournament features club teams — professional teams from leagues around the world — as opposed to national teams that will compete in the 2026 World Cup. It's unclear whether the immigration and border security initiatives of the Trump administration will affect the tournaments. Among the teams to already qualify is Iran, which is one of the countries included in Trump's latest full travel ban. President Donald Trump did attend the Club World Cup draw in December and said he "will try to be" at the tournament. He has hosted FIFA President Gianni Infantino at his Mar-a-Lago Club and the White House. Infantino also attended Trump's second inauguration. Murphy said Wednesday that his understanding is that there will be exceptions for big sporting events and this is the 'biggest in the world.' He went on to say there is a 'long road to travel' between now and when the tournament starts but that all of the teams that qualify will be able to play. When asked about concerns tourists may have about the presence of ICE and comments made by Vice President J.D. Vance about visitors, Murphy said he 'can't speak' for them but is 'hugely optimistic this is going to be a blowout success and a safe World Cup.' 'Based on all the vibrations I hear… this is going to be done in a first class welcoming way,' he said. Lasry said the host committee's 'concern and goal' is that everyone that comes to the tournament has an incredible time. Katie Sobko covers the New Jersey Statehouse. Email: sobko@