GOAL: I have to start with the biggest team from a fan point of view, and that would be Miami. What have you made of them this year? Under Javier Mascherano, new manager, maybe almost a different system, right?
EGAN: They play the way he played. When you think about it seriously right now, there's a combination of his and Lionel Scaloni's Argentina. I see young players at the back like Noah Allen that are playing in the same way that Mascherano played. Noah Allen's only 5-9, and he's putting out fires everywhere he's reading the game really well. He's tough in the challenge. And I think with Scaloni's Argentina, pieces were put around Messi to help him succeed, and I see that here with Inter Miami like Federico Redond, Benja Cremaschi.
Yannick Bright has been next level for this team. These are guys that are very similar, in a way, to the Leandro Paredes and the Rodrigo de Pauls at Argentina, in what they're doing for this team. So it's really that's been fascinating to see Yannick Bright. I'd keep an eye on that name, because he's a draft pick. I'm going to make a bold prediction here that Yannick Bright - if he keeps going the way he's going with the eyeballs on Inter Miami - not only is he going to have a lot of European clubs after him, but I wouldn't be surprised if he started folks are pushing his way into the conversation around maybe an Italy call up. Because he's been next level of late for me.
And then going forward, this team's a lot of fun to watch. I think Telasco Segovia has been a tremendous pickup, a young Venezuelan attacker who has a huge future ahead of him. His first goal, he said to his friends on the day of his debut, he said, 'I'm going to score tonight. I'm going to be assisted by Messi.' And they're all laughing with him on his Whatsapp group, and then, of course, he goes out and gets the assist for Messi. And it's the most beautiful finish. So, great story, but it's definitely not the Messi show. It's the collective.
GOAL: You say it's not just the Messi show. But you've covered him since pretty much day one. Can you even come close to summarizing his impact on the league?
EGAN: First of all, I think what I enjoy most about it is, is that he's such a competitor within the league. A lot of big names have come here in the past, and, well, they've been past it, and it hasn't worked out. And there's been all the talk of the retirement League - "retirement league" and Messi have not been mentioned once in the same sentence. Because he's come here and he's just brought a fire. Jordi Alba, I mean, he's arguing with the referee each and every game, but I kind of love to see that. It just shows how invested they are. Sergio Busquets plays every single minute, as does Lusi Suarez, who came off in the last game, but they've got a massive clash coming up against LAFC midweek, so I'm not surprised to see him rested. But there's Messi in an MLS game against Toronto, playing 90-plus minutes a few days before they take on LAFC.
And that is a priority, by the way. Winning the CONCACAF Champions Cup has to be considered a massive priority for Inter Miami - and the Club World Cup this summer as well. But it's been special. I covered El Classico for many years on the sidelines of the Camp Nou, and the Santiago Bernabeu to witness the Ronaldo versus Messi clashes, MSN versus BBC. It was just such an epic time. Like all football fans, fans of Messi, to see him here in Major League Soccer, to see him also promoting the games and invested in every single part of it - from the youth academy at the club with his kids playing there - it's just the complete package right now. You couldn't ask for anything more.
GOAL: You pick up on something interesting in terms of "retirement league." I always think of Steven Gerrard at LA Galaxy, who didn't look like he cared, to be honest
EGAN: He had a really interesting quote one time - and he got hammered for it, and I appreciated it, and I hated the people that were hammering him. He said, "Everyone talks about the heat, the cold, the altitude, the travel, But you don't know until you experience it." And that's the case for anything in life. You don't know what it's like to drive a car until you drive a car. You don't know what it's like to jump out of a plane until you do it.
And I think a lot of players struggle with that. The travel is exhausting in Major League Soccer. Look at Messi and what he's doing this this week: going across to LA is a five and a half hour flight from Miami to play a midweek game, to be back playing on Sunday, to be back playing again midweek. It's exhausting. Messi turns 38 years of age in a couple of months, so to go through that, like Gerard commented on - I remember Sean Maloney and I became friends in Chicago when he was playing in Chicago, the former Celtic player, and he said the same thing. He said, "It's exhausting, like, it's not easy."