Minnesota United is close to signing James Rodriguez, but the move speaks more to prudence than ambition. According to ESPN’s Jeff Carlisle, the Colombian does not qualify as a designated player and will join on a short-term contract until the 2026 World Cup. Translated, this is a controlled trial, not a whim.
In current MLS, that’s already a sign. Minnesota doesn’t expect James, who played for Brazil in 2014, to return. Before I actually commit, I want to see if there’s still anything useful left. A risk-free contract…because there are so many questions.
From a financial perspective, this operation makes sense. Free transfer, limited salary, clear term. From a sporting perspective, the outlook is even more uncertain.
James is 34 years old and will turn 35 in July, but he has not played 20 league games in a season since the 2022-23 season when he played for Olympiakos. The reason is repeated. Muscle damage, lack of continuity, rhythm issues, and motivation that only seems to be activated in very specific situations.
MLS doesn’t allow physicality
This is what many people underestimate. MLS is neither a slow league nor one that tolerates creative veterans. 34 games, intercontinental travel, artificial turf, extreme climate and constant physical demands.
James has played 17 games for Club Leon in the 2025-26 season. It’s not a small amount, but it’s also not guaranteed. Even less so when you consider the full campaign in the United States.
The question is not whether he can flash or not. That’s out of the question.
The question is whether you can keep doing it every week.
Unimpaired talent, intermittent influence
James remains a set-piece specialist, a footballer who can decide a match with a single technical gesture. The problem is that this rarely creates consistency at club level. His career since 2015 has been characterized by short steps, premature departures and projects that are not a perfect fit. Bayern Munich, Everton, Olympiakos, Leon… It seems like Minnesota is more than just a destination.
Key to James joining MLS
James is scheduled to arrive in Minnesota on a short-term contract through 2026 He does not occupy the Designated Player slot
Minnesota doesn’t believe it, it evaluates it.
This signature is not an act of fantasy, but a period of observation. Minnesota isn’t buying stars. It buys time to see if James can still compete in a league that punishes a lack of rhythm and continuity. If it works, it will be a story of redemption.
Otherwise, I fit perfectly into the pattern of my career over the past decade, where I’ve lived more by memory than by the present.
