Lionel Messi’s inclusion as the anchor of the 2025 MLS Best XI cements not just his ongoing greatness, but marks the turning point for how one superstar can elevate an entire league—raising expectations, opening doors for new talent, and shifting the aspirations of clubs and fans across the United States.
From World Legend to MLS Architect: Messi’s Enduring Impact at 38
When Lionel Messi was announced as the centerpiece of the 2025 MLS Best XI, the news extended well beyond highlight reels. At 38, Messi delivered a staggering 29 goals and 19 assists—a total of 48 goal contributions—just one shy of the MLS record set by Carlos Vela in 2019 (MLS official stats). For fans, his numbers weren’t simply about dominance—they were about rewriting what’s possible for a league still forging its international identity.
That Messi achieved this feat in his second MLS campaign, while fending off MVP contenders a decade younger and maintaining global relevance, puts him in rarefied air. With this Best XI honor, Messi stands poised to become the league’s first-ever consecutive MVP winner, an achievement signaling his transformation from a global guest star to an active architect of MLS standards (ESPN).
MLS Best XI 2025: More Than One Star, a Mosaic of Growth
This year’s Best XI is not a “superteam” of one club, but a showcase of MLS’s increasing competitive balance. Nine clubs are represented, including historic franchises and ambitious expansion sides. Six players, such as Sebastian Berhalter (Vancouver Whitecaps) and Anders Dreyer (San Diego FC), earned their first Best XI nods.
- Forwards: Denis Bouanga (LAFC), Anders Dreyer (San Diego FC), Lionel Messi (Inter Miami CF)
- Midfielders: Sebastian Berhalter (Vancouver Whitecaps), Evander (FC Cincinnati), Cristian Roldan (Seattle Sounders)
- Defenders: Tristan Blackmon (Vancouver Whitecaps), Alex Freeman (Orlando City), Jakob Glesnes (Philadelphia Union), Kai Wagner (Philadelphia Union)
- Goalkeeper: Dayne St. Clair (Minnesota United FC)
The fact that only Vancouver and Philadelphia placed multiple players indicates a shift from the star-centric past toward a league where infrastructure, scouting, and coaching acumen matter as much as marquee signings. Messi’s presence coexists with this evolution—he’s the rising tide, not the entire ocean.
Strategic Impact: Messi as Standard-Setter for MLS Clubs
Inter Miami’s bold decision to extend Messi’s contract through 2028 was not just sentiment—it was strategy. His relentless output forces other clubs to rethink how they build squads and invest in talent. Each year Messi stays, the arms race for player development and international recruitment intensifies. This is evident with San Diego FC’s Anders Dreyer—who, in his debut season, rallied to 19 goals and matched Messi’s league-leading 19 assists, almost seizing the MVP conversation until Messi’s late-season surge (MLS official news).
For clubs and their supporters, the Messi Effect is measurable:
- Attendance spikes wherever Inter Miami plays
- Record jersey sales league-wide
- Youth academies redoubling efforts, hoping for the next stateside sensation
- A bar for international signings that demands more than just past glory—it demands current, headline-grabbing output
Historical Parallels: Messi’s MLS Impact in Context
The global football world has seen legends play out their careers in foreign leagues—but rarely with this level of influence or longevity. While David Beckham’s 2007 arrival elevated MLS’s profile, Messi’s reign is delivering sustained on-field excellence. His goal contribution tally is not only a personal testament, but a benchmark that future DPs (Designated Players) will be measured against. As with Pelé in the old NASL or Zlatan Ibrahimović’s short but electric MLS window, Messi’s standards will be the rubric for greatness—a legacy not just for Inter Miami, but for every MLS hopeful.
Fan Perspective: A Dream Realized, an Era Redefined
Messi’s Best XI selection resonates in the stands and on the forums. On Reddit’s r/MLS and Inter Miami message boards, fans discuss not just Messi’s stats, but how he’s mentoring younger players and “normalizing excellence” for the new generation. The pipeline from fandom to career is now visible: kids inspired by Messi—the hat-trick in the final game, the clutch assists—dream not of Europe, but of raising MLS trophies.
Meanwhile, fan bases for teams like Vancouver and San Diego, seeing their young or first-time Best XI representatives, believe the Messi era is not about domination, but elevation—raising everyone’s ambitions. As Sebastian Berhalter (11 assists, 4 goals in 29 matches) and Dreyer push their own ceilings, they do so chasing Messi, not just idolizing him (CBS Sports).
The Path Forward: Will Messi’s MLS Revolution Endure?
As Messi defies the clock and continues his “second act” as both marketing icon and productive star, the league’s trajectory changes. The ambitions of club front offices swell, investments in facilities grow, and the region’s top youth prospects look at MLS as a league of opportunity—not just a stepping stone. For fans, every remaining Messi match is both routine (more records, more highlights) and rare—a sense of witnessing the rewriting of what American soccer can be.
- Will Messi add back-to-back MVP trophies to his cabinet?
- Can rising stars like Berhalter and Dreyer close the gap?
- How will Inter Miami and the league evolve as Messi transitions from superstar to standard-bearer?
One thing is clear: Messi’s 2025 MLS Best XI selection is about more than the record books. It is the inflection point—where greatness meets legacy, and the aspirations of a league move closer to reality.