Minnesota United manager Adrian Heath, himself an impressive goal scorer during his playing prime with Everton in the 1980s, was asked recently by a friend whether he was surprised that Lionel Messi was having so much success upon joining Major League Soccer's Inter Miami.
Heath chuckled, noting that Messi — one of the greatest players in the history of the sport — had already tallied more than 800 goals in his career counting professional and national team efforts.
The upshot: Nothing Messi does, even at age 36, should surprise us — even if, in somewhat of a contradiction, it continues to amaze us.
Messi has yet to play a league match for Inter Miami, but his dazzling displays in helping the club win the inaugural Leagues Cup and advance to the U.S. Open Cup final have brought an undeniable level of attention to MLS, as Heath talked about on Friday's Daily Delivery podcast.
"I think it's been great," Heath said of Messi's impact. "The eyes of the world have been upon the league."
Messi, for his part, seems to be playing with joy. He's been celebrated almost everywhere he's played (except, of course, Philadelphia) and is clearly taking in the MLS journey for all it is worth.
"I think the great thing is you can tell that Messi is enjoying being here," Heath said. "When I saw his reaction when the young (teammate) scored the winning penalty against Dallas (in the Leagues Cup round of 16), I'm thinking this is a guy who's won every personal and collective accolade you could win."
Heath said he thinks the "bright light" shining on MLS will make it easier for other top-level players to make a similar transition.