Will De Bruyne go the Messi way? Manchester City star could move to MLS
Samira Vishwas May 04, 2025 07:30 PM

Kevin De Bruyne, a 10-year standout in the Premier League, may take a route similar to that of Lionel Messi, leaving European club football for that in the United States.

According to multiple media reports, the Belgium midfielder might join Major League Soccer (MLS) side Chicago Fire.

The 33-year-old contributed 189 goals in 10 seasons with four-time defending champion City. De Bruyne recently announced that he will depart the club when his contract expires at the end of the season.

The struggling Fire holds top priority in signing De Bruyne. D.C. United and NYCFC were the other two teams that inquired about the midfielder.

Inter Miami CF previously negotiated with De Bruyne, but its three Designated Player slots — players who will be paid outside the maximum salary limit — are now filled, including one by Lionel Messi.

The Belgium captain favours heading to the MLS over signing a deal to play in Saudi Arabia. Moreover, he did not rule out returning to the Premier League or competing in Europe as his next venture.

“I’m open for anything, anything, just because I have to look at the whole picture,” De Bruyne said.

“I’m looking at sporting, family, everything together, what makes the most sense for me and my family. I don’t know what that is, because it depends on when you speak to people and what they say about projects or something, like I said, I still feel like I can play at a good level, but then after I’ll have to make a decision once I really know a little bit more.”

Through 10 matches, Fire is 3-3-4 with 12 points and sits in 11th place in the Eastern Conference under former U.S. national team coach Gregg Berhalter.

De Bruyne could join countryman Hugo Cuypers, who is tied for the MLS league with seven goals, and give the side a dynamic offensive presence.

“I think that in a perfect world you’d be able to invest across the entire roster and say, ‘OK, we can bring in world-class players in every position,’ but it’s not perfect,” Berhalter said.

“There’s a salary cap, there’s a limited amount of designated players. So I think the most sense is to bring in an attacking player.”

The Fire has made the playoffs just once (2017) in the last 12 seasons.

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