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José Caicedo’s Move to Portland Shows MLS Is Now the Predator in Liga MX’s Talent Pool

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When José Caicedo vanished from the Pumas call-up list and signed with the Portland Timbers in March 2026, it was not an isolated deal. It was another signal that MLS clubs are now the predator in Liga MX’s talent pool. Diario AS framed the move as a player disappearing from Mexican reckoning and the MLS waiting. The old one-way pipeline, where Liga MX was the supplier and MLS the buyer only when stars chose to go north, has inverted: MLS is actively poaching when call-ups or form dip.

Caicedo’s Move to Portland Is Another Domino in MLS’s Liga MX Raid

In March 2026, the Portland Timbers announced the signing of Colombian midfielder José Caicedo from Liga MX’s Pumas UNAM. According to the Timbers and MLSSoccer.com, Caicedo signed through the 2029-30 season with a club option for 2030-31; Portland acquired his Discovery Priority from D.C. United for $50,000 in General Allocation Money. Diario AS reported that Caicedo had “vanished” from the Pumas call-up list and that MLS was waiting. The defensive midfielder had made 114 appearances for Pumas between 2020 and 2026, with three goals and two assists, but his playing time in the Clausura 2026 tournament had dropped to just three matches and 39 minutes. The Timbers moved when his role at Pumas dipped, reinforcing the pattern of MLS clubs poaching Liga MX talent at moments of vulnerability.

Mexican outlets, including AS Mexico, Marca Mexico, and OEM/ESTO, reported that Pumas accepted an offer from Portland for Caicedo and that he received approval from the club to leave and did not play in Pumas’ match against Necaxa. The transfer fee was reported at approximately $2.9 million. Phil Neville, Portland’s head coach, described Caicedo as “a natural six in the midfield with great quality on both sides of the ball” who “fits perfectly with the direction of the team.” The deal is part of a broader trend: as Diario AS and MLSSoccer.com have documented, the flow of players from Liga MX to MLS has become unprecedented in volume and ambition, with MLS clubs targeting not only stars but also squad players when their standing at Mexican clubs slips.

Portland has form in this market. The Timbers previously acquired Chilean forward Felipe Mora on loan from Pumas UNAM in January 2020 and later made the transfer permanent. Caicedo is the second significant Pumas-to-Portland move, underlining a direct pipeline between the two clubs. MLSSoccer.com has reported that ten top players moved from Liga MX to MLS in a single offseason during 2019-20, including Brian Fernández from Necaxa to Portland, Alan Pulido from Chivas to Sporting Kansas City, and Lucas Zelarayan from Tigres to Columbus Crew. The consequence nobody is talking about yet is that MLS is no longer just the destination for Liga MX stars who want a new challenge; it is the predator that pounces when call-ups or minutes dry up.

What This Actually Means

The takeaway is that the talent flow between MLS and Liga MX has shifted. Liga MX still produces young talent and retains a strong domestic league, but MLS clubs now have the financial muscle and scouting to identify and sign players the moment they fall out of favour or out of the national-team picture. Caicedo’s case is a textbook example: reduced minutes at Pumas, disappearance from the call-up list, and an immediate offer from Portland. That inverts the old narrative of a one-way pipeline where Mexico sent stars north only when they chose to leave. Now MLS is actively raiding Liga MX’s talent pool when form or opportunity dips.

What Is the MLS–Liga MX Talent Pipeline?

Historically, the flow of players between MLS and Liga MX was uneven. Liga MX was long seen as the stronger league and the main exporter of talent to Europe; MLS was the buyer when Mexican stars chose to move north. According to MLSSoccer.com and ESPN, that dynamic has changed. MLS has in recent years sent more players to Europe than Liga MX in some periods, and the influx of Liga MX talent into MLS has become a deliberate strategy. Clubs like Portland, Columbus, and Sporting Kansas City have signed multiple players from Liga MX in high-profile moves. The pipeline is no longer one-way: MLS is now the predator in Liga MX’s talent pool, signing players when their standing in Mexico drops.

Who Is José Caicedo?

José Caicedo is a 23-year-old Colombian defensive midfielder from Palmira, Colombia. He joined Pumas UNAM in 2020 and made 114 first-team appearances for the club through 2026, scoring three goals and adding two assists. He also helped Pumas’ under-20 side win the Liga MX U-20 title in 2022. Before Pumas, he played for Colombia’s Independiente Santa Fe and Barranquilla FC and has represented Colombia’s youth national teams. In March 2026 he signed with the Portland Timbers of MLS on a contract through the 2029-30 season, with Portland acquiring his Discovery Priority from D.C. United for $50,000 in GAM. Head coach Phil Neville has described him as a natural defensive midfielder who fits the team’s direction.

Sources

Diario AS, Portland Timbers, MLSSoccer.com, MLSSoccer.com (Liga MX to MLS), Medio Tiempo

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