Miami Herald

MLS investigat­ing financial, roster aspects of Matuidi’s signing

- BY MICHELLE KAUFMAN mkaufman@miamiheral­d.com Michelle Kaufman: 305-376-3438, @kaufsports

Major League Soccer announced Friday morning that it has begun a formal review of Inter Miami’s signing of midfielder Blaise Matuidi last summer, specifical­ly investigat­ing whether the signing of the player complied with league’s salary budget and roster guidelines.

Inter Miami’s response: “[The club] acknowledg­es the statement made by Major League Soccer today, and we look forward to fully engaging with the league’s review process. We will have no further comment until the completion of the investigat­ion.”

Matuidi, the French World Cup winner who joined the club last August from Italian power Juventus, was signed on a free transfer and was paid last season using discretion­ary Targeted Allocation Money (TAM), a mechanism used to reduce the budget charge of players who are in a high-salary range but not DPs. Each club can use up to $2.8 million in TAM to fund high-priced players without exceeding the team salary cap, which in 2021 is $4.9 million.

According to league sources, Inter Miami will be re-designatin­g Matuidi to one of three allowable Designated Player slots, reserved for elite players whose salaries and acquisitio­n costs exceed the league maximum, which this year is $612,500. A player of Matuidi’s stature — four French Ligue 1 titles with Paris Saint-Germain and three Serie A titles with Juventus — fits the profile of a DP.

The club continues its roster makeover heading into its second season.

Scottish winger Lewis

Morgan, the team’s most valuable player and biggest surprise last season, is expected to be elevated to a TAM player. He started all 24 games and led the team with five goals and eight assists. Morgan ranked second in Major League Soccer with 65 chances created, behind only league MVP Alejandro Pozuelo of Toronto FC, who had 70.

Last season, the three DPs on Inter Miami’s roster were Mexican midfielder Rodolfo Pizarro, veteran Argentine forward Gonzalo Higuain and 20-year-old Argentine midfielder Matias

Pellegrini, who was signed at 19 as a “Young Designated Player.” His transfer fee was reportedly around $7 million, but as a Young DP just $150,000 of his salary counted toward the team salary cap.

Under the new Collective Bargaining Agreement, starting this season teams will be able to exceed the salary budget to sign up to three players through a new Under-22 initiative. It is unclear if a player like Pellegrini could be reassigned that designatio­n to free up a DP spot for Matuidi or if his salary cap cost would be bought down by

TAM.

New sporting director Chris Henderson said Inter Miami is looking to sign two more players, a left back and another attacker.

He confirmed they have been in talks with West Brom left back Kieran Gibbs, who played 10 years for Arsenal. Another left back under considerat­ion is Joevin Jones, 29, a Trinidadia­n free agent who played for the Seattle Sounders and has been on the Trinidad and Tobago national team since 2010.

On this date:

In 1475, Italian artist and poet Michelange­lo was born in Caprese in the Republic of Florence.

In 1853, Verdi’s opera “La Traviata” premiered in Venice, Italy.

In 1857, the U.S. Supreme Court, in Dred

Scott v. Sandford, ruled

7-2 that Scott, a slave, was not an American citizen and therefore could not sue for his freedom in federal court.

In 1944, U.S. bombers staged the first full-scale American raid on Berlin during World War II.

In 1962, what became known as the Ash Wednesday Storm began pounding the mid-Atlantic coast; over a three-day period, the storm caused 40 deaths and more than $200 million in property damage.

In 1964, boxing champion Cassius Clay officially changed his name to Muhammad Ali.

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