The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Martinez's new deal has United 'excited'

Extension keeps last season’s MVP with team through 2023 season.

- By Doug Roberson droberson@ajc.com

Saying Atlanta United is his Barcelona or Real Madrid, Josef Martinez on Wednesday signed a five-year contract extension that will keep the 2018 MLS MVP with the reigning champs through the 2023 season.

“I said last year that this is the dream I wanted for me and my family and now we are happy to make it possible,” he said.

Martinez, 25, said Atlanta has become not only his home, but that of his family, which is why he has repeatedly said he wants to play for the club until it no longer wants him.

A mix of speed, intelligen­ce and technical ability, Martinez in just two seasons has become one of the most prolific strikers in MLS history with 50 goals.

He broke the MLS single-season record with 31 goals during the

2018 regular season and added four more in the playoffs to set the whole season record.

The MLS career record is 145 goals. Martinez is on pace to obliterate that mark as one of the best finishers that Atlanta United President Darren Eales said he has ever seen.

“He has that skill and that quality that is gold dust in the world of soccer,” Eales said. “To have someone in the prime of his career, who has proven that he can do that consistent­ly … is something that we are excited about.”

Those goals helped Martinez become the first player in league history to be named MVP of the All-Star Game, the league and the MLS Cup in the same season.

He also showed an increasing maturity that Eales made sure to note Wednesday.

He referenced Martinez putting teammate

Miguel Almiron through on goal last year to help him break a scoring drought.

Eales mentioned how frequently Martinez would typically turn attention away from himself toward the team as the media tried to get him to talk about records he was chasing.

“He understand­s it’s about winning trophies every year and he’s got a big part to play in that,” Eales said.

And, along the way, Martinez has captured the city’s attention.

He has become one of the most recognizab­le athletes in Atlanta, whether it’s his changing hairstyle, his fearlessne­ss on the field in suffering a broken nose while scoring last year, almost getting engulfed in celebrator­y flames after scoring two seasons ago, his temper when he doesn’t score or the team doesn’t win, his request for a statue of himself outside Mercedes-Benz Stadium, or his wacky humor, such as when he said, “Later, alligator,” at the end of his MVP acceptance speech.

“One of those things we need in the league is having those characters,” Eales said. “We want fans to have a guy they can watch. However he plays, he is someone they want to watch.”

Financial terms of the deal weren’t disclosed. Martinez’s salary in 2018 was $1.4 million, according to the MLS Players Associatio­n. The MLSPA typically releases salaries twice a year.

Martinez didn’t seem concerned about the amount of money.

He said he is from a humble neighborho­od in Venezuela. A dollar isn’t going to change him. If he wanted money, he said he would go play in China.

Instead, Martinez was more focused on the respect and affection he has received from the club and city.

“Surely right now in Venezuela they are saying negative things about me because they have a mediocre mentality,” he said. “They think I should be playing with Real Madrid.

“For me, this is my Barcelona or my Real Madrid. It’s not about me being the star. This team has 11 stars on the field, plus the substitute­s, plus everyone who works at the club. That’s the important thing.”

 ??  ?? Josef Martinez: “This is the dream I wanted.”
Josef Martinez: “This is the dream I wanted.”

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