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kits dream league soccer Dream Liga MX vs. MLS All-Star Rosters: Gignac, Jorge Campos, Carlos Vela, . We finally have MLS vs Liga MX for the All-Star game and the Extratime crew is all about it. But it got the guys dreaming; what MLS-Liga MX matchups did we miss out on in past years? Landon Donovan trying to score on Jorge Campos? Cuauhtémoc Blanco playing for both sides? Check out our picks and then let us know your dream players in the comments! Stories from June 9, 2021. Timbers Broadcast Team Wins 2021 Northwest Regional Emmy Award - International Duty: Jones, Leerdam, Pizarro, Fort Lauderdale Duo Feature for National Teams - Inter Miami CF It's MLS vs. LIGA MX in 2021 MLS All-Star Game - Los Angeles FC It's MLS vs. LIGA MX: 2021 MLS All-Star Game Presented by Target Set for August 25 in Los Angeles - MLS Holds Ribbon-Cutting Ceremony at OhioHealth Performance Center - Columbus Crew SC FC Signs Attacking Midfielder Santiago Rodriguez on Loan from Montevideo City Torque - New York City FC. The opinions expressed in this article are those of the writer(s), and do not necessarily reflect the thoughts or opinions of OurSports Central or its staff. Flamboyant Campos Is Sent Packing by Galaxy. Jorge Campos, the colorful and extroverted goalkeeper who helped put the Los Angeles Galaxy on the local sporting map, no longer is a member of the Major League Soccer team. Campos and midfielder were traded to the Chicago Fire in a five-player swap, the Galaxy announced Tuesday. In return for the former Mexican national team goalkeeper and one of the most promising young American players, the Galaxy will receive three players, including two it lost to Chicago in the MLS expansion draft last fall--midfielder/defender Danny Pena and former UCLA goalkeeper . More significantly, the Fire also gave up one of the international marquee players it was to have been assigned by the league. The Galaxy is expected to use the pick to acquire a top striker to play alongside Ecuador’s . One of the names prominently mentioned has been Mexican national team forward , but the San Jose Clash apparently is ahead of the Galaxy in the race to sign him. Another possibility is Raul Diaz Arce, the Salvadoran forward who has helped Washington D.C. United win two consecutive league titles. That is a longshot, however, since a D.C. trade with the appears in the works. A more likely scenario is that a South American striker will be acquired. Galaxy Coach has spent a good portion of the off- season scouting players in his native Ecuador. Campos, along with Hurtado, U.S. winger and Salvadoran playmaker , have been the four players who have given the Galaxy its identity during the team’s two-year history. The goalkeeper, with a penchant for outrageously colored uniforms and unpredictable behavior in the nets, was a crowd favorite at the and was often described by former Galaxy coach Lothar Osiander as the team’s “circus act.” One favorite trick of his was to race far out of the nets, sometimes as far as the halfway line, before passing the ball to a teammate and racing back. Galaxy fans will also remember the bizarre ceremonies when he would be called on to fill in as a forward if the Galaxy was trailing late in a game. He would run over to the sideline, pull off his fluorescent lime or yellow or orange goalkeeper jersey to reveal the No. 9 Galaxy jersey he always wore beneath it. For all his antics, the Acapulco-born Campos is a more-than-competent keeper, and it was his play that was largely responsible for the Galaxy reaching the MLS championship game in its inaugural season. But 1997 was a different matter. The combination of a nagging knee injury, the loss of his position on the Mexican national team and various financial and personal considerations caused him to consider abandoning the league. By the end of the season, he was talking openly about the possibility of leaving. Naturally, MLS did not want to lose one of its most marketable personalities, and negotiations to keep him to his four-year contract had been under way for several weeks. Complicating matters was the fact that Campos and Jones were the only two Galaxy players with what Danny Villanueva, the Galaxy’s president and general manager, described as “iron-clad no-trade clauses” in their contracts. In other words, if Campos did not want to go to another team, no one could have made him. Finally, after meeting with Campos in Mexico last week, Sunil Gulati, the MLS deputy commissioner, was able to persuade him to return to the league and to accept a trade to Chicago. “Jorge has been an outstanding player for us,” Villanueva said Tuesday. “As a new team in a new league, we were trying to find our way, and he brought a lot of security to us in the back. “I know that Chicago is looking at [him playing] a very similar role, a steady, stabilizing role in the back. “He’s an invaluable asset to this league. He’s an outstanding player, and I will be forever grateful to him for the two years he was here.” Villanueva called the trade “a strategic move,” explaining that he felt that an American player such as Hartman could hold down the goalkeeper position, thereby freeing the team to use all five of its foreign players in attacking positions. In addition to Hurtado and Cienfuegos, the Galaxy also features Brazilian forward Welton and Guatemalan midfielder Martin Machon. Campos was unavailable for comment Tuesday, but Chicago Coach said Campos views the move to the Fire as “a great challenge at this point in his career.” The trade would not have gone through had the Galaxy not been willing to give up Armas, a 25-year-old All-American from Adelphi who played in 50 games for the Galaxy over two seasons. “That was the price we had to pay,” Villanueva said. “There isn’t a coach in this league who doesn’t recognize what Chris Armas does on the field. He is one of the most highly sought American players in this league. “We weren’t willing to make any other trade for Chris other than the strategic one we made [involving Campos].” The Galaxy opens training camp in Orlando, Fla., on Feb. 6 and opens its third MLS season at the Rose Bowl on March 21. Kits dream league soccer jorge campos. 4. David James was famed for his ever-changing haircuts but was also the unfortunate bearer of some horrendous jerseys whilst at Liverpool. This kit in the 1994/1995 season was just not very nice, while the purple strip down the middle makes it resemble an arcade game. Jeepers keepers rating 7/10. Former England and Liverpool goalkeeper David James dons the purple and grey ensemble. 5. David Seaman was an England hero whose finest hour came when he saved Miguel Angel Nadal’s penalty in the quarter-final shoot-out against Spain at Euro 96. The patchwork-style shirt with its huge England logo probably distracted the poor Barcelona defender. Jeepers keepers rating 10/10. While it may bring back good memories, David Seamans's kit during Euro 96 was certainly eye-catching. 6. Kevin Pressman played for Sheffield Wednesday for 15 years, which is surprising given some of the shirts he had to wear. This yellow and blue baggy design worn in the 1994-1995 season was just plain nasty. Jeepers keepers rating 9/10. The blue and yellow shirt Kevin Pressman was forced to wear is not one of his best over the 15-year stint. 7. Just look at this mess. What are those white slashes? Grey, blue, black and white thrown in. And those sleeves. Poor old Shaka Hislop. The former Trinidad and Tobago international had to don this during the 1995/1996 season. Jeepers keepers rating 10/10. Shaka Hislop had to wear a number of dodgy goalkeeping kits while at Newcastle and this was the worst. 8 . Hislop had to wear this the following season too. The shirt was meant to pay homage to the city of Newcastle but instead did the opposite. Adidas may make stylish kits today but in the 1996/1997 season it was a completely different story. Jeepers keepers rating 9/10. Although a hit with the fans, this certainly makes our list for terrible goalkeeping kits, poor Hislop. 9. wore this for the USA at the 1994 World Cup. Like when watching Campos, supporters were probably left blinded. Jeepers keepers rating 10/10. Former USA international Tony Meola wore this sunset designed kit during the 1994 World Cup. 10. Edwin van der Sar was the hero as Ajax beat AC Milan to win the 1995 Champions League final. But he wore this shirt. For that, and that alone, maybe the Italians deserved the crown. Jeepers keepers rating 10/10. Edwin van der Sar, who had a stellar Premier League career, probably left Ajax due to this monstrosity. 11 . Ian Walker had to sport what looks like a onesie before they were famous. The stars on the kit made a mockery because there was no star quality about the kit. Jeepers keepers rating 8/10. Ian Walker, formerly of Tottenham, was kitted out in this green and purple number. 12. Peter Schmeichel had to wear this during the 1996/1997 season. Unless you’re Palermo, purple and pink kits seldom do well. Manchester United have learned their lesson and stayed clear of such an audacious design ever since. Jeepers keepers rating 9/10. Arguably one of the Premier League's greatest-ever goalkeepers but this kit was one of the worst. 13. Liverpool make the list again with a well and truly horrendous kit during the 1995/1996 season. Poor David James was again the unlucky No 1 at the time and even he could not do it justice. With its bright orange and yellow patterns, caution is advised before you look. You have been warned. Jeepers keepers rating 10/10. James features again for Liverpool and this one is a shocker, with a mix of orange, yellow and black. 14. Huddersfield Town’s goalkeeping kit of 1993-1994. Look at it, just look at it. If you can. It had to be sported by poor Kevin Blackwell, who probably wept the moment he first saw it. Jeepers keepers rating 10/10. Huddersfield Town forced goalkeeper Kevin Blackwell to wear this shirt back in 1993-94. 15. Nigel Spink was unlucky enough to be given this monstrosity to wear during the 1994/1995 season. He left Aston Villa shortly afterwards. No coincidence. Jeepers keepers rating 9/10. Ex-Aston Villa keeper Nigel Spink donned this multi-colour kit but soon left the Midlands club. 16. Patriotism is no bad thing but the never-ending St George’s crosses on Joe Hart’s England goalkeeping kit from the 2011/2012 year was too much. Jeepers keepers rating 8/10. England and Manchester City goalkeeper Joe Hart was forced to wear this green kit during Euro qualifying. 17. Unless you’re in the military, steer clear of wearing camouflage. Everton’s goalkeeping kit in 2012 went viral on social media for all the wrong reasons. No wonder looks so angry. Jeepers keepers rating 8/10. Where is he? Tim Howard, known for his own eccentricity, might have enjoyed the camouflage look. 18. Jose Luis Chilavert was a Paraguayan legend yet unfortunately had to wear this at the 1998 World Cup in France. The poor design makes it look as if the kit has been badly put together using the Layout app on Instagram. Jeepers keepers rating 9/10. The set-piece specialist, Jose Luis Chilavert, may not have been happy with this choice of design. 19. Remember the old Tube seats? Well this looks like one of them. A Christmas jumper too. Simon Royce had to wear this for Southend in 1995 and, somewhat amazingly, did not leave for another three years. Jeepers keepers rating 10/10. Simon Royce looks as if he's torn up an old tube seat and worn it, we are not impressed. 20. Last, but certainly not least, is Sunderland’s entry for the 1994/1995 season. Alec Chamberlain and Shay Given had to don what looks like a Pacman arena at the top and chess board at the bottom. What on earth were kit makers Avec thinking? Jeepers keepers rating 8/10. The former Newcastle United stopper, Shay Given, wore this shocker playing for their rivals Sunderland. After colorful soccer career, Jorge Campos enjoys low-key second act. Midnight on a spring Wednesday at LAX finds Jorge Campos about as motionless as when he roamed the goalie box—and the rest of the campo —for the Mexican national team throughout the 1990s. He is hustling from a long-term parking garage toward one of the dozens of flights he will catch between California and Mexico this year, his nomadic ways having changed far less over the years than his manner of dress. The gray jeans and sweater Campos wears as he enters Terminal 2 represent a complete parching of the palette that once splashed neon in every conceivable color, often all at once, across his custom-made goalie kits. “I’m flying to Mexico City,” Campos says in Acapulco-accented English when a stranger asks where he’s headed. “I have to work.” And at this he laughs, his hazel eyes still large and expressive, his tanned 49-year-old face still wearing the glow of youth. Work, for Campos, means providing color commentary on international matches broadcast by Mexican TV giant Azteca, and that’s what he finds funny: “I get to talk about soccer,” he says, arms spread in apology. “They seem to think I learned a little bit when I played.” The diminutive Campos (at 5’ 6”, he’s a full foot shorter than Chelsea goalkeeper Thibaut Courtois) didn’t play futbol as much as he experimented with its boundaries. Over the 130 international matches he played wearing Mexico’s colors—or, rather, wearing his own colors while competing for Mexico—he became known not only for his acrobatic saves and punchaways, executed in leaping rainbow arcs in front of the Mexican goal mouth, but for the threat he posed afterward: that he might rise from the pitch, roll the ball to himself and dribble upfield on the counterattack. Today, with rare exception, that kind of thing is reserved for the fetishist corners of YouTube. Campos showed off that unpredictability in some of the world’s largest stadiums, where he’d just as soon create a shot as pluck one out of the air. On second thought, maybe playing is exactly what he did. “It was a special position,” he says of the freedom he was given to freestyle. “Now it is more—I don’t know how to say . . . it’s more strict. Midfield, defense, right, left, center.” As if his playing style weren’t revolutionary enough, Campos seized our sartorial imaginations by donning uniforms—baggy surf shorts and oversized polo shirts, collar always turned up—that looked as if Montezuma had eaten radioactive tacos before ejecting his fluorescent revenge into Campos’s locker. Jorge Campos’s most eclectic uniforms. Jorge Campos' Most Eclectic Uniforms. Billy Stickland/Getty Images. Al Bello/Getty Images. Stephen Dunn/Getty Images. Rick Stewart/Getty Images. Stephen Dunn/Getty Images. Mike Powell/Getty Images. “I’m from Acapulco,” Campos explains, resting for a minute in an airport coffee shop. “The beach, surfing—I didn’t get to the ocean every day [growing up] . . . But every weekend? Definitely. So I was thinking: If I can’t surf anymore, I’ll bring the style, the shore, the coloring, to soccer. “Kids loved it. They didn’t [care] if I played well or not.” Another laugh, leaning back in his chair. “I never thought it was going to be as big or marketable [as it became]. It was a big business for someone other than me. There was a lot of”—grinning, seeking the right word—“ imitación .” A lesser man might be bitter about the lack of remuneration he received for revolutionizing goalie apparel worldwide, but Campos genuinely doesn’t seem to understand the adjective “bitter”. He just unfurls another childlike laugh—eyes closing, crow’s feet deepening—warming his corner of the deserted terminal. Technically, Campos’s residence is in L.A., but he concedes that “home is everywhere. With my job I have to fly a lot to Mexico. When I retired I decided to move to L.A. because I played for Galaxy—did you know that?” Yes, I knew that. Just like every other sports fan above 25 in this city of 13 million . “After Galaxy, I was an assistant coach with the [Mexican] national team. I thought: O.K., maybe in the future—eight years, 10 years—I can be head coach for the national team.” But when coach Ricardo La Volpe was fired, Campos learned that “in Mexico, when they change the coach they change everything .” A big laugh. “So somebody invited me to work at Azteca.” Campos’s style on the air is as lively and unpredictable as his netminding once was. His soccer insights are sharp but his chemistry with hosts Luis García Postigo and Christian Martinoli (who jokingly calls him George Fields) is what makes the broadcasts work. “We have fun when we do games,” Campos says. “I like that. I need it to be that way.” Sportortas, the Mexican fast-food chain he started with his brother, Miguel, closed its American locations a few years back, so it’s not as if Campos’s schedule is packed. So what does he do now when he isn’t broadcasting or flying to work? “You see my bag, right?” he says, nodding toward a quiver of high-end golf clubs, laughing his biggest laugh yet, because who would have predicted it? “I play a lot. I practice every day. When I retired, a friend said, ‘You have to do something different. You retired young.’ [He played his last game at 37.] I realized: I can do anything . I can play golf anywhere I travel. So I enjoy it. I have fun.” Campos says he promised himself as a young man that he would only play soccer for as long as he was willing to work at it. “If you want to do something you have to do it with passion. Soccer for me was a passion. Every day. Every year. All the time. Then one day I started to practice golf . . . Then I started to practice like a professional.” Campos, who admits that testing his five handicap on the pro tour in Mexico has crossed his mind, shows the stranger his phone with its screensaver picturing Tiger Woods crushing a drive in his red-and-black Sunday best. For all of Woods’s personal shortcomings, Campos says, “you must remember that this man practiced every day.” Campos says he wants to be remembered for his tenure with the Mexican national team, which included victory at the 1999 Confederations Cup. Campos relaxes beneath the terminal’s harsh lights and starts talking about the game that shaped him. He starts with flopping. “People say we have to have a camera [at the goal] so we can see if it’s a goal or not. I say: No, we have to have a camera for players faking fouls so we can say, ‘See that guy? Two games— out .’ The next game he won’t try anything. We need to teach the players respect for this game.” On U.S. Soccer: “The [men’s] team—I have to say it’s better than Mexico’s. Mexico is good, but [the U.S.] do more than us in the World Cup. They’ve gone to the quarterfinals. We have never done that. I think they have a chance to go to the semifinal or final [in 2018].” This enthusiasm he attributes to the sport’s ever-growing popularity in the States, where he sees it being played every time he drives through L.A. “Instead of [American] football, they play soccer. On a baseball field—everybody’s playing soccer! Everywhere . When I came here in 1996, to MLS, there were 10 teams. Every three months we’d play the same team two times. Now it’s a real league. They grew up fast.” He remembers a young MLS official named Sunil Gulati assuring him, against all precedent, that soccer in America was a fast-ripening fruit. Today, one of the first foreign players to sign with MLS accepts no credit for inspiring legions of young American goalkeepers to don their neon and take up the game. “No, no,” Campos says. “Sunil and all the guys who worked with him, they’re responsible.” Campos politely declines to talk about his family, most likely because his father—his boyhood coach and best friend—was kidnapped in 1999 from an Acapulco park named after Jorge. (Alvaro Campos was held for ransom for six days before being freed; he died in 2013.) This brush with darkness would help explain why the younger Campos craves both anonymity and fellowship these days, why he wants to love the people more than they love him. Campos can walk around unnoticed in the States far easier than in his home country. Ever playful, he delights in messing with those who spot him, wherever they are. “They go, ‘Are you Jorge?’ ‘What?’ ‘You look like Jorge.’ ‘Nah, I hear that a lot.’ ” More laughter rockets off of LAX’s stone walls. “I play golf with guys and they ask, ‘What do you do for work?’ I say, ‘I work in soccer.’ They say, ‘Did you play?’ ‘Eh, a long time ago.’ ” Not so long ago, though, that he couldn’t place a diving header in the back of the opposing net in a Mexican legends game in May. When someone is certain they have recognized his smirk or his espresso-colored eyes, “that’s when I say, ‘Me? You think I play goalie? But goalies are’ ”—he raises one hand here, indicating tallness. “They give up and say, ‘Yeah, you’re too short. Too skinny.’ ” Kids today don’t recognize him at all, which means that Campos often finds himself standing and waiting while parents cue up grainy videos on their phones—and here Campos admits he has seen small eyes light with glee. “This makes me feel wonderful,” he says. “It’s nice when kids see the fun you can have in this game.” The legend remains a fan himself. “I like to watch [Manuel] Neuer, from Bayern. I think he’s the best goalie in the world. He’s amazing.” Yet only a keeper with Campos’s on-field wanderlust could admit that Lionel Messi, Cristiano Ronaldo, Neymar and Iniesta are his favorite players. On the subject of his own legacy, Campos is more reticent. He doesn’t want to be remembered for his Day-glo jerseys or his shocking forays to the other side. “I’d like people to remember me for playing for the national team—defending the colors, the Mexican jersey. This for me was the most important moment.” Chin on his chest now, traveling back in time as the announcement comes that his flight is about to board, he says, “I remember , the screaming: ‘Mexico! Mexico!’ That moment is . . . incredible .” With that, the Acapulcan sprite who took the game of soccer into his goalie-gloved hands and squeezed it until it oozed between his fingers—into arcs the shape of his goal-thwarting leaps, the shape of his sidewinding journeys down the pitch—rises, shakes the stranger’s hand, offers the tiniest bow and makes a gentleman’s exit. Who knows, Campos may yet monetize the goalkeeping fashion craze he started 25 years ago. He has trademarked his name, he says, “and I may to try to do something in the future, maybe clothes for everyday—or for golf. Maybe I can design something for a team or for a goalie that’s different. But it’s hard. Today’s goalies have to use the same brand their teams wear. It’s not like in my time. I did whatever I wanted.” Andrea Campos, hija del ‘Brody’, hace su propia historia en el voleibol. Andrea Campos es la nueva jugadora de Archer School for Girls y ya tiene un título. Facebook Twitter Show more sharing options. Facebook Twitter Email Copy Link URL Copied! Print. Andrea Campos acepta que no fue fácil decirle a su papá, el exfutbolista Jorge Campos, que le gustaba más el voleibol que el futbol. “Comencé jugando futbol y me gustaba mucho”, explica Andrea, de 15 años y estudiante de Archer School for Girls. “Pero luego me presentaron el voleibol y me gustó mucho más”. “Tenía mucho miedo de decirle a mi papá, pero le dio gusto”, señala la exportera y exdefensa en futbol. Es así como encontró en el voleibol su nueva pasión. Aunque en este deporte no es la más alta de su equipo, sus 5’8’’ de estatura y agilidad le ha permitido a la hija del ‘Brody’ comenzar a escribir su propia historia en el voleibol a nivel de preparatoria. Los logros han comenzado a caer, pues este año conquistó el título de la Southern Section de División 7 de CIF, la primera vez que esto ocurre en la historia de Archer School for Girls. Gracias a su maestra Lainey Gera y el director atlético de Archer, Denny Lennon, Andrea Campos ha encontrado en el equipo de su escuela una buena plataforma para demostrar su talento. Al final de cuentas, el papá de Andrea tampoco tenía la estatura para ser portero, pero el gran resorte en sus pies, reflejos y elasticidad lo llevaron a ser uno de los mejores porteros de México. “Yo también soy baja de estatura para ser jugadora de voleibol pero es bueno saber que aún tengo una oportunidad porque puedo brincar alto”, dice la estudiante de segundo año de preparatoria. Archer School for Girls conquistó el campeonato tras vencer a Foothill Technology y avanzó por primera vez al torneo estatal. Nadal mal para ser el primer año de Andrea en Archer, escuela a la que se transfirió este año. Hace un año sus padres no estaban contentos en la escuela en la que Andrea estaba. Fue entonces que los padres de Andrea platicaron con Lainey Gera, la entrenadora actual de Archer, quien los convenció de que la escuela privada de Brentwood era el lugar ideal para su hija. “Ahora la están viendo en colegios, tiene el potencial de llegar al próximo nivel”, expresa la entrenadora. “He estado viéndola desde hace mucho. Es una atleta increíble, viene de una familia muy buena. Tiene una buena mentalidad y es centrada. Es alguien que le gusta entrenar y hace que las cosas sean más fáciles para mí. Tiene una ética muy buena”. Mi papá siempre me da consejos. Me dice que no piense mucho y vaya por la pelota. Hay muchas veces que me tiro por la pelota, sin importar dónde vaya y la alcanzó muchas veces. Andrea Campos, hija de Jorge Campos. En semifinales vencieron a Heritage Christian en un duelo cardíaco. Pero en ese duelo, Locke Luhnow, la colocadora titular, tuvo una lesión de tobillo, lo que la dejó fuera y Andrea tomó el control. “Era muy callada pero una vez que llegó a este equipo tomó las riendas del equipo y nos llevó a donde teníamos que estar. Tuve una plática con Andrea y le dije que era su show. Le dije que no temiera, que fuera ella, y dijo ‘OK’, no le dio miedo. Y no tuvo miedo de la situación, lo que me dio confianza”, señala la entrenadora. “Una vez que comenzó a jugar, nuestro juego cambió. Las niñas se acostumbraron a una nueva alineación y de ahí despegamos”, asevera Gera, quien ha seguido el desarrollo de Andrea desde que tenía 12 años. “Su atletismo nos ha permitido ser más creativas en nuestra ofensiva”. Gera ha sido fundamental en el crecimiento de Andrea, pues también es su entrenadora a nivel club. De acuerdo a Andrea, Gera le ayudó a mejorar su técnica, a ser más agresiva y consistente. Archer School for Girls avanzó a la segunda ronda en el torneo estatal y cayó ante Heritage Christian en esas instancias, concluyendo un año maravilloso para Archer. Sin embargo, el futuro del equipo femenil de Archer luce prometedor pues Andrea es una de las cuatro estudiantes que apenas están en su segundo año, por lo que tiene un equipo muy joven. Andrea Campos comenzó jugando futbol pero luego encontró en el voleibol su verdadera pasión. Archer School for Girls no tiene un gimnasio por lo que el equipo de voleibol tuvo que entrenar en Culver City o Santa Mónica. Pero fue la dedicación de las niñas que siguieron las instrucciones de su entrenadora y basado en su atletismo y rapidez, lograron conquistar cosas importantes este año. “No era un equipo muy grande. Pero teníamos un equipo rápido e inteligente”, indicó Denny Lennon, director atlético de Archer. Un papá famoso. Aunque es difícil de que Jorge Campos pase desapercibido durante los juegos de su niña, el enfoque de la familia ha sido apoyar y seguir los deseos de Andrea. “Fue hasta seis meses después que su papá comenzó a venir a los juegos y veía que la gente se tomaba fotos con él. Y él es muy casual. No le gusta que la gente sepa pero ahora que ya sé, hasta yo tomo las fotos. Es chistoso, es un buen tipo”, expresa Gera. “Mi papá siempre me da consejos. Me dice que no piense mucho y vaya por la pelota. Hay muchas veces que me tiro por la pelota, sin importar dónde vaya y la alcanzó muchas veces. Así que mi papá me ayuda mucho en los juegos”, expresa Andrea, quien dice que su papá está muy ocupado pero siempre procura ir sus partidos.