Mexican soccer has always been one of the most commercially successful tournaments and is an industry that year after year generates millions of dollars in profits for the clubs, the players and, of course, for the directors of Liga MX. For this reason, it is not unusual for Liga MX to handle millions of dollars for some players.
Although it is common for these million-dollar figures to go to the most powerful teams in the league, such as Monterrey, Tigres and, of course, America, a club that belongs to Televisa, the largest and most powerful media company in Mexico. And it is common for these clubs to have players who earn more than US$2 million a year.
However, what is not common is that teams that are not on the aforementioned list invest real fortunes in their players, much less in shielding them so that other clubs cannot take them away, and if they do, they leave them with a financial windfall of millions of dollars, and just such information has just surfaced.
According to information from ESPN journalist René Tovar, Colombian striker Julián Quiñones was armored by Atlas with a termination clause of between 10 and 15 million dollars, and this information was made public by the General Editor of ESPN's portals and editions in Central America, who was questioned by a Twitter user about the probable departure of Quiñones from the Zorros.
The fan asked the reporter if it was possible that Quiñones would leave the most recent two-time Mexican soccer champion, to which the journalist affirmed that this was impossible since the Colombian striker still has a contract with Atlas and that his termination clause costs a fortune.
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