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Sam Surridge, Hany Mukhtar, Anders Dreyer, EvanderImagn/GOAL

Lost and Found: How MLS resurrected the nomadic careers of All-Stars Anders Dreyer, Evander, Sam Surridge, Hany Mukhtar and other mid-20s European journeymen

Philip Zinckernagel told his wife this would be the last time. His list of former destinations reads like the ads on the wall of a European travel agent’s office: Copenhagen, Helsingor, London, the Arctic Circle, the central England countryside, Athens, Liege, Bruges.

At each stop, the Danish attacking midfielder had signed a long-term contract, expecting an extended stay. Yet at each spot, he was out within 2 years. This time, he promised, things would be different.

“I’ve been moving around a lot, so I have a bit of practice at getting into new teams and settling down quickly. I promised my wife, this is the one we're going to stay at,” he told GOAL.

This time, he is in Chicago, landing in MLS at age 30, brought in as the Fire’s highly-paid TAM signing. But he is not alone in his profile as a player in Major League Soccer.

While the big-money, bigger-name stars who have played their craft at one club for years - think Lionel Messi, Sergio Busquets, Marco Reus - tend to grab the headlines, the more consistent European quality in the league comes from a multitude of Zinckernagels, journeymen talent that have never found a permanent home on the continent.

“I think it's great. It is great to see a lot of European players want to come to MLS, now it's a very attractive League,” Nashville’s Hany Mukhtar said.