Empire Strykers have signed league’s reigning MVP, but he doesn’t qualify for a work visa – Whittier Daily News

Empire Strykers have signed league’s reigning MVP, but he doesn’t qualify for a work visa – Whittier Daily News

ONTARIO – The Empire Strykers are trying to build a championship team but it may be that U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services is standing in the way.

The Strykers have signed Genaro Castillo, the reigning MVP of the Major Arena Soccer League, but Castillo does not qualify for a work visa under current U.S. law and cannot play for the team.

“It is the USCIS’ contention that MASL is a non-major sports league within the U.S.,” Empire Stykers general manager Oliver King said. “That’s the biggest hurdle. They don’t see MASL as a major sports league (and) therefore believe the league does not require athletes of international recognition to compete.”

A native of Monterrey, Mexico, Castillo has starred the last two seasons for Monterrey Flash but has only traveled to the United States as an employee of a Mexican-based team on a non-U.S. issued business visa.

The tightening of visa restrictions on Latin Americans under the Trump administration and continued under the Biden administration has narrowed the definitions on eligibility, King said, no longer allowing for an MASL team to serve as the primary employment sponsor for lower level professional athletes.

“It’s crazy. It’s a problem that we’re definitely fighting,” Empire Strykers executive vice president Jimmy Nordberg said. “He has a transfer mark on him that shows you he’s a professional player, but we’re talking to people in the government who don’t even know what soccer is or who he is without looking into it.”

Legally, unless Castillo proves having made a significant contribution to his country’s national team or has won major international awards he cannot qualify for an O-1 visa, typically granted to non-immigrants with extraordinary ability or achievement in certain fields, including athletics.

“I am focused and convinced it can happen,” said Castillo through translation. “We are doing everything possible to make that happen.”

A P-1 or P-1A visa requires him to be “internationally recognized and entering the country to compete in an event of international significance,” according to the law.

Currently, only Major League Soccer and its teams are having success in petitioning for P-1 visas for international professional soccer players.

Since 2022, the Strykers have received six denials of new P-1 visa applications, including two denials to renew existing P-1s that were originally approved.

Former Strykers goalkeeper Claysson De Lima, from Brazil, was denied renewal of an existing P-1 despite winning MASL’s 2021 Goalkeeper of the Year award.

“It’s been frustrating for the last one to two years for everyone because every single one of our applications has been denied,” King said.

Calls to the USCIS field office in San Bernardino have not been returned.

Castillo, 31, has poured in 57 goals in 48 appearances for Monterrey during the last two seasons. A Tigres UANL academy product, Castillo made five appearances with the professional side in 2016-’17  and bounced around between clubs before the COVID-19 pandemic.

He scored three goals in seven games for Antigua GFC in Guatemala’s top league in 2021 before arriving at Monterrey Flash in 2022 and re-focusing his career.

“It’s my dream to be (in Ontario),” Castillo said. “I made it my goal since I started in the league (MASL) to do my best and join a big team like Empire.”

“He’s a stud player and we need him in this community,” Nordberg said. “He’s the ‘Pink Panther’ and he’s going to score loads of goals as soon as he gets here.”

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