Rodrigo Mendoza PNG
  • Date of Birth: 15/03/2005
  • Age: 20
  • Nationality: đŸ‡Ș🇾 Spain
  • Preferred Position: CM
  • Alternative Positions: CAM, LM
  • Club: Elche CF
  • Height: 182 cm
  • Contract Until: 30/06/2028

This final day of the transfer window was always going to be crazy
 and it felt like the perfect moment to finally put a report out on this guy. He’s been delivering elite performances for weeks, quietly flying under the radar—until AtlĂ©tico de Madrid, with yet another Mateu Alemany masterclass, wasted no time and seems to have secured his signing.

And yes, I know I said I wouldn’t be doing reports on players from the top 5 leagues—but this one deserved an exception (the only one in these 30 days, I promise). His development this season has been outstanding, and after the way he capped it off in that match against FC Barcelona, I simply couldn’t hold back any longer.

Some players demand more attention. This was one of them.

Pedri’s regen?

To begin with, Elche CF are having a hell of a season in their return to Spanish football’s top tier under Eder Sarabia. The team has fully embraced an attractive, possession-based style, built on patience, structure, and constant movement. Even though recent results haven’t always reflected it, Elche continue to stand out for their passing quality, tactical clarity, and aggressive pressing.

You could easily spend all day talking about the young talent emerging from this side—Martim Neto, HĂ©ctor Fort, Álvaro RodrĂ­guez, among others—but one name stands out above the rest: Rodrigo Mendoza.

Rodrigo is the type of midfielder who runs the game. He sets the rhythm, decides the pace, and gives direction to everything around him. When he wants to accelerate the play, the whole team follows his lead. When the moment calls for calm and control, he has the intelligence and composure to slow things down and keep possession safe.

On top of that, he is a cheat code against pressure. Few players in Elche’s squad are as comfortable receiving the ball under stress and turning it into progress. With a very Pedri-esque technique, Rodrigo can take the ball in tight spaces, control it with ease, and dribble past opponents to break lines and create numerical superiority. If defenders step out to stop him, he has the vision and timing to find the free teammate, often turning a dangerous situation into an attacking advantage in just one touch.

Whether carrying the ball forward himself or playing the perfect pass into space, Rodrigo consistently finds ways to move Elche up the pitch—and that’s what makes him such a key piece in Sarabia’s system.

Representation of how Pedri surpasses the opposition pressure, similarly to what Rodrigo does.

Image done using Tacticalista app.

As illustrated in the picture above, Pedri is unpredictable as he can follow very different paths to surpass the opponent’s and carry the ball forward. Rodrigo does the exact same thing in a more difficult context, since his team mates at Elche CF are supposed to have less quality and rely more on him.

Not only a ball carrier nor a passer

Beyond his influence on the ball, Rodrigo is also an elite presence when it comes to ball recovery. Much like Pedri, his defensive work often goes unnoticed simply because of how gifted he is technically. When a player is this good in possession, it’s easy to overlook the effort he puts in without the ball—but Rodrigo’s contribution there is massive.

He excels at leading the press, reading passing lanes, and jumping at the right moment to win the ball back high up the pitch. Whether it’s pressing immediately after losing possession or anticipating a loose touch from an opponent, he consistently helps Elche regain control in the final third. That ability to attack, lose the ball, and instantly help recover it is a huge reason why Elche can sustain pressure and keep opponents pinned back.

His versatility also adds another layer to his game. Rodrigo has featured in more advanced roles within the system, thanks to his clean shooting technique and his vision near the box, which have already translated into a few goals. In certain matches, he has even been deployed as a left interior or false left winger, not to stretch the pitch, but to maintain possession, overload central areas, and give Elche more control over the tempo of the game.

That said, not everything is perfect yet. Rodrigo still struggles at times with positional defending and tracking back over long distances. At just 20 years old and still adapting to the demands of professional football, his stamina can drop as games go on. He’s also not a dominant duel winner, particularly in the air, despite having a decent physical frame.

Summary

Strengths:

  • Great technique
  • Good dribbling
  • Elite passing and vision
  • Pressing after a loss
  • Ball recovery

Weaknesses:

  • Stamina
  • Duels, especially aerial
  • Positional defense

Player Comparison and Future Expectations

The radar plot simply confirms what has been highlighted throughout the article: Mendoza stands out in ball carrying, passing, and dribbling, while sitting on the lower end when it comes to duels and more positional defensive actions, such as clearances.

His offensive output also doesn’t jump off the page at first glance, with just 1 goal contribution in nearly 800 minutes. However, context matters. In previous seasons—and with Spain’s U21s—he has already shown that this is an area he can grow into. The tools are clearly there, and his profile suggests that increased end product is more a matter of timing and role than a lack of ability.

Since this article has been in the making for several days, my preferred destination for Rodrigo was FC Barcelona. It felt like a natural next step: a club where he could continue developing, learn directly from Pedri, and even take his place in certain matches to manage minutes or cover for injuries.

But
 plans change. And it now seems he is heading to Atlético de Madrid.

Honestly, I believe this move only makes full sense if AtlĂ©tico have already decided that Diego Simeone will leave in the summer. If that’s not the case, I struggle to see Rodrigo succeeding in the short term. He isn’t the typical midfielder Simeone tends to trust, and in that creative role, Pablo Barrios is clearly ahead of him. Add Álex Baena to the mix, and AtlĂ©tico suddenly have three very similar profiles—players who don’t naturally fit together, nor fully align with the manager’s usual ideas. Something doesn’t quite add up.

If Rodrigo does manage to break through and establish himself, I don’t see him leaving anytime soon. But if things don’t click and he looks for a way out in the near future, a loan to Real Betis would make a lot of sense. Looking further ahead, a move to a big European club like PSG or even Bayern Munich wouldn’t be surprising either, as both are in need of this exact type of midfielder.

To wrap things up, here’s my projection for his career path:

Best-Case Scenario
Pedri— A true leader who dictates tempo and becomes the go-to player under pressure. Capable of passing, dribbling, scoring, assisting, and recovering the ball with apparent ease.

Expected Outcome
Sergio Canales — A La Liga reference. Shined at a smaller club, struggled after a big move, but rebuilt his career in a serious project. Excellent vision, passing, and dribbling, with strong offensive impact and high pressing intensity. A path that could suit Rodrigo very well.

Worst-Case Scenario
Arthur — A player whose potential was never fully reached. All the tools were there—passing, vision, dribbling, calmness—but inconsistency, defensive struggles, and not finding the right environment held him back. Still, a career spent at elite clubs with flashes of quality along the way in almost all of them (Loved him huh, Liverpool fans?).

Checkout our post on Instagram covering him!

See all our Scouted Players clicking here.