In Arabic, Saeid means "happy."
So it's fitting that Mohammed "Mo'' Saeid took his March 31 trade to the Colorado Rapids in stride.
In fact, some of Saeid's former Minnesota United FC teammates actually had a harder time with his departure than he did.
"It was the first time in my life I got a friend so fast," Danish winger Bashkim Kadrii said. "I think I was more sad than him that he left."
The midfielder had quickly become the social epicenter of United in his about three-month stint with the Loons, joining the team from the Columbus Crew in December's expansion draft. Saeid's predisposition for positivity comes from his father, an Eritrean refugee from the country's war of independence.
As the son of a refugee, a Muslim and a professional soccer player, Saeid has learned how to face adversity on and off the field with a smile.
"I believe good things will happen," Saeid said. "I have strong faith."
At age 15, Khalid Saeid, Mohammed Saeid's father, fled his native Eritrea, a small country in northeast Africa on the Red Sea coast. Khalid still remembers the seemingly normal Sunday in 1975 when his own father decided it was time to leave after seeing hundreds of young people "being killed on the road" in his hometown of Agordat.