In 1995, Llamosa reignited his professional career, playing a season with the
New York Centaurs of the
A-League. In his second season with the club, renamed the Fever, Llamosa was named to the All A-League first team. Llamosa was subsequently picked up by
D.C. United in the
1997 MLS Supplemental Draft, and soon earned a starting spot on the team, finishing the season with 20 starts in 25 games played, while helping the team to a second consecutive
MLS Cup. Llamosa remained a fixture in 1998, starting every game that he played in. On October 23, 1998, Llamosa was naturalized as a U.S. citizen, and earned his first cap on November 6 against
Australia, just two weeks after becoming a U.S. citizen. Llamosa would go on to play in 29 games for the
United States, including the
1999 Confederations Cup and 2002 World Cup Qualifiers. He made two substitute appearances during the
2002 FIFA World Cup. Llamosa remained with D.C. for the 1999 season, again starting every game he played, including the 1999 MLS Cup, where he helped United to their third championship. Llamosa again was a fixture for United in 2000, starting 20 games and playing 1974 minutes. However, at the end of the 2000 season he was traded to the
Miami Fusion in exchange for
Brian Kamler and a first round draft pick. Llamosa continued his solid play with the Fusion, organizing the defense of one of league's best-ever offensive teams, making 20 starts and playing 1827 minutes. After the Fusion folded at the end of 2001, Llamosa was selected 5th overall in the
2002 MLS Allocation Draft by the
New England Revolution. He would play a significant role for the team over the next two seasons, helping lead the Revs to a 2002
MLS Cup appearance, and starting 23 games for the team in 2003. Llamosa missed all of the 2004 season, however, after injuring his ACL during preseason. He was released in early 2005. In 2006, Llamosa came back to the league, signing with Chivas USA. Llamosa was waived by Chivas USA at the end of the
2007 season. ==Coaching==