Juventus beat the MLS All-Stars 5-3 on penalties after they played out a 1-1 draw in Atlanta on Wednesday night.It wasn't quite the star-studded affair many fans may had hoped for.LA Galaxy's Zlatan Ibrahimovic opted to skip the event while Juventus record-signing Cristiano Ronaldo was back in Turin.Andrea Favilli opened the scoring for the Italians in the 21st minute before local hero, Josef Martinez, equalised five minutes later.Neither side could find a winner and Juve eventually triumphed in a high-quality shoot-out.New York Red Bulls striker Bradley Wright-Phillips was the only player to miss his penalty - his attempt rebounded off the post.The big talking point of the game surrounded American goalkeeper Brad Guzan, who played his part in a very unique moment during the first half.

MLS split opinion

ESPN were screening the annual All-Stars match and the network mic'd up Guzan in order to interview him while the ball was in play.

The 33-year-old stopper spoke about his distribution before he got sidetracked by the incidents happening in front of him.

We've seen this happen in cricket but this is definitely a first for football.

Some fans on Twitter did not respond well to the stunt, describing ESPN's in-game interview as the 'peak of MLS'.

Although ESPN's new feature mostly met with criticism on social media, some actually quite enjoyed the novelty.

However, it seems unlikely that it could be implemented into a competitive game in the near future.

Have we just witnesses the future of football? Or will the concept be binned? Only time will tell.

Guzan, who previously played for Aston Villa, reportedly took the earpiece out of his ear after he conceded moments after the interview.

In 1989, a similar experiment was carried out in England.

Retired referee David Elleray was fitted with a mic during Arsenal's visit to Milwall.

Arsenal defender Tony Adams was caught on camera calling the referee a "cheat" - and it's no surprise we haven't seen much of this in the 29 years since.

Putting microphones on a football pitch, where testosterone is usually sky-high, is probably not such a great idea.

Could you envisage Premier League goalkeepers being fitted with a mic in the future?

Let us know your thoughts in the comments section below.