Tyler Adams at AFC Bournemouth

Discussion in 'Yanks Abroad' started by TheFalseNine, Jul 11, 2018.

  1. FirstStar

    FirstStar Hustlin' for the USA

    Fulham Football Club
    Feb 1, 2005
    Time's Arrow
    Nat'l Team:
    United States
    They don't grade on a curve.
     
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  2. Gorky

    Gorky Member+

    Jul 28, 2006
    NYC
    Club:
    New York Red Bulls
    Nat'l Team:
    United States
    He’s the youngest on that list. 22-yo Denis Zakaria at 13 is next.
     
  3. TimB4Last

    TimB4Last Member+

    May 5, 2006
    Dystopia
    https://www.bundesliga.com/en/bunde...mpions-league-world-cup-rb-leipzig-usmnt-5269

    "For incoming Leipzig head coach Julian Nagelsmann – renowned for his ability to take players up a level – Adams is the perfect student.

    “He’s already watched me and told me that he is happy to train me,” the 10-time USA international said of his first meaningful conversation with the former Hoffenheim strategist.

    “We talked about the future, and it's going to be incredibly exciting to be coached by a great coach like him soon. It’s definitely exciting to have a coach that’s coming in that already has faith in you and has watched you. He plays a unique style of play. His attention to detail and how he focuses on each individual player on the pitch and the role that they’re going to play is unlike many coaches in the world."

    Sounds promising ...
     
  4. mattjo

    mattjo Member+

    Feb 3, 2001
    Club:
    DC United
    Nat'l Team:
    United States
    #1254 mattjo, Jun 25, 2019
    Last edited: Jun 25, 2019
    I will say, I hated to see Tyler pulled from the Gold Cup due to injury, but given the changes at at RB Leipzig, with a new head coach and Marsch moving on to Salzburg, this may work out to be in Adams' best interest.
     
  5. TimB4Last

    TimB4Last Member+

    May 5, 2006
    Dystopia
    I tend to agree - full rest and rehab, then fresh start with new coach.
     
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  6. WheezingUSASupport

    Dortmund
    United States
    Aug 28, 2017
    Based on his injury anyone have an estimate on when he’d be ready for full training again?

    Hoping his injury doesn’t derail his preseason.
     
  7. BostonRed

    BostonRed Member+

    Oct 9, 2011
    Somerville, MA
    Club:
    New England Revolution
    Nat'l Team:
    United States
    Interview (in German):

    https://www.goal.com/de/meldungen/t...isterschaft-feiern/1wm30du2uzrhq1593g8gu9mw31

    What about your German language skills?

    Adams: It's definitely not an easy language, but just coming over is the best way to learn German. I already know a lot of vocabulary, but just the sentence construction makes me still big problems. My biggest problem is that I do not want to speak until my German is really good. We have a lot of foreign players on the team and often speaking English is the easiest way. Even the staff in the club usually speak English with me, so I have to continue to be patient.
     
  8. TimB4Last

    TimB4Last Member+

    May 5, 2006
    Dystopia
    You can again that say!
     
  9. Gorky

    Gorky Member+

    Jul 28, 2006
    NYC
    Club:
    New York Red Bulls
    Nat'l Team:
    United States
    I think it was a decision made entirely in Adams’ interest.
     
  10. LouisianaViking07/09

    Aug 15, 2009
    It def hurts your fluency when folks rather speak English to you. That's what hurt my learning Swedish back in 09. No one wanted to bother waiting for me to form a proper sentence.
     
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  11. DeCoverley

    DeCoverley Member

    Aug 9, 2007
    San Francisco
    Club:
    AC Milan
    We're still waiting;).
     
  12. Eighteen Alpha

    Eighteen Alpha Member+

    Aug 17, 2016
    Club:
    Stoke City FC
    :ROFLMAO::ROFLMAO::ROFLMAO::ROFLMAO:
     
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  13. Eighteen Alpha

    Eighteen Alpha Member+

    Aug 17, 2016
    Club:
    Stoke City FC
    This thread is getting interesting. Maybe this summer won’t be a complete disappointment.
     
  14. FC Tallavana

    FC Tallavana Member+

    Jul 1, 2004
    La Quinta
    Americans are used to people butchering English because we have so many immigrants, not to mention we butcher it ourselves. But in Lithuania, where my wife is from, they look at my like I’m speaking Klingon when I say something simple like “taip” (yes). My father-in-law speaks German with me instead of Lithuanian. I don’t speak German but that keeps him from hearing me speak Lithuanian. Then again, maybe it’s just to get me not to speak at all.
     
  15. Deeneaus

    Deeneaus Member+

    Aug 29, 2007
    America/Deutschland
    Club:
    Arminia Bielefeld
    Nat'l Team:
    United States
    I learned German, and a love for soccer, primarily by getting drunk with old German dudes at bars across Germany. Granted, Tyler becoming a drunk is probably not good for his YA and USMNT career...but what I'm saying is he just needs to go for it and take the weird comments he's bound to make auf Deutsch in stride. :)
     
  16. freisland

    freisland Member+

    Jan 31, 2001
    I learned my terrible French (my wife won't speak French with me, "for the same reason I don't run my nails down a chalkboard repeatedly") by drinking a lot of red wine, smoking filterless cigarettes and just blabbing. It led to a long Galois habit I finally broke, which is probably not ideal, but French people will talk to me for hours, since my fractured French is apparently "cute..." My kids just put their fingers in their ears when I try...

    The French appreciate you trying. The Dutch in the countryside too. And Germans only have patience for bad German when drinking. Say any more than "Ciao" in Italy and every Italian will commence to address you like you are a fluent as a native son.
     
  17. BostonRed

    BostonRed Member+

    Oct 9, 2011
    Somerville, MA
    Club:
    New England Revolution
    Nat'l Team:
    United States
    They say the best way to learn another language is horizontally.
     
  18. FC Tallavana

    FC Tallavana Member+

    Jul 1, 2004
    La Quinta
    In France -- outside of Paris anyway -- I have found that a simple bonjour and/or merci will get the locals to put me out of my misery and switch over to English. As you say, in Italy, that sort of fluency leads to a more formal conversation in the local language. But I'd rather have that than what my wife deals with in the United States. She has a PhD in English and has lived in the States for most of her life at this point, but because of her accent, she gets people asking where she's from and welcoming her to America nearly every day.
     
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  19. freisland

    freisland Member+

    Jan 31, 2001
    #1269 freisland, Jun 26, 2019
    Last edited: Jun 26, 2019
    I don't mean to take this off topic, and while I never welcome people to America, I ask everyone where they're from. I now preface it with "I know we're not supposed to ask, but where did you grow up?" - because I'm really interested. Uber and Cab drivers often have the best stories. I ask Americans that too, BTW. Ok, back to the other OT discussion that helped start...

    I'll go look for Tyler Boyd transfer tweets as penance....

    I mean Adams... ahhhahahahh. This is why we can't have nice threads!
     
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  20. Monarch Bay Beachbum

    Apr 5, 2004
    The OC
    Nat'l Team:
    United States
    My wife cringes when I ask people where they are originally from. I do it out of interest and a chance for some commonality(usually through soccer). She believes it is offensive but it often breaks the ice when you can find out a can driver is Ethiopian and have a 30 minute conversation about Gedion Zelalem
     
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  21. freisland

    freisland Member+

    Jan 31, 2001
    Yep.

    Meanwhile, Portuguese winger Bruma to PSV for 12 million is all the Leipzig news I can find...
     
  22. LouisianaViking07/09

    Aug 15, 2009
    That is so true about Italian. I've been a few times and I speak (at most) 10 words and whenever I try they speak to me as if I'm a local. It's quite a warmfilled response.
     
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  23. Eighteen Alpha

    Eighteen Alpha Member+

    Aug 17, 2016
    Club:
    Stoke City FC
    Italians are the least bi-/multi- lingual Europeans I have encountered. Especially in the North. Given that the global influence of the Italian language is about on the scale of Serbo-Croatian, this is bizarre to me, if only for economic reasons.
     
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  24. PalmettoSpur

    PalmettoSpur Member

    Oct 21, 2015
    Club:
    Tottenham Hotspur FC
    A map of the "Knowledge of English in the EU"
    [​IMG]
    Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_language_in_Europe
     
  25. Eighteen Alpha

    Eighteen Alpha Member+

    Aug 17, 2016
    Club:
    Stoke City FC
    Great find! I’d say Milan and Rome accounts for Italy’s 30 to 49 %. I’d probably put Germany as high as Scandinavia but I’m probably not accounting for Rural Germans. I admit I encountered little English in the Black Forest but everywhere else I found Germans to speak remarkably good English. Spain I would agree with but, then, Spanish has enormous global influence. Portugal, I wouldnt know. My first trip there will be next year. France is definitely more multi- lingual than Italy.
    Thanks for posting. Linguistics is a hobby of mine.
     

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