American Teen Starlet Freddy Adu To
Trial With Manchester United
Much Adu about Freddy
Sean O'Conor
So the American soccer whizzkid Freddy Adu is finally coming to
England, for a two-week trial with the mighty Manchester
United beginning on the 18th of November.
The phony war surrouding press speculation on Adu and English
clubs was ended on the 9th of this month when United confirmed Adu
was coming for a trial, a day after denying news that was plainly
around the town in American soccer circles.
So, 'Is he any good?' is the next question. The jury is out is
my answer. Freddy
debuted in MLS aged 14 in 2004, the youngest professional American
sportsman of all time. But in much of West Africa, from where he
hails, births are often not officially recorded for some time (remember
Roger Milla?) and there was much talk that Adu is actually two to
three years older than his mother claims.
Adu is officially 17 now and has 87 appearances and 11 goals for
DC United under his belt. He has played one friendly for the US
national team, which means he can still switch allegiances to Ghana,
the land of his birth, should he so desire. Given that he is a US
citizen and has been brought through the various US youth teams,
I would say it is only a matter of time before he gains his first
full cap and ends the Ghana/USA debate.
Freddy also attended the US Soccer Academy in Bradenton, Florida,
whose alumni include Bobby Convey, DaMarcus Beasley and Jonathan
Spector, now plying their trade in the Premiership, the league Adu
dreams of playing in.
Freddy is doing exceptionally well for his age, has very good
technique and balance, is fast though not supersonic, and strong
but not powerful. He likes to dribble, attack defenders and is not
afraid to shoot. He is in conclusion one of America's most talented
17 year olds, but is he good enough to get into Manchester United's
1st XI? Not yet, I would say.
He was not deemed good enough for the US
team that exited the first round of the 2006 World Cup either.
At a press conference in Kaiserslautern during the build-up to the
tournament, a German journalist asked coach Bruce Arena, "What
about Freddy Adu? Is he going to the World Cup?" to which Arena
sarcastically, and typically, replied, "I don't know, I'll
have to ask him."
MLS is not the Premier League and Freddy is not yet the finished
product in many ways. On the other hand, only by coming to Europe
might we really find out what he is truly capable of. As someone
who mixes in the US Soccer community, I can honestly say there is
no consensus about whether Adu is America's soccer messiah. Off
the record, someone who works with him told me he thought he wasn't
'a 90-minute player' yet.
True, Freddy is young and cannot short-cut the experience that
will endow him with intimate knowledge of the nuances and phases
of the game at the highest level.
For that reason alone we should be patient and give him time in
my opinion and stop trying to jump the gun on football in America,
which is a long work in progress, an oak tree, not a cypress leylandii.
Adu is still only 17 for goodness' sake. We also never seem to learn
that players peak at different ages.
All those drunk on the dream of Adu becoming a superstar would
do well to remember Nii Lamptey, a 16 year-old starter for Anderlecht
who was touted as the new Pele and played for PSV before moving
to Aston Villa, where he started a gradual decline which saw him
hawking his boots around clubs in 11 different countries, wondering
what might have been while the rest of the football world quickly
forgot about him.
I last watched Adu in the flesh last month playing for DC United
against New England Revolution at RFK Stadium in Washington DC.
He certainly stood out as one of the liveliest and most inventive
players on the field, but seemed lacking in experience as he often
over-dribbled or ran into avoidable danger.
There was a more impressive American on the field that night,
a 23 year-old who is desperate to come to Europe and unlike Adu,
can boast a CV with 23 international caps and 6 goals, including
one in a World Cup Finals. European clubs, I give you Clint Dempsey,
a fiery right-sided attacking midfielder. Buy him and stop worrying
about whether Freddy Adu can become the 'American Pele.'
Related Links
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Who the Hell is Freddy Adu?
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