Michael Bradley

Been one of the players of the tournament for me. Still only 23.

Worth a PL club taking a punt?

He's a complete cnut with a temper problem. Probably the only guy on the team I dislike more than Donovan.

He might be decent. I'm still not sold on him because he pulled a disappearing act during qualifying for an extended period.

The reporter asked Bradley how the Americans' first opponent, England, differs tactically from Friday's adversary, Slovenia. It wasn't the greatest question, but it was far from unanswerable.

Bradley grimaced and stammered a bit, then said, "They're two different teams!"

The surprised journalist agreed, then asked again how England and Slovenia contrast. Most athletes would come up something -- perhaps a thoughtful answer, or a reply that twists the question into one he can respond to, or at least some kind of cliche about how both teams are great in their own way and the U.S. will have to be at their very best to win, etc.

Not Bradley.

"They've got 11 different players!"

Missed the Confed Cup final because of a red, the 2007 Gold Cup final because of a red. After the red in the Confed Cup, he attacked the ref in the tunnel and got a three game ban.

He's a fecking moron with a chip on his shoulder.
 
He's a complete cnut with a temper problem. Probably the only guy on the team I dislike more than Donovan.

He might be decent. I'm still not sold on him because he pulled a disappearing act during qualifying for an extended period.



Missed the Confed Cup final because of a red, the 2007 Gold Cup final because of a red. After the red in the Confed Cup, he attacked the ref in the tunnel and got a three game ban.

He's a fecking moron with a chip on his shoulder.

Sounds a bit like Roy Keane in the mental department. The current United side could use a player with a bit of a nasty streak.
 
I like Bradley, but he's not Manchester United quality in my opinion and never will be.

I mean we have midfielders of the promise of Possebon and Cleverley who may never make it at United. You have to be something special.

The only thing that would make me believe we were interested in Bradley is the number of goals he scores from midfield in the Dutch league. A midfielder who gets goals always has a place with us even if he can't tackle (Scholes) or pass very well (Gibson), and if he can't get goals, then his place is in danger (Anderson).

Bradley can make the right passes, get stuck in and get a goal.
 
The only thing that would make me believe we were interested in Bradley is the number of goals he scores from midfield in the Dutch league.
He plays for Moenchengladbach in the Bundesliga.
But you've got it spot on, he's nowhere near Manchester United level. Gladbach are about his level, he isn't even the best player there.
 
Ok, sorry. I should have said the goals he HAS scored for Heerenveen in the Dutch league and IS scoring for Gladbach in the German league.
 
Michael Bradley is close to United quality. His problem however is that his passing is wayward at the best of times and simply poor at the worst of times. He would win a lot of balls in midfield and score goals, but he would give away possession far too often in my opinion.
 
Michael Bradley is close to United quality. His problem however is that his passing is wayward at the best of times and simply poor at the worst of times. He would win a lot of balls in midfield and score goals, but he would give away possession far too often in my opinion.

This, his problem is his possession which has gotten a lot better from his early days. He isnt United quality but not by far. He is level with Gibson though, to be fair. Had he been groomed by United he could be levels better than he can ever be.
 
Michael Bradley is close to United quality. .

You compare him to Scholes or Keano and you'd see that M.Bradley is just a toddler playing kindergarden games... kicking a paper ball around. :devil:

United MF(That have been considered 1st choice):

Scholes: One of the best or maybe the best MF of his generation ( Zidane said so )
Keano: One of the best box to box players you'd ever get to see.
Hargreaves: One of Englands best DM that I've seen, box to box, has a good free kick, has the stamina to run 120minutes... sadly he is too injury prone.
Carrick: Let's not consider last season cuz I'd say it was a total Nightmare for him but for three seasons before that, Carrick has showed that he can play 4-4-2, can intercept balls, spray out passes Scholesque, and can run the show and get a few goals...
Anderson: Was a superb prospect from what I saw him from in his Porto days.. dubbed the new Ronaldinho.. he had everything from pace to stamina to tricks... alas he forgot his shooting boots at Portugal, found one boot Vs Spurs though...


So if M.Bradley is anywhere near the players mentioned then he might get a peak, but I don't think so...

Ozil/Hamsik are the only players that come close to United quality from what I've seen so far based on last season and the current WC.
 
No ones saying he would be a first team regular but hes better than any back up we have. I would say he could get games ahead of Anderson and Carrick though. He has the heart and desire to picked ahead of Carrick and he can perform more consistent that Anderson. Although I think both are technically better he has the drive, passion and heart that is lacking in our midfield minus Fletcher.

He could easily be a starter for anyone outside the top 6. Saying he is a bottom half team talent is ridiculous.
 
He'd basically be like Smudge pt 2. I think the fans would actually really like him.
 
On his way to Sunderland apparently for somewhere in the range of 5-7m.

Good move imo
 
On his way to Sunderland apparently for somewhere in the range of 5-7m.

Good move imo

Bruce starting to spend Bent money, I see. Not sure if they need a midfielder when they already have Cattermole and Henderson who are both good but a little depth will do them no harm and they will probably play with three midfielders more often, in which case Bradley should compliment well with the other two. Besides, even £7m is a rather small price.
 
On his way to Sunderland apparently for somewhere in the range of 5-7m.

Good move imo

I think Bruce should have sold Bent for like 17-19m and then got Ireland too instead of all money. He is thinking of getting a central midfielder anyways. He definitely needs a striker because he has lost Jones and Bent in the last six months.
 
Could theoretically got 451 with Welbeck on the left.

Welbeck-Henderson-Bradley-Cattermole-Elmo

Or Bradley could be an insurance policy if (when :nervous:?)Henderson bolts.
 
Is Cattermole the holding midfielder in that side? Bradley performs his best when he has someone doing the dirty work at the back so he can move forward.
 
I think Bruce should have sold Bent for like 17-19m and then got Ireland too instead of all money. He is thinking of getting a central midfielder anyways. He definitely needs a striker because he has lost Jones and Bent in the last six months.

They still owed Spurs a lot of that for Bent.
 
They still owed Spurs a lot of that for Bent.

What is it about Donovan you dont like, just curious. I first saw him in NZ for the US under 17 side in 1999 under 17 wc. He was player of the tournament and I got to chat to him, seemed a decent kid back then.
 
I thought he was excellent in the WC. Be interesting to see how he copes in the PL.

Re: Bruce buying another central midfielder. Preparing for life without Henderson?

He's been playing on the right quite a lot since Sunderland switched to a 4-4-2, with Elmo at right back quite often. Wonder if he's thinking about keeping that more permanent so just strengthening because they've often been playing Meyler alongside Cattermole.
 
According to the well-respected source "Kicker" he's on his way to Villa on loan until the end of the season, with an option to buy him in the summer.
 
Guardian says he's off to Villa

Aston Villa are expected to bring their business in the transfer window to an end by signing Michael Bradley on loan from Borussia Mönchengladbach for the remainder of the season and allowing Stephen Ireland to join Newcastle United in another temporary move.

Bradley, who was part of the USA World Cup team managed by his father, Bob, was due to undergo a medical at Villa today before his arrival is confirmed.
 
Moved to Chievo this summer and he's doing very well.

ROME (AP) -He's become known in Italy as "General Bradley,'' "the midfield sergeant'' and "the American Marine.''
Whatever the name, Michael Bradley has adapted to both the highly technical Italian game and his new country. Having joined Chievo Verona in August to become the only American in Serie A, the 24-year-old midfielder has become a regular starter and already speaks Italian.
"When this is your livelihood, your profession, you give everything you have for it and you put everything you have into it,'' Bradley explained during an interview last weekend with The Associated Press. "There's no doubt that when you're in a new country with a new club it's important to be able to integrate yourself as quickly as possible - that's part of the deal.''

A son of former U.S. national team coach Bob Bradley, Michael has cut a distinctive figure in Italy with his shaved head, his New Jersey roots and a nickname likening him to Omar Bradley, the famed World War II general. He's only the fourth American-born player to join a Serie A club in recent years, following Alexi Lalas, Giuseppe Rossi and Oguchi Onyewu.
Lalas played for Padova from 1994-96 after starring for the U.S. team at the 1994 World Cup. Rossi, born in New Jersey to Italian parents, played on loan with Parma in 2007. Onyewu had a brief injury-plagued stint with AC Milan in 2009-10, making only one competitive appearance.
Bradley was kept on the bench during his first match with Chievo, but has started every game since.

"We didn't expect him to adapt so well and so quickly,'' said Chievo's front office member Fabio Moro, who played for the club for 11 seasons. "It's rare for a foreign player to become a starter and do so well in their first season in Italy, but he's showed all his worth and we've been very impressed - he's improving game by game and become a key member of the squad.''

Moro noted that Bradley already conducts interviews in Italian.
"He already speaks very well, which has also been a surprise,'' Moro said. "So beyond showing that he's a great player, he's showed that he's also an intelligent person.''

Michael turned pro at 16 when he joined the New York-New Jersey MetroStars and training with the U.S. national team ahead of the 2006 World Cup. He got his first taste of European soccer with Dutch club Heerenveen from 2006-08 and then scored 10 goals in 76 league games for Borussia Moenchengladbach in Germany.
However, midway through last season Bradley wasn't interested in extending his contract with Moenchengladbach and was loaned to Aston Villa in the English Premier League.

When Alex McLeish was appointed Villa manager at the end of last season, Bradley again found himself looking for a new club. At the same time, new U.S. coach Jurgen Klinsmann chose not to call Bradley up for two friendlies while he was sorting out his club status.

So for a short span, Bradley had no club and had temporarily lost his spot on the national team - having been a regular starter under his father.
"That's life. That's football,'' Bradley said. "When you're a professional you know that this is the nature of things. You know that if you lose a few games in a row there's going to be pressure, there could be a new coach, there could be new players. And that's the same whether it's a club team or national team.

"When you come to a new club you try as quickly as possible to earn the respect of your teammates, to earn the respect of the coaches, to earn the respect of the people in the club with the way that you train, play, handle yourself, so that's the challenge,'' Bradley added. "Flip to the national team, it's the same thing. A new coach comes in and you want to show him that you're a guy who can be counted on in big games.''
Bradley quickly regained his starting spot for the United States for a November friendly at Slovenia. Klinsmann - who played three seasons with Inter Milan - can surely appreciate Bradley's rapid development in Italy.
"I was really pleased with his move. It will really help him in his learning curve,'' Klinsmann said. "In an environment where they are kind of tactic fanatics, the Italians will teach him a lot, will kind of help him a lot to read the game better, to anticipate the game better and to know exactly when to go into certain spaces and when not to go into certain space. And so I was very pleased. On top of that, he chose a beautiful city with Verona. That's always great for a visit from a coach.''

Bankrolled by Christmas cake-maker Paluani, Chievo has transformed itself in recent seasons from a small neighborhood club into a Serie A regular, finishing as high as fifth in its fairy-tale debut season in 2001-02 and solidly mid-table last season in 11th.

As a kid, Bradley and his father, then the Princeton coach, would religiously watch the one Serie A game broadcast on RAI International each Sunday. That's how he became a fan of AC Milan and midfielder Demetrio Albertini.
When Italy trained in New Jersey for the 1994 World Cup, Bradley and his father went to watch a few practices.

"(Albertini) wasn't necessarily the best player on those teams, but in a lot of ways with (Marcel) Desailly or whoever he played with in the center of the midfield was one of the most important,'' Bradley said.
"These kind of guys who play in the center of the midfield and are able to work for the team in attack and defense and really impose themselves on the other team,'' Bradley added. "These guys help their team win, and these are the kind of guys that I've always appreciated and enjoyed watching.''

Bradley is highly articulate and puts a lot of thought into what he says. Asked about the darker sides of the Italian game, which is rife with match-fixing and betting scandals, poor attendance and fan racism, Bradley treads lightly.
Has he heard any racist chants at Verona's 39,000-seat Bentegodi stadium?

"No,'' Bradley said, before taking a long pause. "Obviously you always want to be educated when you go into a situation of what's gone on, the history of things, but at the same time you go in with an open mind and since the day I've been here I have nothing but good things to say about Italian people, Italian soccer, living in Verona. In all ways it's been a great experience.''

So great, in fact, that there has been mild speculation that three-time Italian champion Roma is interested in signing Bradley, especially since Roma is under new American ownership, and has not renewed the contract of midfielder Daniele De Rossi.

A group of four Boston executives closed a deal for Roma in August to become the first foreign majority owners of a Serie A club.
"If these people have come to Roma and have big ideas and big plans for the club, I think that's great,'' Bradley said. "I think it's good for their club, I think it's good for Italian football and I think it's good for football in general. It's no different than the Americans at Liverpool or the Americans at Man United.''

For now, though, Bradley remains focused on Chievo, which lost 2-0 to Roma on Sunday and is in 14th place, eight points clear of the relegation zone.
He's in the first year of a two-year contract, and sounds open to an extension.
"I've enjoyed every part of playing for Chievo so far, every part of playing in Serie A, every part of playing in Italy,'' Bradley said. "For me and my career right now it couldn't have been a better step and a better move for me.''


Read more: 'General Bradley' gets respect in Italy's Serie A - - SI.com

Glazernomic signing :D

Lots of rumors of a move to Roma, especially if the get sell De Rossi.