"He's intense, he's always prepared," offered Carlos Bocanegra.
"There's so many coaches that beat around the bush and hem and haw, but you always know where you stand with Bob," said Tim Howard. "You can talk to him about anything."
"He's definitely very serious - the way he works, the way he trains," Tim added. "Everything about him is very serious."
Bob H. asked about non-serious Bradley.
"It's nice when he has his guard down," said Tim. "We have a laugh as players and coaches all the time."
Bob H. pressed for specifics, wanting an example of a joke.
"He likes to laugh," said Tim. "Certainly when the coaches are together. I can't think of anything right now."
"He’s very serious about what he does," said Landon Donovan. "He makes jokes, but he's very work-oriented. At first it was a little hard, because Bruce [Arena] was more laid-back."
However, I do have an example of a Bradley joke, one that took place less than an hour ago. Walking toward the Home Depot Center's main entrance, I saw Bob Bradley and Peter Nowak exit the doors and approach from a distance.
"I've got to shield him from the media," said Bradley of his assistant coach.
I laughed. It was especially funny because Bradley knows full well Nowak doesn't talk to the media. He hasn't so far.
Unless they speak German.
3 comments:
Why German?
If you hunt around this blog, you'll find a posting I had around the Denmark game. I'd been trying to talk to Nowak all week and it was always, "No media availability for Peter."
At the Denmark game, a couple of Danish reporters got him to open up in German, which Nowak knows perfectly from his years playing in the Bundesliga. Nowak, from what I could make out with my very basic German, was talking to them about the development of U.S. players and style differences between Europe and America. He went on for some time, but when he was finished, he wouldn't do an interview in English.
So that's why.
OK cool. BTW great blog, Andrea!
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