Two years ago, I texted a former teammate, then with the Vancouver Whitecaps, to catch up. He sent me pictures of his new son; I made him feel jealous about life as a bachelor. Eventually the conversation moved to soccer, as it always does when old teammates chat.
We caught up on all things MLS. Can you believe what the Rapids are doing? You think Dallas has a chance without Fabian Castillo?
I asked about life with the āCaps, what he thought of the squad. His voice took on new energy:
ā This 15 year old is for real, dude.
ā Huh?
ā The 15 year old we just signed out of the Academy. Alphonso Davies.ā
ā Do you know how many times Iāve heard "this 15 year old is the real deal?"
ā I know, but seriously. When we play 6-v-6 at the end of practice, heās the best player. Heās the one that everyone wants on his team.
(The Whitecaps roster at the time included Kendall Waston, Tim Parker, Christian BolaƱos, and Pedro Morales.)
ā Heās better than all of them, Bobby.
I maintained my skepticism but tucked the story into my memory.
On Wednesday, that 15-year-old was transferred to Bayern Munich in a record-breaking deal.
The news feels like a perfectly natural move for Davies at this point. Anyone whoās watched the Whitecaps or Davies in the last year-and-a-half has picked up what the Whitecaps players saw back in 2016.
He can be downright unstoppable.
Itās huge news for Davies ā I canāt imagine what itās like going to bed the night after Bayern Munich has made a bid for you ā the Whitecaps organization and the league as a whole. Itās the biggest outgoing transfer in league history, on multiple metrics.
Looking forward...
The job isnāt done for Davies. Yes, itās an amazing opportunity. But Bayern signs a lot of players. Remember Renato Sanches? He stood out at Euro 2016 and then moved to Bayern and a lot of people thought heād be the next dominant midfielder in Europe. A year later he was struggling to get minutes at Swansea City.
Norwegian attacker Martin Odegaard was the last 15-year-old wonderkid available in the world market. He too decided to vault straight to the top and picked Real Madrid. Odegaard has made only one appearance with the Spanish giants in three years and played last season on loan in the Eredivisie with Heerenveen.
Clubs like Bayern and Real often work like venture capital firms; they acquire lots of high-quality assets and hope for one to be a gold mine.
This shouldnāt pour cold water on Daviesā move; it should only provide perspective. The initial idea of Bayern provides a thrill, but everything starts over when he gets there. Bayern are signing Davies for his potential, not his present ability. Davies is good, but heās not Bayern good, yet. Bayern starts guys that are top-20 in the world at their positions. Davies has shown he might be able to get to that level, but he still needs to bridge the potential to the Bayern good gap.
Iām interested, first, about what Bayern plans to do with Daviesā. In the immediate future, Davies will stay with the āCaps until the end of the 2018 MLS season. What happens after that?
It would be tough for Davies to get minutes in Bayernās first team right now. The Bundesliga champions have Arjen Robben, Franck Ribery, Kingsley Coman, Thomas Muller and James Rodriguez as options at winger for the upcoming season. It doesnāt get much easier at left back or center mid, either. Itās not to say Davies canāt beat them out, but I wouldnāt necessarily bet on it.
If Davies isnāt ready to play at Bayern yet, then how do they get him ready to play? Will they loan him out? To what kind of club?
It will also be interesting to see where European clubs decide to play Davies. Heās spent time at left winger, left back and left wing back in 2018. I could also see a coach deciding heās a marauding center midfielder in the Blaise Matuidi-mold.
I suspect Daviesā position and ultimate ceiling depend on two areas of his game, and how well he develops them.
First, he will need to improve his execution around the goal. This is somewhat of a blanket statement thatās true for all young attackers who move to big clubs. The biggest difference between Davies and Ribery wonāt be creating chances, but making the final action to finish them.
Davies has already made huge strides within the last year in his comfort around goal. A year ago he would often settle for mediocre crosses from wide areas; now he has the ability to beat defenders toward goal and the composure to pick up his head to find teammates. If he continues on his current trajectory, he should be in good shape on this one.
Second, he will need to get more comfortable in possession in the middle third. The Whitecaps havenāt tried to possess the ball much in Daviesā time in Vancouver. Theyāve primarily been a counterattacking team. Daviesā ability in open space is undeniable, but itās tough to gauge how good he is/can be in possession. He will need to show heās capable of receiving the ball and connecting passes in tight spaces in the middle of the field. If teammateās canāt trust him with possession in tough spots, then he might be better suited to play left back.
Overall, Daviesā move to Bayern is exciting. Itās a huge success for the Whitecaps, developing a player in their academy and moving him to one of the biggest clubs in the world. Itās a big statement for MLS to have Bayern come calling.
For Davies, Iām nervous about a 17-year-old moving to such a big club. Young players need to play. But I also wouldnāt expect anyone to turn down Bayern Munich. And I applaud Daviesā willingness to take on the biggest challenge.
Davies has been nothing but breathtaking in his time in MLS. Heās annihilated anyone whoās tried to stand in his way. Iām not about to bet against him now.