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Villyan Bijev

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King Binny

Part of the Furniture
Honorary Member
Liverpool have signed American teenager Villyan Bijev from Cal Odyssey on a three-year deal, according to a report from Californian news channel KMPH Fox 26.

Bijev, 18, impressed while on trial at Liverpool last week, and scored five goals in two games with the Under-18 squad, which included a hat-trick.

The striker hold Bulgarian citizenship through his father, Chris, and so avoided having to fulfil any work permit criteria, while Clovis North Head Coach, Chad McCarty, who worked with the youngster in his early career, confirmed the deal to the channel.

VillyanBijev-440x300%20copy.jpg


Position: Forward
Date Of Birth: Jan. 3, 1993
Height: 6-1
Weight: 145
Hometown: Fresno, Calif.
Club: Cal Odyssey

Villyan Bijev Goals

Him 2 yrs ago

The American wonderkid has spent two games on trial with Liverpool and came to the fore in an 8-0 win over Stevenage Borough last Monday.

Mike Marsh’s Under-18s had an easy time of things and Bijev produced an incredible first-half performance, scoring a hat-trick, winning a penalty and setting up another with a fine assist in the Liverpool number 9 shirt.

Intriguingly, Liverpool, who are yet to announce the signing, made no mention on their website of Villyan Bijev’s excellent 45-minute performance against Stevenage that undoubtedly secured him a contract on Merseyside. The official website simply notes that Adam Morgan claimed two goals

Bio:
http://ussda.demosphere.com/teams/17276140/17297170-17276233/11637384.html

http://www.facebook.com/people/Villyan-Bijev/100001036050522?sk=wall

"I guess i'll never walk alone 😉
16 hours ago"
 
Intriguingly, Liverpool, who are yet to announce the signing, made no mention on their website of Villyan Bijev’s excellent 45-minute performance against Stevenage


Yeah TLW lads mentioned how the club didn't want to name the players on trial incase other scouts tried to nick them . But then they stuck the vids online and mentioned them there so didn't do the best job of hiding their identities at all
 
If only we'd played more youths against Hull....
 
i see the U 18s won again , 4-2 against wigan this time . I read that the youth teams all play the same formation , a 4-3-3 , which is being credited for how they seamlessly move up the age groups . Now obviously with our ex-barca staff this isn't such a surprise as barca do this themselves , but they do it as their B and 1st team play this formation also . So i wonder if we've decided to do similar with our 1st team formation . Ok obviously we won't play 4-3-3 all the time but perhaps the majority of the time . At the very least i expect our reserves will play this formation also with Rodolfo there now .

Also our youth team are meant to make this formation work so well as they've shit loads of place out wide to link with the main striker .
 
Re: Re: Villyan Bijev

[quote author=Hansern link=topic=46216.msg1369348#msg1369348 date=1311515087]
Apperantly that Pelosi lad will be signed aswell.
[/quote]

*has no clue who that is*

What about nacho?
 
Re: Re: Villyan Bijev

[quote author=Hansern link=topic=46216.msg1369353#msg1369353 date=1311515333]
Nacho nacho man. I want to be a nacho man.

No idea mate.
[/quote]

That song and the delicious food based puns are the only reason I want him
 
Re: Re: Villyan Bijev

[quote author=Fabio link=topic=46216.msg1369358#msg1369358 date=1311515626]
[quote author=Hansern link=topic=46216.msg1369353#msg1369353 date=1311515333]
Nacho nacho man. I want to be a nacho man.

No idea mate.
[/quote]

That song and the delicious food based puns are the only reason I want him
[/quote]

id also like us to start selling nacho hats

nacho_hat_06.jpg


although this one does look a bit shit
 
id be made up if some fella sat in front of me with one of them, all youd need is a pack of doritoes

could turn ugly if we score though
 
Villyan Bijev, an 18-year-old striker from Fresno, Calif., has signed with England's Liverpool FC, according to weekend reports from MLSsoccer.com and numerous other outlets.

The Bulgarian-born teenager is a product of California Odyssey Soccer Club and recently impressed while on trial at Liverpool. Playing just the first half in the Liverpool Under-18 side's 8-0 demolition of Stevenage Borough, Bijev scored a hat trick, earned a penalty kick and set up another goal with a clever heel flick.

"This is such an incredible achievement for Villyan," said California Odyssey Club Director Jeremy Schultz in a statement on the Clovis, Ca.-based club's website. "He has been so committed to soccer and this reward for him is much deserved. He has displayed not only the ability to maximize his potential through dedication, commitment and hard work and seize his moments of opportunity but he has maintained a humble spirit and become a man of character along his journey.

"We are so incredibly proud of his accomplishments and know that Villyan will continue to push himself to achieve more. He is a special player."

MLSsoccer.com's Greg Seltzer reports that Bijev signed a five-year contract with the Reds and was immediately sent out on loan to Belgian champions Racing Genk, where he is expected to challenge for playing time with the first team this season. Bijev is a member of the United States' U-18 national team player pool but also holds a Bulgarian passport, which greatly simplifies the process of securing a work permit.
 
[quote author=Youllnevrwalkalone link=topic=46216.msg1369951#msg1369951 date=1311613096]
Played against him. He's better than me.
[/quote]

can i have your autograph?
 
Silly boy, he's not even looking at what he's signing.

He could turn up for first days training and be handed a gimp suit for all he knows.
 
[quote author=Skullflower link=topic=46216.msg1369988#msg1369988 date=1311616844]
[quote author=Youllnevrwalkalone link=topic=46216.msg1369951#msg1369951 date=1311613096]
Played against him. He's better than me.
[/quote]

can i have your autograph?
[/quote]

I'm also illiterate
 
Bijev, 18, was signed by Liverpool to a three-year contract this summer after starring for youth club Cal Odyssey, and the Reds loaned him out to Fortuna Dusseldorf.

"Dusseldorf is a great club with a super stadium," said Bijev, whose parents are Bulgarian. "I am looking forward to playing here and I hope that I can help my new team with goals."

Fortuna sporting director Werner Wolf called Bijev a great talent.

"We want to give him the opportunity here at Dusseldorf to mature as a player," said Wolf.

PM_119_2011_Nachwuchsstuermer_Villyan_Bijev_wird_vom_FC_Liverpool_ausgeliehen_small.JPG
 
Not so actually.....I wish you would get your fact right Binny 😉

Creativity bonus points get awarded to Genk, who managed to price themselves out of an already agreed Villyan Bijev loan by demanding that Liverpool pay them a large fee for taking the youngster this season. Yes, you read that right — and no, we've never heard of that before, either.

Liverpool also tied up the signing of USA Under-18s striker Villyan Bijev from American outfit California Odyssey. Bijev has been immediately loaned out to Fortuna Dusseldorf.

regards
 
Fortuna Düsseldorf currently 3rd in German Bundesliga 2.

Villyan Bijev made his pro debut yesterday as he played 8 minutes for Fortuna Dusseldorf in their 2-1 loss to Hansa Rostock.

An article earlier this Jan:


As the week-long United States under-20 camp ended last Sunday in Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., one of the players who is shaping up to be an important part of the team in months ahead is the forward Villyan Bijev.

Bijev arrived in camp after a phenomenal 2011 during which the youngster sign a professional contract with Liverpool. Along with Real Salt Lake midfielder Luis Gil, he is one of the most high-profile players on the 36-man roster.

For Bijev, 18, it was his first time with the U.S. team and he is pleased with how both he and the team performed.

“The camp has been great and there are a lot of great players here,” Bijev said. “I feel like I’ve been playing well. Everybody just came off of winter break so I think it’s kind of normal that a few of the players would be a little bit rusty. But taking that into consideration, I think everyone is playing really well and I feel that my performance has been good at this stage.”

Earlier last year Bijev had been playing with the U.S. U-18 team and had made initial plans to attend the University of Washington. But in the summer he made headlines when he went on a trial at Liverpool and delivered a stellar performance.

During the trial he played in two games for Liverpool’s U-18 team. In the first game against Tranmere, he scored two goals and assisted on a third in a 6-1 win. In the second game, against Stevenage, he scored a hat-trick and added another assist in an 8-1 win.

Club officials at Liverpool were clearly impressed and they wasted no time in signing Bijev to a three-year contract with a club option for two more years.

“I believe the trial worked out so well because I got a chance to play with players who have been playing professionally since they were young,” he said. “I got to train with [the players] before the scrimmages. During the scrimmages I knew what they would be looking for. I was making good runs and the ball was just there. All I had to do was put it away which is the instinct I have as a forward. I guess the chips just fell where they needed to fall.”

Bijev was born in Bulgaria but moved to Fresno, Calif., when he was a child and it is there he began to develop while playing for the California Odyssey, one of the premier youth club teams in the country. When he was 17 he obtained his American citizenship.

Bijev was unable to play for Liverpool after signing for at least a year because he had no way of obtaining a British work permit at the time because of Bulgaria’s transitional status in the European Union.

Because of this issue, Liverpool immediately sent Bijev on a season-long loan to Fortuna Düsseldorf in Germany’s second highest division, the 2.Bundesliga. The club was seen as a solid choice as they were anticipated to be in strong contention for promotion.

“I like being in Germany a lot,” Bijev said. “The style of play at Fortuna Düsseldorf is also possession and the speed of play is very fast. That has helped me a lot as far as knowing what to do with the ball before I get it and playing one or two touch. I would definitely prefer to be in Liverpool from the beginning and not have to go on loan. But due to the work permit situation, if I had to be out on loan anywhere, I would prefer to be in Germany.”

The first half of his season with Fortuna Düsseldorf has proven to be difficult for Bijev to break into the first team primarily because of an ankle injury that lingered.

“I rolled my ankle during a game where we were playing on artificial turf,” Bijev recalled. “I just kept taping it and playing on it. It got to the point where I could no longer play on it. I flew over to Liverpool and had treatment there and came back to Germany to have more treatment. I returned to playing and I made the mistake of playing without tape. I reinjured it even worse.”

The injury kept him out four weeks and it was not until the beginning of December that he began to feel 100 percent. He finished 2011 on a positive note with solid training in Germany before the winter break.

For Bijev, it put the exclamation point on a year that saw a meteoric rise and laid the foundation for him progress at one of the world’s most storied clubs.

“Last year was the most progression I’ve made in my career and I think the main thing has to do with focus,” Bijev said. “I always wanted to go pro as opposed to going to college. Knowing that, I pushed myself to the limits with the California Odyssey as well as doing trainings on my own and in the U-18 camps just trying to get better every day. In the end it worked out for me.”

Now in 2012 Fortuna Düsseldorf is in first place as the end of the winter break nears, and Bijev’s top goal is to make the first team during the second half of the season to ensure the club’s promotion to the Bundesliga. To do that, however, he feels that the next step in his development is to improve his physical strength.

“The areas of my game that I want to improve on are mainly to get stronger and stronger on the ball,” Bijev said. “To be a forward I need to have good upper-body strength. Also, [I want to work on] shooting from range and making better contact with the ball to keep [my shots] low. Other than that, I feel like I have good awareness when I’m in the box. When the ball comes to my feet, I know what to do with it.”

When Bijev joined the U.S. U-20 team last week, he was hoping to boost a team that was coming off a bitterly disappointing cycle in 2011 where it put together a talented team but fell short of qualifying for the FIFA U-20 World Cup after an upset loss to Guatemala in the quarterfinals of the qualifying tournament.

Last fall, U.S. Soccer hired Tab Ramos to coach the U-20 team and reinvigorate the program. Bijev had never met Ramos before the camp but after his first experience playing under the former U.S. national team captain, Bijev said he enjoys the style of play Ramos wants to implement and feels that it will mirror top teams in the United States.

“I like the way he coaches very much,” Bijev said of Ramos. “He seems like a very possession-minded coach, which I think is very important as far as the direction that the United States wants to go soccer-wise. I think it’s important as opposed to in the past [when] we were known to be more physical and fit guys just chasing the ball. I would prefer we keep possession — we play with ball and make the other team chase us. That’s what Tab wants to do.”

Bijev is familiar with most of the key players on the U.S. U-20 team and is confident they will have the ability to succeed as they move forward in building a team to qualify and succeed at the 2013 U-20 World Cup in Turkey.

The development path he is on, however, is different from the path of most of the players in camp. On the 36-man roster, 15 are currently in the N.C.A.A. ranks. There have been many players like Clint Dempsey, Oguchi Onyewu, and Vedad Ibisevic who have played in college that have had great success.

Still despite the success of a few, the environment with professional clubs in Europe is simply different for players at that age.

“There are a lot of great players in this U-20 group,” Bijev said. “One thing I can say is the only difference in playing abroad is that those players play on a daily basis from a young age. With the U.S., most of the players are in college so they have many other responsibilities on top of playing soccer. Whereas the professionals, their main focus is just to play soccer as opposed to going to school and jobs.”

Bijev is excited to be part of the U.S. U-20 team, but as with any player with dual citizenship, the issue of which country a player will represent arises and Bijev’s situation is no different.

Bijev is happy to have multiple options and he does not discount the idea of representing Bulgaria. Still, he happy to be with the U.S. U-20 team and is committed to the U.S. program at this stage.

“Right now the U.S. is in my mind in terms of who I want to represent,” Bijev said. “But at this young stage in my career and also in my life I think it’s a good thing I have an opportunity to play for either country. I would like to keep all my options open. But right now I am committed to the U.S. I’m very blessed to have been called into this camp and I’m very thankful. I’m happy to be here.
 
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