Times Colonist

Reports: Bayern inks Davies to transfer deal

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VANCOUVER — Reports that Vancouver Whitecaps star Alphonso Davies has finalized a transfer to a German soccer giant are bitterswee­t for his current coach.

Media reports say the 17-year-old Canadian internatio­nal midfielder is heading to Bayern Munich.

Whitecaps coach Carl Robinson said it would be wrong for the club to stop the rising star — who was not at training on Tuesday — from developing his career and talents abroad.

“Did we want to sell him? No. Because he’s a big success on the field,” Robinson said after training. “But you can’t be selfish at this moment because we’ve got a wonderful talent on our hands for me at the club level and even at the internatio­nal level.”

The deal is not official just yet, though.

“Nothing is final yet, but it’s looking good,” Bayern coach Niko Kovac said at a news conference on Tuesday in Philadelph­ia, where the team faces Juventus in a friendly tonight.

“He is a big talent, he’s young and very fast.”

TSN has reported the transfer fee could reach as high as $20 million US with bonuses, an amount that would shatter the record price fetched by an MLS player.

The current record was set in 2008, when Spanish club Villarreal spent $10 million US to acquire then-18-year-old striker Jozy Altidore from the New York Red Bulls.

Davies has eight assists and three goals in 20 games with the Whitecaps this season, his third with the team. He’s also scheduled to play in the MLS all-star game next month.

“He’s ready to go and develop,” Robinson said. “He’s at this age at the moment, I call him a sponge — he’s willing to take so much informatio­n on board. And you’ve got to let him do that.”

Davies joined the Whitecaps residency program in 2015. He was scouted from Edmonton, where his family settled after emigrating to Canada from a refugee camp in Ghana. Davies was born in the refugee camp in 2000, after his parents fled the Liberian civil war.

“It’s not easy to find players at the best of times but to find a player, coach a player, develop a player and then sell a player at that value that we think he’s going to go for is an incredible feat,” Robinson said.

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