The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Family was ‘big factor’ in Adam’s Dens move

Adam has done it all in England but playing for Dee will be right up there

- GEORGE CRAN

Charlie Adam has opened his heart on the family reasons that played a part in his move to Dundee.

The 26-times capped Scotland internatio­nal – who starred for Blackpool, Liverpool and Stoke in the English Premier League – signed a two-year deal with his boyhood heroes on Tuesday.

The desire to be near his loved ones again after more than a decade plying his trade down south was a key factor in the decision to join up with James McPake’s squad at Dens Park.

Particular­ly after some upsetting news last week.

Adam, 34, said: “I’ve got an issue with my mum. She got some bad news in the last week that she’ s got cancer and obviously I’ ve to deal with that…

“That’s the realisatio­n of where I am in my life and my career. Sometimes you don’t get the opportunit­y to come back home.

“Personal circumstan­ces changed and that was a big factor .”

This week was a homecoming for Charlie Adam and not just in a football sense.

The 26-times capped Scotland internatio­nal, who starred for Blackpool, Liverpool and Stoke in the Premier League, signed a two-year deal on Tuesday with the club he grew up supporting.

Dundee is his club, but the city is also his home, and the desire to be near his family again after 11 and a half years plying his trade down south was a big part in the decision to sign at Dens Park.

Particular­ly after some upsetting news last week.

Adam said: “I’ve got an issue with my mum. She got some bad news in the last week that she’s got cancer and obviously I’ve to deal with that.

“That’s the realisatio­n of where I am in my life and my career.

“Sometimes you don’t get the opportunit­y to come back home. Personal circumstan­ces changed and that was a big factor.

“I think the club have played a huge role. The manager was the one who picked up the phone and had the courage to ask me if I’d be interested, I’m delighted he did.

“I want to play and enjoy football. I have played but not with excitement.

“I was travelling a lot last year, my family was at home and it just never felt right. This feels right.

“It’s a two-year contract. I keep referring to my age, but age is just a number and it’s important that we can come here and help these young kids play and have security and try and be as successful as we can.”

Adam, who played 27 times for Reading last season in the English Championsh­ip, himself broke the news he was speaking to the club about a possible move more than a fortnight ago.

It may have taken a bit of time but the 34-year-old is delighted to finally get the move to Dens Park over the line and he’s looking forward to the pressure that comes with pulling on the dark blue of Dundee.

He added: “I’m delighted. It took a while. We had a couple weeks of discussion­s and toing and froing. You know how it is with contracts, they take a while.

“Eventually we got to a point where I had to make a decision on what I wanted to do and I had the realisatio­n that this is a club that meant a lot to me growing up.

“I stood on these terraces, I’ve been on this pitch, I’ve been in pitch invasions. It’s exciting times.

“It’s a dream because it would have been easy to walk away and go somewhere else. But when you’ve got a club like this, it’s been a tough time, and hopefully I can come in and lift it.

“We’ve got some good young players and experience in (Graham) Dorrans and (Paul) McGowan. I’m excited.”

Asked whether there was any concern the deal would fall through, Adam replied: “There’s always worry because there are negotiatio­ns.

“We’re in the middle of a pandemic and there has got to be a realisatio­n from my end as a player.

“I’m 34, I understand what’s going on in the world, and the club would never put itself in financial trouble – and they aren’t.

“It (this move) is nothing to do with salaries, it’s about coming and playing and enjoying and trying to get promoted.

“It’s about being successful because with United in the Premiershi­p, that’s where we want to be, and hopefully we can do that this year.

“I know there is pressure on my shoulders. Everybody will be looking and thinking ‘what’s he thinking?’

“I can handle it. I’m here to learn as well. I want to learn from the manager, I want to learn from people at the club. That’s a big factor as well.

“The experience of coaching and management is something for me in the future, but right now I’m focused on winning every week and that’s how I see it. This is a club that needs to be winning games, and if we can win games with supporters back in the door, it will be a tough place to come.

“The pressure is on Hearts. They’ve got the momentum and the big backing, and we’ll just wait for our opportunit­y to win games.”

Adam propelled himself into the limelight down south with a spectacula­r free-kick in Blackpool’s play-off final win over Cardiff that earned promotion to the Premier League.

The midfielder’s focus now is getting his team out of the Scottish Championsh­ip rather than the English one, but he feels getting Dundee back to the top-flight would surpass his achievemen­ts at Bloomfield Road.

“It would be fairytale stuff,” he added. “Going back to getting promoted with Blackpool to the Premier League, that’s what I feel it would be like.

“This is my club, this is who I supported. I never ever thought I would get the opportunit­y because people would always think it was too big a gap.

“But sometimes you have to sacrifice things in life to make things happen.

“It is important that we are on this journey together. This is a project going forward and it is exciting times for the club as well as the city again.

“I keep referring to United and they are in the Premiershi­p.

‘‘That’s where we want to be and to be challengin­g them again.

‘‘They have put huge investment in but we just have to go and do our own business.

“Starting with that friendly, we just have to step that mark up and then we go again at the weekend, building up to the games in the cup.”

Adam was pictured in the new Dundee kit this week as his signing was announced but it’s not the first time he’s donned the dark blue.

And he says turning out alongside some of his boyhood heroes for Julian Speroni’s testimonia­l at Crystal Palace in 2015 played a big factor in his eventual return to Dundee.

“The Crystal Palace game was something I was taken aback by because of the support I got.

“Everybody knows you can get overawed but I was lucky to play with some of my heroes that night.

“The way the fans reacted – and I hope they react the same way when we do get crowds back – was just amazing.

“One of my mates was with me and he was talking about it, saying to go all the way to London and have that support just shows what this club is all about.”

Playing – and scoring – with the likes of

“I stood on these terraces, I’ve been on this pitch, I’ve been in pitch invasions. It’s exciting times. It’s a dream because it would have been easy to walk away and go somewhere else.

CHARLIE ADAM

Speroni, Caballero and Sara that night at Selhurst Park brought back memories of watching Dundee as a youngster.

Adam also revealed he was part of a pitch invasion at Dens Park as a nineyear-old after watching Jim Duffy’s Dark Blues defeat Hearts on penalties after an epic 4-4 draw in the League Cup on their way to the final in 1995.

He was also cheekily in the Dundee end while a Rangers player as the two sides played out the 2003 Scottish Cup final cheering on his side.

“I was on the pitch when we beat Hearts in the cup,” he said.

“Morten Wieghorst scored an unbelievab­le goal. I was young but remember it. I was in the Derry then running on here. But that’s what it means.”

Recalling more of his boyhood heroes, he said: “Years ago Iain Anderson was a hero of mine and I was fortunate enough to play with him at St Mirren.

“But the days when Jimmy and Peter Marr were running the club we had some superstars – (Claudio) Caniggia, Juan Sara scoring a hat-trick in a derby, Caballero, Speroni, (Fabrizio) Ravanelli.

“We had some top, top players over the years at this football club.

“I want to try and emulate that, to bring those great days back.

“I remember being employed by Rangers when Amoruso scored in the Scottish Cup final and I was in the Dundee end hoping my team would win.

“Unfortunat­ely we never but that’s how it goes. So I am just looking forward to this opportunit­y being at Dundee now.”

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 ?? Pictures: SNS/PA. ?? Charlie Adam, top, trains with his Dundee team-mates for the first time yesterday; Adam in action for his beloved Dee in Julian Speroni’s testimonia­l at Crystal Palace in May 2015, above.
Pictures: SNS/PA. Charlie Adam, top, trains with his Dundee team-mates for the first time yesterday; Adam in action for his beloved Dee in Julian Speroni’s testimonia­l at Crystal Palace in May 2015, above.

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