
Tyrhys Dolan faced cultural adjustments and the pressures of playing for Espanyol, a club with high expectations amid a relegation battle.
The stigma surrounding British players moving to LaLiga is fading, as evidenced by recent signings like Kieran Trippier and Jude Bellingham.
Tyrhys Dolan grew up in Manchester and had a successful spell at Blackburn Rovers in the Championship before signing with Espanyol.
Tyrhys Dolan recommends embracing the experience of moving abroad, despite the challenges of being on your own in a new environment.
Tyrhys Dolan discusses his transition to life in LaLiga after signing a three-year deal with Espanyol. He reflects on the challenges and cultural adjustments faced by British players moving abroad.
Interview: âA lot of time to be on your own, but Iâd recommendâ â Tyrhys Dolan on adapting to life in LaLiga
Taboo is the wrong word, but the curiosity surrounding British players moving abroad certainly qualifies as a stigma. For a long time, and no doubt still in some clubs, signing a player from that idiosyncratic island was considered more of risk than bringing in a Brazilian from across the Atlantic Ocean. Yet that belief seems to be on the wain â perhaps itâs harder sporting directors in suits and glass-faced offices struggle to justify multi-million investments with traditional dogma.
If David Beckham was a global superstar, Gareth Bale was just a brilliant footballer. One of them collected three Champions League awards and various Puskas contenders, but was villified, first and foremost because of his lack of cultural integration. The last success, David Beckham, left Real Madrid with a single major trophy in four years. Yet the arrival of Kieran Trippier, Jude Bellingham, followed last summer by Marcus Rashford and Trent Alexander-Arnold shows that at least within clubs, if perhaps not the media, that prejudice is fading.
Maybe Tyrhys Dolan is a more accurate representation of the transition â away from the particulars of a Real Madrid or a Barcelona â although not too far. The 24-year-old grew up in Manchester, and after successful spell at Blackburn Rovers in the Championship, raised eyebrows, and certainly curiosity in Spain, signing a three-year deal with Espanyol. There are easier clubs to arrive at. Something of a sleeping giant, with expectations well beyond their recent performance, who survived in LaLiga with a gargantuan escape act last season, Dolan was thrust into the coliseum of La Ligaâs relegation battle.
Image via RCDE. Tyrhys Dolan signs for Espanyol.
âComing in off the back of last season, it was a proper survivorâs mentality,â Dolan tells Football España. âThey were just really willing to fight coming in. One thing I noticed was that the supporters were really behind us. Obviously Barcelona is the biggest thing in the city, so everyone thatâs rocking with Espanyol is so loyal to us. So the supporters they had our backs, and the start to life was amazing, and probably unexpected off the back of the last year.â
Dolan played a part in Espanyolâs 2-1 win in over Atletico Madrid in the opening game of the season, the home fans definitely rocking. Los Pericos didnât look back, and sat 5th at Christmas, equalling their best first half of a season ever.
âIt was really positive, off the back of a few wins, it was really about understanding a winnerâs mindset in the team, and the manager [Manolo Gonzalez] implemented that into us. Heâs mental about football, I was excited to work with him, and I heard of him before, but actually experiencing him, and working under him, is a completely different thing. Just enjoying it and taking it in my stride.â
Establishing himself as a regular, Dolan seemed to take to life at Espanyol seamlessly. As Barcelonaâs wettest and coldest winter in decades descended, Dolan perhaps at home in that regard, the fans at the RCDE Stadium were warmed by a hard-running winger with a bag of tricks in his back pocket. His five assists, second only to set-piece taker Edu Exposito (6), have made him a key source of goals for his side. Previously, Dolan has described football as a highlight reel though, akin to the deceptive life portrayed on Instagram. His first season in Spain perhaps obscures the work that has gone into it.
âThere was a point when I first joined, when I thought â am I really ready for this? But then it was just me adapting and getting used to it. To a new way of football. Iâm constantly trying to learn. Iâm really enjoying playing with Carlos [Romero], heâs a top player. But I can sit here and name every other player. When youâre playing with better players, it makes you better, you have to be sharper mentally.â
â[Itâs] Little things like defensive body positioning, depending on where the ball is on the pitch. When Iâm attacking, end product. How to get more out of it. Thereâs just so many things, because when you step up a level, you need to raise your game in all areas, and the staff have been great working with me, and a lot of off-pitch conversations to do that. Thereâs a lot of aspects to the game, and I feel like Iâm understanding more. My end product, Iâm getting more crosses off than I was last season.â
If anything though, Dolan suggests the most difficult thing is finding a routine off the pitch. Beyond any inherent cultural mindset or ability to adapt, the biggest change is the upheaval from a foundation built to absorb footballâs weekly shockwaves.
âTransitioning into a completely different culture, isolating myself a bit, Iâve not got my safety net around me. That was the big difference to me, just adapting my life for my career,â Dolan says without blinking. Later Dolan talks of adding âtools to his tradeâ, on and off the pitch. Do the highs and lows of the game smooth out with age and experience?
â[Iâm] Just trying to ride the wave, Iâve had my ups and downs. A down has never kept me down too long. So if Iâm in it, I know what I have to do to get out of it. And if Iâm up, not to get too wrapped up in it. Football is so temporary, nothing is permanent. So I just try to take the rough with the smooth. I knew it wasnât going to be easy coming out here.â
âPeople say like âwow, youâre playing in one of the top leagues in the worldâ, and it is, itâs great and I love it. But there is so much sacrifice that comes with that. Iâm probably at football three or four hours a day, and the rest of the time itâs just me. Itâs a lot of time to be on your own. Itâs not always easy, but Iâm enjoying the journey, and itâs made me a much stronger person mentally, and embracing it all.â
Whatever the sacrifices, Dolan vouches that the juice is worth the squeeze. Life in La Liga comes with his stamp of approval for anyone in English football.
âIâd definitely recommend it. If youâve got the opportunity to play in the top leagues abroad, then go for it. Itâs obviously not easy, not everyone has hit the ground running coming from England to La Liga, but itâs amazing what it can do for your career. Itâs also adding more tools to your trade, Iâve learnt so much, in eight or nine months. Iâve learnt a lot football-wise and about myself.â
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