Bryan
Ruiz,
the
Making
of a
Tico
Creator
Things
are
not
always
easy
for
Bryan
Ruiz,
considered
by
many
to
be
Costa
Rica’s
most
talented
export.
The
soft-footed,
mercurial
schemer,
currently
with
London
side
Fulham,
is
on a
rocky
road
to
stardom.

“It
was
a
tough
transition
to
the
English
Premier
League,
the
best
league
in
the
world,
with
the
best
players
in
the
world,”
Ruiz,
26,
told
FIFA.com
in
April,
a
day
before
a
broken
foot
brought
an
early
end
to
his
first
season
in
the
rough
and
tumble
of
the
English
game.
Nicknamed
La
Comadreja,
or
the
Weasel,
for
his
slippery
dribbling
and
confounding
approach
work,
Ruiz
has
not
transitioned
seamlessly
to
the
physicality
and
furious
pace
of
English
football.
For
all
of
his
talent
and
creativity,
he
can
sometimes
settle
for
a
supporting
role
at
Craven
Cottage.
“I
like
to
have
the
ball,
I
like
to
combine
with
other
players.
I’m
not
greedy;
if I
see
a
player
in a
better
position
than
me,
I
give
him
the
ball,”
said
the
soft-spoken
Costa
Rican,
slight
of
frame,
at
home
on
either
flank
or
just
behind
a
striker.
Abandoned
by
his
father
as a
boy,
Ruiz
grew
up
in a
poor
section
of
Costa
Rica’s
capital,
San
Jose.
Football
became
an
escape,
and
he
showed
promise
early.
He
won
the
domestic
title
and
the
CONCACAF
Champions
Cup
with
hometown
club
Alajuelense
in
2005,
the
same
year
he
was
first
called
into
the
national
team.
Touted
as
the
next
big
thing
in
Central
America,
Ruiz,
then
18,
was
nonetheless
left
out
of
the
Tico
team
that
went
to
the
2006
FIFA
World
Cup™
in
Germany.
“A
very
difficult
moment
for
me,”
he
quietly
remembered
the
snub.
“A
real
shock.”
The
long,
lonely
road
That
window
slammed
shut,
but
another
opened
later
that
year.
He
was
offered
a
contract
at
Gent,
far
from
home
in
Belgium.
“I
didn’t
know
anything
about
the
club,”
Ruiz
admitted,
laughing.
“But
I
learned
a
lot
there.”
With
very
few
Costa
Ricans
previously
going
abroad,
Ruiz
was
blazing
a
lonely
trail.
In
short
order
he
was
Gent’s
top
scorer,
captain
and
fan
favourite.
Next
stop
was
the
Dutch
top
flight,
and
provincial
strivers
FC
Twente
in
Enschede.
“This
was
definitely
the
high
point
of
my
career,”
he
said.
He
scored
a
league-best
24
goals
in
his
first
season
in
2010,
leading
the
club
to
their
first
Dutch
title.
“It
meant
everything
to
the
fans.
They
appreciated
me
so
much
there
and
everyone
knew
who
I
was.”
The
next
year,
Twente
were
edged
by
Ajax
to
the
title,
Ruiz
suffered
the
personal
turmoil
of a
divorce
from
his
wife
and
his
first
real
injury,
seriously
damaging
his
knee.
But
his
emerging
talent
was
enough
to
earn
a
move
to
England.
“I
know
it
wasn’t
my
best
year,”
Ruiz
admitted
about
his
time
so
far
in
London.
"But
the
fans
here
at
Fulham
were
great
to
me
and
I
promise
them
more
next
season.”
The
supporters
weren’t
the
only
ones
to
welcome
him
with
open
arms
“I
had
never
actually
met
[Clint]
Dempsey
before,
although
we
clashed
many
times
with
our
national
teams,”
said
Ruiz
of
the
American
international
and
Fulham
top
scorer.
“He
[Dempsey]
came
right
over
to
me
and
introduced
himself
when
I
arrived,
even
using
a
little
broken
Spanish
to
help
me
feel
at
home.
He
is a
kind
guy.”
Dempsey
telepathy
The
understanding
between
the
CONCACAF
pair
was
immediate
and
electric.
Ruiz’s
best
moments
in a
Fulham
shirt
came
from
setting
up
Dempsey,
who
scored
23
goals
last
term.
“We
find
each
other
often,”
Ruiz
said,
and
after
the
Costa
Rican
set
up
all
three
of
Dempsey’s
goals
in
an
FA
Cup
game,
the
striker
dragged
him
in
front
of
the
fans
to
share
in
the
plaudits.
The
two
will
likely
meet
in
the
final
round
of
regional
qualifying
for
the
next
FIFA
World
Cup.
Costa
Rica,
without
the
injured
Ruiz,
made
a
strong
start
to
their
semi-final
campaign
on
the
road
to
Brazil
2014,
picking
up
four
points
from
two
games.
With
their
talisman
now
back,
they
face
giants
Mexico
twice
in
early
September.
“We’re
in a
tough
group,
and
Mexico
have
everything,”
Ruiz
said,
admitting
that
missing
out
on
the
2006
finals
and
failing
to
qualify
for
South
Africa
2010
has
left
him
desperate
to
reach
the
2014
event.
Ruiz
was
15,
just
taking
his
first
steps
into
the
wide
world
of
football,
when
Costa
Rica
became
the
only
team
ever
to
beat
Mexico
in
qualifying
at
their
fortress-like
Azteca
Stadium
in
2001.
“We
play
football
the
right
way,”
he
said
of
the
most
recent
incarnation
of
the
national
team,
pointing
to
up-and-comer
Joel
Campbell,
who
has
followed
in
his
own
footsteps
to
England
and
Arsenal,
as a
player
to
watch.
“We
can’t
focus
on
the
negative,
of
missing
out
last
time,”
he
said
with
the
conviction
of a
man
accustomed
to
the
sting
of
adversity.
“We
just
need
to
get
to
Brazil.”
From
FIFA.com