After nearly 5 months in England we caught up with Eduardo Vargas to find out how he's adapting to life in the Premier League ... ADAPTING to English Premier League football can be difficult for even the worldâs best players. Forward Eduardo Vargas, however, QPRâs summer loan arrival from Napoli, has hit the ground running. Our Chilean international has discovered an altogether different problem, though â the British road network! We sat down with Vargas ahead of Christmas Day to find out how heâs settling in to life at Loftus Road... FIRSTLY, Eduardo, how are you â and how are you finding life in England? Iâm very well, thank you. Iâm very happy in England at the moment. I love the Premier League and my family really like it here. Weâre enjoying it. Iâm very happy with my newly-born daughter now here and my wife speaks English, so she has been helping me a lot. In England, people are very polite, punctual and the main thing is that they respect your privacy. The culture is very different to what weâre used to in South America. You can feel normal, you can go out on the street shopping. Of course, sometimes it feels good to be recognised. And sometimes that happens, other times not. But people are very respectful. Off the pitch, have you any stories to tell from your time here so far? As everyone knows, you have to drive on the left-hand side of the road here. The first time I left the training ground at Harlington, I was driving on the wrong side for a while! The other cars coming in the opposite direction were flashing their lights at me. I thought, âWhat are they on about?â But then I realised what I was doing wrong! Thatâs quite a story! Back on the pitch, youâve done well in the Premier League since moving from Italy. What have you made of our top flight so far? Grounds here, with the supporters, the fans, are always full. The football is exactly how people describe it, too, it is very quick, very fast-paced and very physical, as well. The truth is, I feel comfortable with that type of game. Iâm enjoying it. I think I have adapted to the English game very quickly. I think Iâm doing well and hopefully I can continue to do so. Youâre playing against the top players and learn each week, as well. Do you feel the style of play suits you, then? I think so. As I said, I think I have adapted quite quickly and I feel comfortable. Why? Itâs because of the lifestyle, I think. Itâs quite normal, thatâs priceless. You can move around, go anywhere and just feel like a normal person â not a footballer. Now Iâm playing on the right-hand side of midfield and I feel very comfortable playing there. Iâd always been a striker. Harry Redknapp has asked me to play a little bit deeper and Iâm very happy with that â I think Iâm adapting very well to this position. You currently speak only a little English. How have you been communicating with your team-mates? I know having friend and fellow Chile international Mauricio Isla here with you is a big help, isnât it? Iâm obviously used to playing with Mauricio for Chile, who speaks Spanish. Armand [Traore] can also speak some Italian. To be honest, when I have to ask for the ball, I just whistle! My team-mates hear me whistling so they know Iâm open and then they give me the ball. Charlie [Austin] and Niko [Kranjcar] already know what Iâm trying to do, whether thatâs a diagonal run or trying to open up space. They know that, if I whistle, Iâm open. Going back to your summer move to QPR â when you heard the club were interested in signing you, did you know anything about the club? I knew who QPR were â I knew the name, even though I hadnât watched any games. But I knew about QPR. My agent told me that itâs a serious club trying to put together a good squad to stay in the Premier League. I liked the sound of the challenge. We all thought that coming here was the right move to make, that it was the right option. When I was at Napoli, several team-mates told me that the Premier League would be great for my style of play since Iâm quick. Mauricio [Isla] also wanted me to come to QPR and play together, like we do for Chile. How have you found working for an English manager like Harry Redknapp? I like him very much. This is a great experience for me. He teaches me new, different things on a weekly basis, in order for me to get better in my career. And your thoughts on Loftus Road? I love playing at Loftus Road, especially for the fansâ support. Whether we win or lose, theyâre always there supporting the team. You fashioned an audacious scissor-kick volley effort against Manchester City at home recently, and went extremely close to scoring in the process. Is that something that you practice in training regularly? Well, itâs something that came to me at that moment when I saw that I had the time, no-one was marking me and I thought, âWhy not? Letâs give this a tryâ. It was almost good! Of course, you got off the mark in our marginal defeat to Liverpool at Loftus Road in mid-October. I thought I wasnât going to get a chance that day as a substitute. I was warming up and looking at the clock ticking down. You always want to get your chance against the big clubs. It was beautiful to score. Unfortunately, we didnât get anything from the game that day. But performances have been vastly improved since then, havenât they? While our home form has been very good. Are you confident we are strong enough to survive? Yes, I think we are. We are a newly-formed team with lots of players having recently joined. Obviously, me and Mauricio donât speak any English and itâs difficult to speak on the pitch. But weâre all getting to know each other, there are quality players and I hope we can stay in the Premier League. How are you going to spend your Christmas? Thereâs obviously the small matter of Arsenal away on Boxing Day⦠I think itâs just going to be a quiet one. Training and dinner with my wife, daughter and her godfather. Itâll have to be a quiet one so Iâm ready for the game. Iâm now used to being away from Chile without my whole family, although this Christmas is going to be a bit different because thereâll be a game. Of course, you must be used to a winter break? Yes. Playing is strange. But weâre going to have to concentrate and put the festivities to one side. Weâll be playing and weâll try our best â weâll have to work. Itâs our job and we have to do our best for the team. Just finally, Eduardo, have you asked Santa for anything in particular? All I can ask him is to bring QPR some good luck so that we can stay in the Premier League. Weâll try our best to do that. I hope he sends some luck our way! I love playing here. I love the English style of football. Iâm on loan but Iâm hoping that I can do enough to stay here. Read more at http://www.qpr.co.uk/news/article/q...ue-interview-2162501.aspx#qhT3zwsvj8itQcph.99
I hope he stays driving on the left-hand side of the road .................. everything else will take care of itself.
Sounds very humble (doesn't think he's bigger than us). If there was one player I'd trust to retain a ball to feet with three opponents around him, it's him - tidy and technically excellent. Hope he stays.
A great addition to our team in every sense. Another good pro who doesnt shirk and has the skill to deliver on his actions. Few more goals would be nice but that goes for the whole team. I'd be very happy if we could keep him. A very good player who wants to play for us...what more do we want?
A very down to earth kind of guy and has been a great squad addition. I'd like to see him playing more with Kranjcar as the two have great skill on the ball and could form an influential partnership to give us some much needed attacking creativity
The more I read and hear about the Chilean lads the more likable they become, both are the right sort.....
I am worried opposition defenders will read this article and start whistling at him to confuse our strikers.....