Tyler Adams is driven by a relentless motor. No distance stands too great to cover for the pacy 19-year-old. A true box-to-box midfielder, that energy sets him apart every time he steps on the field.
Outside the lines, Adams gets around on a much less glamorous motor: a 2013 Accord once owned by his mother. That vehicle carries Adams 150 miles every day, from his home in Wappingers Falls, N.Y. to the New York Red Bulls training facility in Whippany, N.Y.
2017 launched Adams to new heights. After a stellar showing at the FIFA U-20 World Cup in Korea Republic, he locked down a starting role with the Red Bulls and established himself as one of Major League Soccer’s brightest rising stars. The year culminated with his first-ever senior Men’s National Team call-up last November, and Adams’ debut against Portugal saw him become the first player born in 1999 to represent the MNT.
The ride to and from training takes Adams an hour and twenty minutes each way. Over the last six years, it has become his daily commute as he has worked his way up through the Red Bulls’ Academy system.

While the routine isn’t enviable and the car isn’t flashy, the unstoppable drive of the teenager behind the wheel turns heads. The first half of 2018 has seen the young midfielder continue to climb. Propelled by a ferocious motor, there’s no sign he will slow down any time soon.
“From an early age, being in school and having to do the drive, it was definitely a grind and a commitment,” Adams said. “It wasn’t the typical teenage adolescent schedule. The analogy to me being a player is that I’m definitely a grinder. I work for everything that I earn. It’s a high risk, high reward mentality. As a player known for being able to cover ground and break-up plays, my mentality on the field is being gritty.”
It wasn’t always Adams in the driver’s seat. At the beginning of his journey with the Red Bulls, his mom sat behind the wheel for the 150-mile roundtrip. Adams has always had a fire inside when he steps on the field. Even as a four-year-old, he carried a competitive streak. And for as long as Adams has played, his mother, Melissa Russo has been by his side. She raised Adams solo for much of his childhood. Her work ethic in his boyhood planted the seeds of his dogged nature on-field.

“With me being a single parent for a while, he was always very involved in whatever had to be done,” Russo said. “If it snowed and we needed to shovel the driveway, he was out there with me, as little as I can remember, like, ‘Mom, where's my shovel? Mom, what do you need help with?’ He was just always that kid that was willing to do whatever he could to help.”
The sacrifices that Russo made as a single mother defined Adams’ youth career. A change in his home life would play a similarly important role in his development. As Adams became a teenager, Daryl Sullivan and his three sons became a part of Tyler and Melissa’s family. For the first time, Adams had three younger brothers that looked up to him for guidance. The experience has served well now that Adams has become a literal poster child for the Red Bulls Academy, where images of him playing for the first team adorn the walls of club’s youth development office building. The next generation of New York players look at his profile on the wall and aspire to reach the same heights.
“Being the role model for his brothers has transitioned,” Russo said. “I’m like, ‘You know, you need to lead by example because there are a million kids now in this area that really want to be the next Tyler.’ For him to come out of here leaves a lot of hope for a lot of the younger kids.”
The Sullivans entered the picture just as Adams arrived on the Red Bulls’ radar. At a tryout for New York’s pre-Academy Regional Development School in 2012, Adams impressed enough to pique the club’s interest and earn an invite to a summer camp with the academy squad. The tryout also marked the first time Adams caught the eye of National Team scouts, specifically, former MNT head coach Manfred Schellscheidt.

“When you put him around [Upstate New York], obviously he's going to shine, but when you put him down there with some of the best kids from Connecticut, New York and New Jersey, and he's still up to the top, you're like, ‘Wow, it's pretty impressive,’” Sullivan said. “The difference between Tyler and any other player is his competitiveness. He separates himself. When you see the U.S. scout there, you see the Red Bulls, the facilities and all the coaches, that for me was definitely the moment where I was like, ‘Wow, he's got something.’”
Adams proved himself worthy of a spot in the Red Bulls’ academy set-up and did enough at tryouts to convince the USA to give him a shot. While the scouts had come to the Tri-State area to find goalkeepers to pad out Youth National Team rosters, Red Bull academy director Bob Montgomery convinced them that he had a very special player on his hands in the field.
“I quickly realized that Tyler was far above the players in his age group,” Montgomery said. “Tyler had the drive and the dedication before he came to us. He realized when he came and joined the players, the team at Red Bull, that this was the best opportunity for him to grow as a player. After the first National Team camp, he was the best player, he was the captain and from that point on, he’s been in every camp when he’s available.”
Adams earned his first National Team call-up in November 2012 as a part of the U-14 Boys’ National Team. From there, he established himself as a Youth National Team mainstay.