LaFlorecita said:
RedheadDane said:
Kwibus said:
RedheadDane said:
Dunno if it's a correct assessment, but Danish television have this little "theory" that if he's doing interviews in English, it means he's feeling pretty good.
The stuff people come up with. This has to be a joke though.
We will see in July how his form will be.
I can actually see what they build it on:
If you're struggling you
might not have the mental "overview" to start conducting interviews in a foreign language, which you doesn't speak very well.
Of course it's entirely possible that Trek has a - somewhat strict -
everbody must speak English rule, so he's simply practicing.
Practicing
He's been doing interviews in English for say 6 or 7 years - he has gotten better in recent years but to say he is practicing is weird to me, his English is pretty good, he just has a thick Spanish accent and sometimes makes grammar mistakes.
He prefers to do interviews in Spanish but for certain audiences he will do interviews in English - i.e. GCN or Aussie SBS. However on ITV he is often interviewed in Spanish by Daniel Friebe and on Eurosport too, of course.
I don't think it depends on how he feels although obviously after a stage when he is tired he would rather be interviewed in Spanish.
It's been pretty back-and-forth with what language he uses. Like you said, he - obviously - prefers Spanish, and most of the time when he's been interviewed by Danish TV they've been speaking that language. Of course these interviews recently have all been
before stage start, so... obviously not tired yet. And maybe he just decided that the interviewer's Spanish was so ridiculous it was better to do it in English...
However, even if he's been doing interviews in English for years, he'd still need to keep practicing. Everybody needs to keep practicing when it comes to foreign languages.
What foreign language do they learn first in Spain?