We consider the response of an adsorbed polymer that is pulled by an AFM within a simple geometric framework. We separately consider the cases of i) fixed polymer-surface contact point, ii) sticky case where the polymer is peeled off from the substrate, and iii) slippery case where the polymer glides over the surface. The resultant behavior depends on the value of the surface friction coefficient and the adsorption strength. Our resultant force profiles in principle allow to extract both from non-equilibrium force-spectroscopic data. After its introduction in the 1980s [1], the atomic-force microscope (AFM) has been intensely used to study the mechanical properties of single molecules [2]. Applications range from sequential unfolding of collapsed biopolymers over stretching of coiled synthetic polymers to breaking individual covalent bonds [3,4,5,6]. In recent experiments, the desorption of polyelectrolytes such as DNA, poly-(vinylamines), and poly-(acrylicacid) and polymers in varying solvent conditions physisorbed to different substrates was investigated [7,8,9,10].Depending on the adsorption strength between polymer and substrate, AFM single-polymer studies split in two classes: In the first, the applied forces are relatively weak so that the attachment on the cantilever tip and on the substrate is irreversible up to a certain maximal force and over the typical experimental time-scales; in this case the measured distance-force traces contain information on the polymer that is being stretched and can be used to extract the polymer elasticity by comparison with molecular models [11,12]. In the second class, the applied force is strong enough to detach the polymer from the substrate. In this case, the measured force-distance relation contains information about the strength of the surface-polymer interaction and, as we will show in this paper, about the nanoscopic friction effects at the substrate. In fact, assuming that the polymer glides very easily over the surface and surface friction can be neglected, plateau forces are measured the heights of which correspond to the adsorption free energy per unit length [7,8,13]. In the presence of finite surface-polymer friction, the force-distance curves exhibit more complex behavior.In the interpretation of force-distance curves it is often assumed that the polymer is vertically attached between cantilever tip and surface. This is not necessarily true, and in this paper we point out the consequences of a non-zero attachment angle φ as defined schematically in fig. 1. In the case of irreversible attachment between polymer and substrate, i.e. where the polymer-substrate contact point is immobile, the angle φ is fixed for a given vertical distance between the polymer-substrate and polymer-cantilever contact points and determined by their lateral distance. This distance is typically not controlled in experiments, but the resulting force-distance curve decisively depends on this angle. In the case of reversible attachment between polymer and substrate, the resultant ...