
| Squad No. |
16 |
| Joined |
Jul 2000 |
| Transfer Fee |
£2.5M |
| Signed by |
Walter Smith |
| Debut |
v Charlton
Athletic (h),
23 August 2000 |
Contract;
Expires |
5 years;
June 2005 |
| Finalé |
v
Plymouth
(A)
8 Jan 2005 |
Left
Everton |
for Real Madrid (£2.5M)
14 Jan 2005 |
| Born |
Vejle, Denmark |
| Date of birth |
11 March 1976 |
| Height |
6' 1" (185 cm) |
| Nicknames |
Mad Dog, Grave Digger |
| Honours |
Danish international (15 caps) |
|
STRENGTHS
|
Technically strong
Tenacious & determined
Good all-round midfielder |
|
WEAKNESSES
|
Temperamental
Erratic
Occasionally unruly |
Soccerbase
Datafile
|
| Previous Career |
| Seasons |
Club |
Appearances |
Goals |
| 1993-1997 |
Vejle (Den) |
79 |
10 |
| 1997-2000 |
Hamburg SV (Ger) |
47(4) & 1(0) |
4 & 1 |
Danish international midfielder Thomas Gravesen joined Everton from
Hamburg SV in the Bundesliga for £2.5M following typically protracted
transfer negotiations in the summer of 2000.
He arrived at Goodison Park with a reputation as a 'mad dog' whose bark is
as fierce as his bite in the tackle. Gravesen rejected the chance to play
European League-Cup football with Hamburg and turned down a move to Bayern
Munich to come to the Premiership. He said: "I've always wanted
to play in the English Premiership and I couldn't let such a good
opportunity slip away."
Walter Smith first spotted Gravesen when he was playing sweeper for Danish
club Vejle and considered signing him during his time as manager at
Rangers. "Thomas is a player I've known about for a while and comes
out of contract in a year, which alerted us to his
availability."
Joining Hamburg in 1997, Gravesen was named as one of the best foreigners
in the Bundesliga by the German football magazine 'Kicker'. He was
one of the key performers in Hamburg SV's impressive domestic campaign and
earned the nickname 'Humörbömbe', a German/Danish word meaning
"joker".
He made a fairly impressive start to his Everton career, showing a
willingness to get forward, fearless tackling and good midfield
distribution. His first goal (in the 3-1 home defeat by Manchester
United in the autumn of 2000-01) demonstrated how effectively he could
burst from midfield into the final third, but he was unable to maintain
that form and he became more erratic and unreliable.
Much the same trend occurred the following season and as Everton's season
took a familiar turn for the worse in December 2001, Gravesen started
making noises in the German and Danish press about lack of ambition at
Goodison and how lonely his existence on Merseyside was.
Officially struck down with injury that month, there were growing
suspicions that he had alienated himself from his manager and his
teammates and that he was being frozen out of the first team set up.
The arrival of Tobias Linderoth, billed as a central defensive midfielder in the
Gravesen mould but later proved anything but, further suggested that his time with Everton was coming to
an end. But strangely Walter Smith started to involve him in games,
albeit as a typically late substitute.
After Smith's departure, Gravesen was selected by Andy Holden for David
Moyes's first game in charge, at home to Fulham...
and got himself sent off in the first half. The conclusion was that he had no tactical discipline and simply chased the ball like a
schoolboy rather than holding his position in a team shape. Sometimes it looked as if he was running around the pitch with a
hand-grenade wondering whether to take the pin out. And he stayed
pretty much the same throughout Moyes's first season, punctuated by
consistently good performances at International level for Denmark.
He was much the same during the 2003-04 season, when Everton increasingly
struggled to come to terms with the presence of Wayne Rooney, and the
high-handed discipline of David Moyes broke team spirit. Gravesen
made it clear (through his annoying agent, John Siveback) that
he would not stay around unless significant changes were made and Everton
started to show some European ambitions.
Fast-forward to the first half of the 2004-05 season and everything changed. Gravesen finally looked the international class player he always looked playing for Denmark and at the turn of the year, the British press were lauding him as one of the best midfielders in the country. Indeed, one national paper singled him out as the most important player in his position for 2004.
There are, however a few clouds hanging over his vastly improved performances: the fact that his contract expires at the end of 2004-05, his failure to make any sort of commitment to the
Club, and his agent consistently talking up interest from the top clubs in Europe.
As the January 2005 transfer window opened, Real Madrid and Manchester United had emerged as the front-runners for "Mad
Dog's" signature, and it was the call of Los Galacticos that proved
irresistible for Tommy and for Everton. The Club reaped a reasonable deal with
sell-on and buy-back clauses for the 28-year-old midfield magician who had
underpinned the team's remarkable half-season, playing by far his best
football in the 4-5-1 formation after four years of headless-chicken
buffoonery.
Who on earth will now replace the mad, fist-waving, eye-bulging loon in
Moyes's tightly bonded team?
Updated by Michael
Kenrick and Lyndon Lloyd, January 2005 |