The Rise of Tammy Abraham - Is Far More about being at the Right Place at the Right time
Eight goals
from seven Premier League starts have returned Tammy Abraham to the England
squad. Two years on from receiving his first international caps, in friendlies
against Brazil and Germany in which he looked coltish and out of place, Abraham
is back – and deservedly so.
So how good he
is now; and what caliber of player might he become?
Really,
those are the wrong questions to ask. If Abraham's rise is an example of
anything, it’s that the initial judgment of a player can so often be reductive
and misleading. At the very least, it shows the error of considering him to be
a what, rather than a who.
At the time
of his first call-up, Abraham was on loan at struggling Swansea. He had some
good moments that season and, periodically, flashed some of the skill and
instinct that he’s now exhibiting more regularly. But those weren't substantive
hints. That is to say that nobody who watched him regularly that year - or even
last season at Aston Villa - would have been convinced that he was destined to
lead Chelsea's line.
And that
represents a great failing: the habit of forming rough sketches of players from
initial impressions, but then remaining completely loyal to that vague image.
Abraham's touch was too loose. He wasn't composed enough in front of goal. He
didn't use his body well enough. Because judgment was - and is always - made so
quickly, those imperfections weren't seen as temporary. Worse, they were
observations made at the expense of recognizing that it is a player's
personality which gives his career its definition. Physical and technical
attributes are important, but they are never the sum total of a young player's
worth.
Back in
2017, off the back of a fine Championship season with Bristol City, Abraham
travelled to Poland with England’s under-21s for the European Championship. He
had a decent if unspectacular tournament, but what endured was not how he
played, but how he came across in person and how he was spoken of by his
team-mates.
Abraham was
engaging throughout, regardless of whether he was playing well or not.
Post-match mixed zones are usually quite sterile environments, full of banality
and that painful shyness which comes with being young and under constant
scrutiny. But he was a contrasting figure. Not because of what he said, but
rather how he spoke: with an intelligence and optimism which left a lasting
impression. He was impressive. He listened to questions and answered them
thoughtfully and, unfortunately, that's unusual enough to stick in the mind.
Talking to him wasn't a chore.
At one of
the media events that took place on a tournament rest day, Nathaniel Chalobah -
who was captaining the side - was asked about Abraham. He just smiled at the
question and laughed softly, away from the microphone. They were club-mates at
the time – Chalobah would leave for Watford a few months later – and he
described someone with a real affection for football. In fact, if memory
serves, he said that he’d never met anyone who was so enthusiastic about the
game or who loved it quite so much.
Partly, his
current place is attributable to luck. It was his good fortune; of course, that
Chelsea was under a transfer embargo this summer and that they’re now under the
direction of a head-coach who places great emphasis on homegrown players.
Nevertheless, these last few months have also spoken highly of his ability to
digest his time in the Premier League. Another fallacy is that exposure always
breeds improvement and that players evolve just by being on the pitch. Really,
that’s a pre-requisite: players have to play. What seems to determine their
growth is whether they possess the dexterity to adapt around their experiences.
Can they cope with failure? Can they use it? Does their relationship with the
sport allow them to better their own place within it?
When a
player does have those hidden abilities, his development can be very dramatic.
Not always, but sometimes. He begins to show traits he was presumed not to have
and do things on the field which were thought to be beyond him.
And that
describes Abraham’s career really well at the moment. The curve will flatten
out in time, but, for now, every week seems to be revealing something new. A
different type of goal, a slightly
slicker interchange with a team-mate. There are other ways of explaining that –
growing team chemistry and confidence – but at root lies that nest of
characteristics shared by all the players who become much more than they
appeared at first glance.
This Post
First Appeared on fourfourtwo.com
No comments