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Tom Davies

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Easily missed in the goal avalanche but today he did something so simple, so ordinary that it might have passed some by because it was not terribly significant. He picked the ball up 15 yards inside our half and moved forward a yard or two towards a Bournemouth player. To avoid the tackle he slipped the ball past the opponent and shimmied around him, completely missing any contact - sublime. Yes, nothing significant happened, he probably passed it off or lost possession but that moment was just poetry in lightning speed.. lovely stuff.
 

Tom Davies looks like a rock star... but Everton's newest talent loves Elvis Presley and Frank Sinatra
  • Tom Davies announced his arrival with stunning goal against Manchester City
  • The boyhood Evertonian has forced his way into the first-team this season
  • Davies has shot to fame and was recognised by an American in Barcelona
  • The 19-year-old admitted he was shocked to be spotted in a foreign country
  • Davies also set up winner against Crystal Palace and is becoming fans' favourite

Tom Davies shakes his head and laughs, still trying to take it all in. This has been a whirlwind month for the Everton teenager, one defined by a question of four short words.

With Everton having a blank weekend when the FA Cup fourth round was being staged, manager Ronald Koeman gave his players a few days off. So Davies, a keen traveller — ‘I like to open my mind,’ he says — took the opportunity to visit Barcelona with his older brother Liam.

The break was well-deserved. The previous fortnight had featured a goal and man-of-the-match midfield display in a 4-0 rout of Manchester City, then, crucially, an assist for Seamus Coleman in a tough 1-0 win at Crystal Palace. This, though, was no time to party.

3CF5F86800000578-4204994-image-m-7_1486587534164.jpg



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Tom Davies has enjoyed a whirlwind month after shining having broken into the Everton team

3CEC28BC00000578-4204994-The_18_year_old_scored_a_stunning_goal_against_Manchester_City_i-m-1_1486588787778.jpg



+15
The 18-year-old scored a stunning goal against Manchester City in Everton's 4-0 victory

3C2671C300000578-4204994-image-a-9_1486587635163.jpg

  • SHARE PICTURE

+15
Davies, a boyhood Evertonian, celebrates in front of the Toffees faithful in the Gwladys Street

Davies, more than anything, wanted to see the Sagrada Familia, Gaudi’s iconic cathedral. There was also a chance to see Barcelona play Real Sociedad in the Spanish Cup and it was outside the Nou Camp the 18-year-old realised how much his life is changing.

‘This lad from America comes up to me and says, “Are you Tom Davies?”,’ he reveals. ‘I honestly couldn’t get my head around it.

‘It was a bit of a shock, really. He wasn’t even an Evertonian. He told me he had seen the goal (against City) on the internet.

‘So we had a little conversation but after it had happened, me and Liam just started laughing. I’d gone to see (Lionel) Messi and (Andres) Iniesta, to look for inspiration from those brilliant players. So for someone to come up to me? Outside there? It was a bit strange!’

3CD6326E00000578-4204994-image-a-2_1486588946573.jpg



+15

Davies has impressed and starred with Everton unbeaten in the Premier League this year

3CF652DE00000578-4204994-image-m-29_1486588352954.jpg



+15
Davies has started to be recognised and was spotted by an American during a trip to Barcelona

3CF02B3F00000578-4204994-image-a-22_1486588190058.jpg



+15
The young midfielder travelled to the Nou Camp with his brother to watch Lionel Messi and Co

In these circumstances, it would be easy to get carried away by the first whiff of fame, but you can tell from spending time in Davies’s company that he is not motivated by that and his family would not allow him to head down that path anyway.

For all that life is changing in a football sense, with Davies having impressed the hard-to-please Koeman, nothing has altered off the pitch after that golden goal against City and his emergence into this campaign’s narrative.

He still lives at home, in the suburb of West Derby, with mum Diane and father Tony.

The fact Tom has not yet passed his driving test means his parents are still on taxi duty, while Liam — a footballer of promise who played for Tranmere — keeps an eye on what he is eating.

3CF9837100000578-4204994-image-m-10_1486590318193.jpg



+15
Everton newest star is fast becoming a fans' favourite following his goal at Goodison Park

3CF6890800000578-4204994-image-a-23_1486588204262.jpg



+15
Davies is yet to pass his driving test and is currently taken to training by his mother and father

3CF9839B00000578-4204994-image-a-8_1486589842058.jpg



+15
‘I’ve done my theory,’ Davies points out. ‘But who takes me (to Finch Farm training ground)? My lovely mother. Dad does sometimes too. Mum doesn’t mind, I don’t think. She puts up with me.

‘They are great, really. They are always there and won’t let me get carried away, no chance. A lift to training is nothing, really. But I suppose it’s bad for me isn’t it! Mum cooks. And Liam is a decent chef. I try and help out but they send me away! It’s the same for dad. We get told to stay clear.

‘Liam is always there for me. He has had a lot of bad luck in his own career and a few bad injuries. When I see what happened to him (serious knee ligament injury), it makes it important to realise I have to enjoy every moment.

'I have just got to make sure I take everything as it comes.’

Sitting in his company, Davies doesn’t come across as a youngster who is awkward when asked questions. He speaks quietly but thinks about his answers and shows maturity; confident but without any trace of arrogance.

Davies isn’t afraid to be different. To look at him, with his curly blond hair and the edgy way he is dressed, you would assume his favourite band is the Arctic Monkeys or similar, but there is a surprise when he discloses his preference.

‘The old stuff is the best,’ he says with a glint in his eye. ‘The Beatles — obviously! — but I love Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin. Mum and dad used to play them in the house, so I just picked up on that. I love a bit of that. Then there is Marvin Gaye, Stevie Wonder, The Drifters.

‘It’s good, isn’t it? I don’t mind stuff like the Arctic Monkeys but it is the older ones that really catch me. Elvis as well. Got to be Elvis. Favourite song? Something Stupid, maybe. That’s a good one. Big Bad Leroy Brown. Another good one.’



3CF8FEA400000578-4204994-image-m-3_1486589118294.jpg



+15

Davies, pictured celebrating with Ross Barkley, comes from a close-knit family in West Derby



023A53390000044D-4204994-image-m-17_1486587864103.jpg



+15
24382A4700000578-4204994-image-m-16_1486587842130.jpg



+15

Davies may have the indie look but is actually a bigger fan of Frank Sinatra (left) and Elvis

Yet to illustrate his youth, he was born on June 30, 1998, the day England were knocked out of the World Cup by Argentina after Michael Owen had scored that wondrous solo goal. It was also 60 days after his current team-mate, Gareth Barry had made his first Premier League appearance.

He laughs at that fact and reveals Barry has been a constant source of help and advice and ‘always looks out’ for him. There are special mentions, too, for David Unsworth, Everton’s Under 23 head coach, and club legend Joe Royle, who he ‘can’t thank enough’.

There is a reason, however, that Davies finds himself in Everton’s squad. He might be intelligent, he might be courteous, but more than anything he can play football and has long been held in high regard by his club — he signed when he was 12 — and the FA.

When England’s seniors needed an Under 18 player to help with a session at St George’s Park in 2015, Davies stepped forward.

3CF8FA7700000578-4204994-Davies_watches_on-m-5_1486589291313.jpg



+15
Davies was called up to take part in a training session with the England senior squad in 2015

3CD3AEB400000578-4204994-image-a-6_1486589667255.jpg



+15
Team-mate Gareth Barry made his Premier League debut 60 days before Davies was born

Roy Hodgson and Gary Neville made a point of telling the relevant coaches how impressed they had been with the way Davies handled himself. Koeman is a taskmaster too, but has found himself unable to hold Davies back. The Dutchman said before Christmas that he felt Davies ‘wasn’t ready’ for the Premier League, but now he has found himself with another quality midfield option.

‘I wasn’t ready,’ Davies stresses. ‘I was playing for the Under 23s. I heard what people were saying but I could see, even in training, how much I needed to improve. He took the time to leave me out and let me develop and that has given me confidence and experience.

‘For him to be coaching me — and his brother (Erwin) as well — they are really helpful and I’m just trying to take everything on board.

‘I feel like I have fitted in well since he gave me a chance. I feel like I am part of it. The time being out of the team was worth the wait. I feel ready now.’

3CD5657800000578-4204994-image-m-19_1486587940255.jpg



+15
Ronald Koeman has given Davies his chance in the first-team and, having shone and settled well, the youngster is determined to work hard and impress the Everton manager

Still, there may be another spell on the fringes coming. With Morgan Schneiderlin, Barry, Ross Barkley and Idrissa Gana Gueye vying for a place, the competition is ferocious — but the way Davies deals with this subject is the most significant of all. The smile goes. Now it is about business.

‘You see it in training with people stepping it up every day, wanting a shirt,’ he points out. ‘When you get that, the team is only going to go on to better things. I know I’m going to have to work harder than I have ever done.’

It is time for him to leave but, fittingly, there is now a statement of four short words to make things clear: ‘I will do that.’




Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/fo...Everton-s-star-loves-Elvis.html#ixzz4Y8WL3T4D
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook
 
Tom Davies looks like a rock star... but Everton's newest talent loves Elvis Presley and Frank Sinatra
  • Tom Davies announced his arrival with stunning goal against Manchester City
  • The boyhood Evertonian has forced his way into the first-team this season
  • Davies has shot to fame and was recognised by an American in Barcelona
  • The 19-year-old admitted he was shocked to be spotted in a foreign country
  • Davies also set up winner against Crystal Palace and is becoming fans' favourite

Tom Davies shakes his head and laughs, still trying to take it all in. This has been a whirlwind month for the Everton teenager, one defined by a question of four short words.

With Everton having a blank weekend when the FA Cup fourth round was being staged, manager Ronald Koeman gave his players a few days off. So Davies, a keen traveller — ‘I like to open my mind,’ he says — took the opportunity to visit Barcelona with his older brother Liam.

The break was well-deserved. The previous fortnight had featured a goal and man-of-the-match midfield display in a 4-0 rout of Manchester City, then, crucially, an assist for Seamus Coleman in a tough 1-0 win at Crystal Palace. This, though, was no time to party.

3CF5F86800000578-4204994-image-m-7_1486587534164.jpg



+15
Tom Davies has enjoyed a whirlwind month after shining having broken into the Everton team

3CEC28BC00000578-4204994-The_18_year_old_scored_a_stunning_goal_against_Manchester_City_i-m-1_1486588787778.jpg



+15
The 18-year-old scored a stunning goal against Manchester City in Everton's 4-0 victory

3C2671C300000578-4204994-image-a-9_1486587635163.jpg

  • SHARE PICTURE

+15
Davies, a boyhood Evertonian, celebrates in front of the Toffees faithful in the Gwladys Street

Davies, more than anything, wanted to see the Sagrada Familia, Gaudi’s iconic cathedral. There was also a chance to see Barcelona play Real Sociedad in the Spanish Cup and it was outside the Nou Camp the 18-year-old realised how much his life is changing.

‘This lad from America comes up to me and says, “Are you Tom Davies?”,’ he reveals. ‘I honestly couldn’t get my head around it.

‘It was a bit of a shock, really. He wasn’t even an Evertonian. He told me he had seen the goal (against City) on the internet.

‘So we had a little conversation but after it had happened, me and Liam just started laughing. I’d gone to see (Lionel) Messi and (Andres) Iniesta, to look for inspiration from those brilliant players. So for someone to come up to me? Outside there? It was a bit strange!’

3CD6326E00000578-4204994-image-a-2_1486588946573.jpg



+15

Davies has impressed and starred with Everton unbeaten in the Premier League this year

3CF652DE00000578-4204994-image-m-29_1486588352954.jpg



+15
Davies has started to be recognised and was spotted by an American during a trip to Barcelona

3CF02B3F00000578-4204994-image-a-22_1486588190058.jpg



+15
The young midfielder travelled to the Nou Camp with his brother to watch Lionel Messi and Co

In these circumstances, it would be easy to get carried away by the first whiff of fame, but you can tell from spending time in Davies’s company that he is not motivated by that and his family would not allow him to head down that path anyway.

For all that life is changing in a football sense, with Davies having impressed the hard-to-please Koeman, nothing has altered off the pitch after that golden goal against City and his emergence into this campaign’s narrative.

He still lives at home, in the suburb of West Derby, with mum Diane and father Tony.

The fact Tom has not yet passed his driving test means his parents are still on taxi duty, while Liam — a footballer of promise who played for Tranmere — keeps an eye on what he is eating.

3CF9837100000578-4204994-image-m-10_1486590318193.jpg



+15
Everton newest star is fast becoming a fans' favourite following his goal at Goodison Park

3CF6890800000578-4204994-image-a-23_1486588204262.jpg



+15
Davies is yet to pass his driving test and is currently taken to training by his mother and father

3CF9839B00000578-4204994-image-a-8_1486589842058.jpg



+15
‘I’ve done my theory,’ Davies points out. ‘But who takes me (to Finch Farm training ground)? My lovely mother. Dad does sometimes too. Mum doesn’t mind, I don’t think. She puts up with me.

‘They are great, really. They are always there and won’t let me get carried away, no chance. A lift to training is nothing, really. But I suppose it’s bad for me isn’t it! Mum cooks. And Liam is a decent chef. I try and help out but they send me away! It’s the same for dad. We get told to stay clear.

‘Liam is always there for me. He has had a lot of bad luck in his own career and a few bad injuries. When I see what happened to him (serious knee ligament injury), it makes it important to realise I have to enjoy every moment.

'I have just got to make sure I take everything as it comes.’

Sitting in his company, Davies doesn’t come across as a youngster who is awkward when asked questions. He speaks quietly but thinks about his answers and shows maturity; confident but without any trace of arrogance.

Davies isn’t afraid to be different. To look at him, with his curly blond hair and the edgy way he is dressed, you would assume his favourite band is the Arctic Monkeys or similar, but there is a surprise when he discloses his preference.

‘The old stuff is the best,’ he says with a glint in his eye. ‘The Beatles — obviously! — but I love Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin. Mum and dad used to play them in the house, so I just picked up on that. I love a bit of that. Then there is Marvin Gaye, Stevie Wonder, The Drifters.

‘It’s good, isn’t it? I don’t mind stuff like the Arctic Monkeys but it is the older ones that really catch me. Elvis as well. Got to be Elvis. Favourite song? Something Stupid, maybe. That’s a good one. Big Bad Leroy Brown. Another good one.’



3CF8FEA400000578-4204994-image-m-3_1486589118294.jpg



+15

Davies, pictured celebrating with Ross Barkley, comes from a close-knit family in West Derby



023A53390000044D-4204994-image-m-17_1486587864103.jpg



+15
24382A4700000578-4204994-image-m-16_1486587842130.jpg



+15

Davies may have the indie look but is actually a bigger fan of Frank Sinatra (left) and Elvis

Yet to illustrate his youth, he was born on June 30, 1998, the day England were knocked out of the World Cup by Argentina after Michael Owen had scored that wondrous solo goal. It was also 60 days after his current team-mate, Gareth Barry had made his first Premier League appearance.

He laughs at that fact and reveals Barry has been a constant source of help and advice and ‘always looks out’ for him. There are special mentions, too, for David Unsworth, Everton’s Under 23 head coach, and club legend Joe Royle, who he ‘can’t thank enough’.

There is a reason, however, that Davies finds himself in Everton’s squad. He might be intelligent, he might be courteous, but more than anything he can play football and has long been held in high regard by his club — he signed when he was 12 — and the FA.

When England’s seniors needed an Under 18 player to help with a session at St George’s Park in 2015, Davies stepped forward.

3CF8FA7700000578-4204994-Davies_watches_on-m-5_1486589291313.jpg



+15
Davies was called up to take part in a training session with the England senior squad in 2015

3CD3AEB400000578-4204994-image-a-6_1486589667255.jpg



+15
Team-mate Gareth Barry made his Premier League debut 60 days before Davies was born

Roy Hodgson and Gary Neville made a point of telling the relevant coaches how impressed they had been with the way Davies handled himself. Koeman is a taskmaster too, but has found himself unable to hold Davies back. The Dutchman said before Christmas that he felt Davies ‘wasn’t ready’ for the Premier League, but now he has found himself with another quality midfield option.

‘I wasn’t ready,’ Davies stresses. ‘I was playing for the Under 23s. I heard what people were saying but I could see, even in training, how much I needed to improve. He took the time to leave me out and let me develop and that has given me confidence and experience.

‘For him to be coaching me — and his brother (Erwin) as well — they are really helpful and I’m just trying to take everything on board.

‘I feel like I have fitted in well since he gave me a chance. I feel like I am part of it. The time being out of the team was worth the wait. I feel ready now.’

3CD5657800000578-4204994-image-m-19_1486587940255.jpg



+15
Ronald Koeman has given Davies his chance in the first-team and, having shone and settled well, the youngster is determined to work hard and impress the Everton manager

Still, there may be another spell on the fringes coming. With Morgan Schneiderlin, Barry, Ross Barkley and Idrissa Gana Gueye vying for a place, the competition is ferocious — but the way Davies deals with this subject is the most significant of all. The smile goes. Now it is about business.

‘You see it in training with people stepping it up every day, wanting a shirt,’ he points out. ‘When you get that, the team is only going to go on to better things. I know I’m going to have to work harder than I have ever done.’

It is time for him to leave but, fittingly, there is now a statement of four short words to make things clear: ‘I will do that.’




Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/fo...Everton-s-star-loves-Elvis.html#ixzz4Y8WL3T4D
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook

He may look like he's just come off an Everest expedition, but don't you just love the lad
 

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