Thomas Teye Partey Profile

Soccer Thomas Partey Almeria
CLUB:
Atletico Madrid ()
POSITION:
Midfield
BORN:
1993-06-13
BIRTHPLACE:
Odumase Krobo
PREVIOUS CLUBS:
Tema Youth, Atlético Madrid, Mallorca, Almera
HEIGHT / WEIGHT:
182cm/78kg
NIKNAME:
GHANA DEBUT :
2016-00-00
CAPS/GOALS:
2/0

Thomas joined Atlético Madrid from Tema Youth in 2011
The midfielder's time at Atlético has been a whirlwind, but much of his journey has occurred away from the eyes of the club’s supporters.

Signed in 2011, it only took him four months to gain promotion from the Juvenil B to Juvenil A team. They won the league, and by the next season he was playing for Atleti B.

A loan to RCD Mallorca followed in 2013, taking him off the Spanish mainland as well as away from the gaze of Atleti fans, with the islanders recently sent down to the second division.
Collectively, Mallorca experienced a nightmare season, ending up in a relegation scrap rather than pushing for a return to the top flight.

In his first campaign as a senior professional, the young loanee turned out to be their best player: playing in all but five of the Palma side’s league games, he managed to score five goals from the middle of the pitch.


Mallorca changed manager three times over the course of the year. It was hardly the ideal scenario for a young player to develop in, yet didn’t seem to faze Thomas, the first sign of a mental toughness that has impressed Simeone. His encouraging displays that season weren’t yet enough to gain a place in an Atlético Madrid squad that already featured seven midfielders at the start of 2014/15, but they were enough to earn him his first year in the Spanish top flight, on loan at Almeria.


Once again, the circumstances weren’t exactly perfect: Almeria unsuccessfully battled relegation over the season. Yet once again, Thomas acquitted himself well.
At Almeria, Thomas showed that he had the qualities to be a menacing box-to-box midfielder in high-level competition, his ability to arrive effectively in the final third particularly noteworthy. He also showed that the defensive side of his game needed some refining, however, with a yellow card count that almost reached double figures in his first six months in Andalucia.


The experience ultimately proved to be worthwhile. In the second half of the year, his discipline improved significantly, suggesting a capacity to learn quickly and put instructions into action that would bode well for his Atlético future.


That idea was reinforced when, after several months of waiting, Thomas finally made his top-flight debut for the Colchoneros in late November 2015, coming off the bench against Espanyol in a delicately poised game. Rarely putting a foot wrong, the debutant shielded the ball well, pressed effectively in the right areas, and played a discrete but tidy part in a classic 1-0 win for Simeone’s side.

It proved to be the first of several noteworthy interventions in Atlético’s rise to the top of the table, the next coming against Rayo Vallecano on December 30. That evening, the offensive Thomas shone. In Vallecas, Atleti had toiled for 87 minutes without reward, and were heading for five points dropped on the bounce after losing to Malaga in the previous league fixture. Their title shot was slipping away... or so it seemed. That was until the 88th minute, when Simeone’s joker made his impact.


Picking the ball up on the halfway line, Thomas drove forward, dipped a shoulder to wrong-foot a marker, laid the ball off and kept running. Receiving the return pass first time, he took one touch, then eliminated a Rayo defender with a perfect through-ball straight into the path of Angel Correa, who thumped his shot into the net.
That assist kept first place within touching distance for Atleti, but three days later he would go one better. The scenario was eerily similar: against Levante, Simeone’s men were drawing 0-0 with almost 80 minutes played, when in the 81st, up popped late substitute Thomas. Starting his move just inside the final third, he turned away from an assailant, played the ball to Gabi, then kept moving. Receiving the return pass between the lines, the Ghanaian knocked the ball past two players, surged into the box and struck a shot with just enough power to slip through Diego Mariño’s hands. Atlético were league leaders.


“We’ve got the Yaya Toure of Spain!” a delighted Atleti fan exclaimed to AS just after the win. It’s way too early for those claims yet, but there is something of the Ivorian in the way the young midfielder has driven forward from deep and produced the ideal end product in important moments. If he keeps that form up, Thomas will soon find he is offered more than just a super sub’s role from the bench. Atlético may even find that they’re in for another special year.

He’s the oldest of eight children in his family and loves spending quality time with his father who loves football His father runs and trains a team in Odumase Krobo where Thomas started playing until he was nine. While playing for that team, his father gave him the nickname “Senegal”, because he reminded him of a friend with the same name.

After playing for his father’s team, Thomas developed as a footballer in a neighbourhood side while waiting for new opportunities. The chance to take a big step up came when Tema Youth, a Ghanaian team from Division Two, spotted him. With them, he experienced a promotion play-off to the Ghanaian top flight. His performances were noted by the scouts and glowing reports about his abilities swept through the country.

Thomas has said an agent registered interested with him in 2011 despite never having seen him play. His agent quickly saw his potential and decided to take him to Spain, where he was given a trial with the Atletico Madrid youth academy. The Rojiblanco coaching staff did not hesitate to sign him. In four months, he made the leap from their Under 18s to the Under 19s, and a season later he was already in the ‘Colchoneros’ second team.

He was loaned out to RCD Mallorca and Almeria before Diego Simeone gave a run in the first team. He has just earned his debut call to represent his country ( Black Stars). After playing for RCD Mallorca he trained with Ghana’s under 20s but did not make the squad for the 2013 Under 20 World Cup in Turkey.