Chelsea academy graduates normally have a few well-trodden pathways – breakthrough, mortgage, first group. Or breakthrough, mortgage, sale.
The Blues have moved on greater than 40 homegrown gamers up to now decade, and made £315m from promoting academy-developed expertise within the final 4 seasons alone – £100m greater than Manchester Metropolis.
However their newest high-profile prospect George has bucked that pattern thus far and may have a look at how Levi Colwill, Trevoh Chalobah and Reece James have progressed to first-team success.
George’s strike towards Fulham on 20 April, aged 19 years and 75 days, noticed him develop into the membership’s youngest scorer within the Premier League since Callum Hudson-Odoi netted towards Burnley in January 2020.
The winger’s breakthrough season included Carabao Cup video games towards Barrow and Morecambe, substitute league appearances towards Arsenal and Brighton, and greater than 750 minutes in 12 Convention League video games, together with a aim within the quarter-final first-leg win at Legia Warsaw.
George, who turned 19 in February, is disrupting the ‘Chelsea’ narrative because of a degree of dedication uncommon even on this period of youth improvement.
The final Chelsea participant to come back via the youth system into the primary group with out a mortgage was considered one of his idols, Hudson-Odoi in January 2018.
A supply informed BBC Sport that in his early years at Chelsea, George was a ‘middling’ participant in his age group till across the age of 10.
It was at that time his dad employed a goalkeeper in addition to a private coach, David ‘Guru’ Sobers, to lift his sport.
In midweek, George would practice with Chelsea, after which from the age of 13 on Fridays, he would play towards males in nine-a-side matches at both Vauxhall or 9 Elms Energy League in South London.
On Saturdays, he would practice once more and undergo post-match evaluation with Sobers from his Energy League matches the earlier night, earlier than going again to Chelsea on Sunday to play.
“I used to spend hours travelling on public transport to do two-hour classes, or longer, with Tyrique as I assumed I may assist him,” Sobers informed BBC Sport.
“We might spend hours doing one-versus-one, technical work, capturing drills, and I loved the truth that he would push himself a lot.
“I would be a ‘dangerous’ referee when he performed towards 18-year-olds, so he would get kicked – however need to rise up and win the ball again.
“We did techniques on his Friday session throughout these matches. I believe it helped our younger gamers, we additionally had guys now at Manchester Metropolis, West Ham and Studying, develop into fearless, particularly when coming again to their very own age group.”
