After joining Mallorca on loan from Atlético Madrid in the summer of 2013, a 20-year-old Thomas Partey would always introduce himself with a smile and the same phrase.
“I’m Thomas Partey,” he would say, “notfiesta!”
The play on words –fiestameans party in Spanish – immediately endeared him to his new colleagues.
“Whenever our paths crossed in the years after that, he would always say that same thing and laugh,” José Luis Oltra, Mallorca’s manager at the time, chuckles down the phone. But it was Partey’s footballing ability that made the most lasting impression.
Partey arrived at the island as a highly-rated but untested midfielder. He left it a year later having taken an important step on a road that would eventually lead him to the top. From Mallorca, he went to Almeria, again on loan, before returning to Atlético to become a key player under Diego Simeone.
Now, the Premier League beckons with Arsenal.
Mikel Arteta hopes Partey will transform his midfield and those who have followed his career from the start can understand why.
Precision passing, tactically aware
At Atletico, his ability was apparent long before he was sent on loan. In fact, Javi Baños, a former youth coach there, only needed to see him play once, in a friendly for their U18s against Getafe, to be convinced that his trial period should be made permanent.
“You could quickly see that he was a player with attributes which were very advanced for his age,” Baños tellsSky Sports.
“Above all, it was the precision of his passing. He was very effective in terms of his delivery. He also covered a lot of ground and positioned himself well on the pitch tactically.”
Until then, Partey had been playing for a side called Tema Youth in Ghana, where he came to the attention of an agent named Jose Jimenez, who offered to organize a trial for him at Atletico. Partey, determined to seize the opportunity, would later recall packing his bags and leaving without even telling his family.
It was a leap of faith but he would not regret it. Partey signed for Atletico soon after his trial and before long he was excelling in their academy.
“Atletico Madrid always has strong players in their youth teams,” says Baños. “Over the years I was fortunate enough to coach guys like Lucas Hernandez and David de Gea. But the truth is that Thomas was a player who made the difference. He had great potential.”
Partey was swiftly promoted to Atletico’sJuvenil A(U19) side and soon enough Simeone and his assistant German Burgos became aware of the youngster’s talents. At the end of his first year there, Partey even joined the senior squad on a pre-season trip to Colombia.
“He was a very attractive player to them because he was different for his age,” says Baños. “He was a very disciplined player, as he is now, and he was very grateful and respectful too.
“I always remember that every day after training, he would shake your hand and thank you for the session and the advice you had given him. He has always been a very good player to have in the dressing room.”
Those traits are now part of the appeal to Arteta, who values team spirit and togetherness highly, but for Partey at that age, the competition for places at Atletico was such that it was not easy to see a route into the first-team. Simeone could already call on experienced trio Gabi, Tiago, and Mario Suarez in central midfield. Koke and Saul Niguez were next in line.
Learning during loan spells
So, at the start of the season in which Atletico would go on to win a historic title, Partey ended up joining Mallorca, who had just been relegated to Spain’s second division after a 16-year spell in La Liga.
Partey’s only previous senior experience had come with Atletico’s B team in Spain’s third tier but he quickly established himself there, displacing experienced club captain Jose Luis Marti in central midfield and going on to make 38 appearances over the course of the campaign, scoring five goals.
“He ended up being an undisputed starter,” Oltra tellsSky Sports. “He worked hard and showed very good things.”
For all his undoubted quality, however, Partey still had much to learn.