Dominic Calvert-Lewin has followed an unconventional and rapid route to the top of English football. Everton magazine spoke to some of the people who know the Toffees forward best – and discovered the secrets underpinning Calvert-Lewin’s startling two-year rise from League Two loanee to Goodison Park favourite
Paul Simpson assembled his 21-strong battalion, ready for their assault on world glory.
The England Under-20s manager and his players had been separated for only two months. But Simpson detected a change in one of his young bucks.
Following a Four Nations competition in France, Dominic Calvert-Lewin had featured in a handful of games for Everton, maintaining an upward trajectory that has characterised the 20-year-old’s embryonic career.
“There had been a huge growing-up process,” Simpson tells Everton magazine. “He was always a sensible bloke, but he seemed to really grow up over that period when he was regularly involved with Everton’s first team.
“He is a really good character who, judging by the way he went about things, had obviously had a good upbringing in football.”
That upbringing, in fact, is littered with similar tales. Simpson was merely becoming acquainted with the CalvertLewin familiar to a plethora of the player’s managers and coaches – past and present – prepared to form a figurative queue around the block to deliver their testimony on this athletic young footballer, blessed with a ferocious work ethic and endearingly grounded attitude.
The exponential maturation in him detected by Simpson, unbeknown to the young Lions’ boss, was par for the course.
Calvert-Lewin learns, adapts and improves. Just ask Bira Dembele. And Ryan Cresswell, too, for that matter.
“He was shy and never really said much, initially,” says Cresswell, who shared both a flat and countless car journeys with Calvert-Lewin, during the rookie forward’s five-month loan spell with Northampton Town.
“He would just sit there and listen. But then he said something back to me in the changing room one day, and the lads were like, ‘Hey up, when did you sign?’
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der November 2017-18-Ausgabe von Everton Magazine.
Starten Sie Ihre 7-tägige kostenlose Testversion von Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierte Premium-Storys sowie über 8.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Bereits Abonnent ? Anmelden
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der November 2017-18-Ausgabe von Everton Magazine.
Starten Sie Ihre 7-tägige kostenlose Testversion von Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierte Premium-Storys sowie über 8.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Bereits Abonnent? Anmelden
Bringing The Right Chemistry
Soon after Sam Allardyce was confirmed as the new manager of Everton Football Club, his most trusted lieutenants followed him through the door at USM Finch Farm. In assistant manager Sammy Lee and first-team coach Craig Shakespeare, the Toffees boss has added two of the most highly-regarded coaches in football to his backroom team. Everton magazine sat down with the duo to discover how they will use their collective knowledge to boost the Blues
Academy Success Continues
Everton’s proud list of Academy graduates expanded again recently, with several names added to the ever-growing board at USM Finch Farm.
Changing Track
“To be honest, I didn’t really get much sleep after the match. It was an amazing night that I will remember for the rest of my career… it was really, really special.”
Setting New Goals
A Club legend due to his attacking exploits during his playing career, Duncan Ferguson is on the right path to make his name in coaching – and believes he is in the right place to do it.
Scouse And Proud
After a 2016 in which he took giant leaps, teenager Tom Davies seemingly has the footballing world at his feet. Primed to make a big impact in the years ahead, he says there is no place he would rather call home…
Blue Girls
Two female Evertonians are making waves in their respective disciplines. Molly McCann – or Meatball to her friends – is a Mixed Martial Arts fighter with her sights set on the UFC while cricketer, Sophie Eccelstone, made her senior England debut aged just 17 earlier this year.
Eitc's Armed Forces Recognition
Eitc's Armed Forces Recognition
Bolasie Will Return 'Hungry And Refreshed'
Bolasie Will Return 'Hungry And Refreshed'
Improving Accessibility At Goodison
Improving Accessibility At Goodison
Alan Kelly
New Everton goalkeeper coach Alan Kelly has had an eventful first few weeks in a role which has seen him once again follow in his father’s footsteps…