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FC Groningen
Following in the footsteps of Zlatan
An article on Swedish players in Holland and Germany. By freelance sports writer Ben Sibley.
The Dutch Eredivisie, along with the German Bundesliga, witnesses an influx of Swedish, Finnish, and Norwegian footballers year after year. The trend is long established, the most well-known example being Zlatan Ibrahimovic’s move from Malmö to Ajax Amsterdam in the spring of 2001.
The sheer amount of players who have followed in Zlatan’s footsteps highlight the vast difference between coincidence and trend; there is no doubt Scandinavian players and their agents recognise the Dutch Eredivisie as the perfect stepping stone for their careers.
Further along the career path of such players, the German Bundesliga comes into play; perhaps the most notable recent example being Marcus Berg’s move from FC Groningen to SV Hamburg last month.
Similar to the Eredivisie offering a step up in class from the Nordic leagues, the Bundesliga offers a step up from Holland; far from being a hollow claim, Fifa rank the German premier division as the fifth best in Europe, with Holland languishing down in ninth. Those who make an impression in the Eredivisie following a move from Scandinavia alert Bundesliga clubs who have utilised this relationship between the two leagues to great effect.
Of course there are those who make the move to Europe with a Dutch club and swiftly return to Sweden, Finland or Norway after failing to make the grade. Additionally, there are those who move directly to the Bundesliga, along with others who take the plunge straight into the Premiership, La Liga or Serie A. However, there is no doubting the trend we are focusing on this week.
After directly following Ibrahimovic from Malmö to Ajax Amsterdam, Markus Rosenberg has established himself as a consistent goalscorer in the German Bundesliga with Werder Bremen. Following a productive spell on loan at Halmstad in 2004, Rosenberg returned to Malmö, ending up top scorer in that year’s Royal League.
After being alerted to his performances in the competition, Ajax paid €5.3m to take him to Amsterdam at the beginning of the 2005-06 season. He immediately began to repay Danny Blind’s faith in him by scoring on his debut against (ironically) Brondby in the UEFA Champions League qualifiers.
However, as the season progressed, Blind’s preference for a 4-3-3 system saw Rosenberg pushed out of position to the left side of attack. After failing to make an impact in the new formation and the arrival of Klaas-Jan Huntelaar from Heerenveen, he began the following season as second choice striker. However, Werder Bremen had seen enough of him to warrant making him their first purchase of the 2007 January transfer window.
Those who had witnessed Rosenberg’s performances in the Eredivisie had no doubt of his ability to step up to the higher level of German football. Two years on, Rosenberg has bagged 29 goals in 73 first-team appearances; a figure that would no doubt be significantly higher had Bremen sustained their impressive form from of recent years in the 2008-09 season.
Thus far, Rosenberg can be considered a success story of the Sweden-Holland-Germany route taken by many others.
As mentioned, Marcus Berg is the latest player to follow the path of his contemporaries; after moving from FC Groningen to Hamburg last month, much is expected of the striker who lit up the European U21 Championships on his way to winning the Player of the Tournament accolade earlier this summer.
Following an impressive strike rate of 21 goals in 53 games for IFK Göteborg, FC Groningen took Berg to Holland for the 2007-08 season.
Berg settled immediately and finished the season with 15 goals in 25 league games, drawing interest from both PSV and Ajax. However, Berg stayed loyal to the team who gave him a chance at European football and propelled them to a sixth place finish the following season. With 17 goals in 31 games added to his debut season haul, the speculation began.
As many as 20 clubs across Europe coveted Berg, with the greatest interest from Premier League and Budesliga clubs. After underlining his talent at the U21 Championships, Hamburg won the race for his signature. Although one cannot be sure whether or not English interest in Berg had any legitimacy, it should be considered as no coincidence he has followed Rosenberg to the Bundesliga.
We now wait to see if he can make the second step up, as many have done before him.
Occasionally, an extremely promising player will make the decision to bypass this well-trodden route through Western Europe. One such player attracting great interest this summer is Berg’s ex-teammate, Andreas Granqvist. After impressing European scouts visiting Helsingborg’s Olympiastadion, he and his agent decided upon a move to Wigan Athletic in June 2007.
Taking on the Premier League straight out of Swedish football, Granqvist lasted only nine months in England before rejoining Helsingborg for two months of the 2008 season. Then Wigan manager Steve Bruce made a false point of suggesting an experience away from English football would do Andreas’ career the world of good.
“He has a big future here, but a bit of experience of playing somewhere else can only benefit him”. A statement hollowed out by his willingness to let Granqvist rejoin the team he left less than a year before.
Having seen the same potential in the Swedish defender as Bruce had, FC Groningen paid £600,000 in July 2008 to bolster their defence ahead of a season full of promise following Marcus Berg’s explosive arrival a year earlier.
The 2008-09 season proved to be the season in which Granqvist announced his delayed arrival in Europe. Adapting immediately to the attacking nature of the Eredivisie, he stood out among the otherwise poor defending witnessed every week by Dutch football players, fans, and pundits alike. As if to cement his burgeoning reputation, Granqvist took it upon himself to score one of the goals of the season seen anywhere in Europe.
This summer has seen the return of the speculation that surrounded him before he took the English bypass. His preferred destination? The German Bundesliga. After hearing of interest from Hamburg, Schalke and Wolfsburg to name but three, Granqvist admitted, “If I get the opportunity to play in a bigger league, like in Germany, I would obviously like that.”
Having taken a wrong turn to Wigan, Granqvist is now firmly, and impressively, back on the established route.
Profiles of the Great and Good: Garry Brooke—Better To Be Lucky Than Good
There are very few outside Spurs who would have heard of Garry Brooke, come to think of it, there are few Spurs fans who would even remember his time at White Hart Lane.
But Brooke earned a place in the clubs history, winning two FA Cup medals, playing 75 matches and scoring 15 goals has ensured that Brooke's name will go down in the Tottenham opus.
A gifted central midfielder, Brooke signed for Spurs in 1978, aged 18. The 5'6" dynamo liked nothing better than joining the attack, and he was blessed with a remarkable habit of ghosting into the box unnoticed.
Brooke made his debut for Spurs in 1980, coming on as a substitute in a 3-2 defeat to West Brom. A month later, he made sure it would be a Christmas to remember. On St. Stephen's Day (Boxing Day) he played his first full game for the club and he scored twice in the 4-4 draw with Southampton.
Over the course of the '80-'81 season he played 18 league matches and featured in seven FA Cup games on the way to Spurs winning the trophy, scoring the winning goal against Hull in Round four and then coming on as a sub in the 1-1 draw with Manchester City in the Final.
Spurs went on to win the replay 3-2, thanks to Ricky Villa's famous goal where he beat four players inside the box before he fired past Joe Corrigan. Brooke didn't feature in the replay, but he collected a winners medal all the same.
Brooke not featuring wasn't a surprise, in the early 80s Spurs as were blessed with some of the best players in England.
World Cup winners, Osvaldo Ardilles and Ricky Villa were prominent team players as were the mercurial Glenn Hoddle, hard-man Graeme Roberts, and the indefatigable Tony Galvin.
Ardilles was a genuine world-class talent, while Glenn Hoddle had all the talent that god could give and then some. Faced with such opposition for a berth in midfield, it wasn't a shock to see Garry Brooke become a fixture on the bench, although to even make it that far would suggest that he was also highly talented.
With such competition for places, Brooke found it difficult to claim a regular spot, despite this he won his second FA Cup medal in 1982, as Spurs beat Q.P.R.
Under manager Keith Burkinshaw, Spurs were on the crest of a wave. Having won the FA Cup in '81, Spurs were battling on four fronts in '82. They won the FA Cup, but finished as Runners-up in the League Cup and the Cup-Winners-Cup after Barcelona won the Final on the away goals rule, following a 1-1 draw at White Hart Lane.
With a massive backlog of fixtures due to their cup exploits, Spurs fell away in the final month. They played almost three games a week for seven weeks.
Brooke rose to the occasion in the league run in, he scored four goals in seven games and was one of the few Spurs players left with enough stamina to battle for the title. Burkinshaw took notice, and the following season Garry became a regular.
By February, Brooke had played 23 times and had scored seven goals, and with Spurs gaining even more momentum as they challenged for trophies, Brooke was at the epicentre of all that was good about Tottenham.
Unfortunately, a car crash on the way home from a friends wedding at the end of February would bring a close to Brooke's career as a top-flight footballer at 23 years of age.
Brooke was a passenger travelling home from a wedding reception when they hit black ice, hit a couple of lamp posts and crashed down a ditch.
"I'd actually crawled out but the pain was just above my b*****ks. I said to Kay, "Do me a favour, undo me trousers" and then she's gone, "Oh, shut up Garry!"
"Funny now but at the time I was in agony...
"Maybe it was the adrenalin keeping me conscious, but by the time I was in hospital, I was in a real bad way. Mark Falco (Spurs player) came to the hospital that night. He saw me getting the last rites...one of the ambulance people didn't know he was talking to my mum and dad and said "he's got no chance; he won't last 'til morning. He'll be dead".
Miraculously, Brooke woke up the next day. Unfortunately he had almost a dozen tubes coming in and out of his body, he had fractured or broken 12 ribs and damaged some of his internal organs, most notably one of his lungs was left like Swiss cheese after his ribs had shredded it.
After months out for recuperation, Brooke eventually returned to action but he was never the same player again. Spurs had fallen away from challenging towards the end of the '82 to '83 season, but had still finished high enough to qualify for Europe.
With Spurs chasing honours on all fronts again in the '83 to '84 season, Brooke found it very difficult to break back into the team. And despite his lung capacity being reduced by almost 25-percent, Brooke still battled on.
Keith Burkinshaw stuck with Brooke, and over the next season he played 13 games but he was never the same player. Spurs went on to win the UEFA Cup in '84 but Brooke never collected a medal as he hadn't featured during the campaign.
Days after winning the UEFA Cup, Burkinshaw resigned citing boardroom interference as the reason.
Sadly for Brooke, new manager Peter Shreeve sold him to Norwich the following summer.
Brooke spent two seasons with the Canaries, helping them gain promotion from Division Two in '85.
Following his time in Norwich, Brooke found himself in Holland playing for Groningen. On a personal level, it was one of the happiest times of his career. The different style of football played in Holland favoured technique over lung-bursting runs (and little has changed since) and Brooke found himself slotting right in.
Over a single season in 1987 to 1988 he played 38 times, and scored 9 goals. Groningen finished in 11th place, but qualified for the UEFA Cup, a remarkable achievement for the minnows.
After his successful season in Holland, Brooke was offered a way back into top-flight football in England. Wimbledon FC had been newly promoted are were trying to solidify their ranks with proven talent, perhaps being ill-advised Garry Brooke jumped at the chance to join "The Crazy Gang."
As a player who came in at five and a half foot, and who wasn't the most physical of players with the added impairment of a reduced lung capacity, maybe a move to Wimbledon wasn't the best of choices.
On hearing that Garry was joining Wimbledon, Spurs legend Steve Perryman told him "he was the most un-Wimbledon like player that's ever been born!"
Famed for their physical approach, Brooke struggled to get a game in his two years there. But his good luck rubbed off them, as they won the FA Cup in '88.
Over the next year (1990) Brooke played for five different clubs before he joined the ranks of non-league football.
Brooke was a good player, unfortunately his career may not have gone the way he would have liked. But Lady Luck likes him, over his career he was with clubs who won cups, gained promotion, qualified for Europe when they shouldn't have, and survived a crash when he had no right to.
Sometimes, as the old saying goes, it's better to be lucky than good.