Thomas Sørensen: Difference between revisions
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| fullname = Thomas Løvendahl Sørensen |
| fullname = Thomas Løvendahl Sørensen |
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| image = [[Image:TommyS.jpg]] |
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| nickname = Tommy |
| nickname = Tommy |
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| dateofbirth = {{birth date and age|1976|6|12}} |
| dateofbirth = {{birth date and age|1976|6|12}} |
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Revision as of 23:18, 5 May 2007
| File:TommyS.jpg | |||
| Personal information | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Full name | Thomas Løvendahl Sørensen | ||
| Height | 6 ft 4 in (1.93 m) | ||
| Position | Goalkeeper | ||
| Team information | |||
Current team | Aston Villa | ||
| Number | 1 | ||
| ‡ National team caps and goals as of 28 March 2007 | |||
Thomas Løvendahl Sørensen (born June 12 1976 in Fredericia, Denmark) is a Danish professional football goalkeeper, who currently plays for Aston Villa in the English Premiership. He is the starting goalkeeper for the Danish national team, the successor to Peter Schmeichel, and he has played more than 60 matches for his country. He has no major honours to his name, but did start for his country at the 2002 FIFA World Cup and 2004 European Championship tournaments.
Biography
Thomas Sørensen first came into the spotlight when playing youth football at Odense BK. He debuted for the Danish under-21 national team in September 1993, 17 years old.
Filling in the gloves
He began his professional career at Odense BK's first team in the Danish Superliga championship in 1995. Sørensen initially served as an understudy to club legend goalkeeper Lars Høgh. For the 1996-97 season, he was loaned out to league rivals Vejle BK for six months, where he played six league matches. Once back at Odense he was loaned out again, this time to Svendborg fB in the secondary Danish 1st Division league. He played the remaining season, as well as the full 1997-98 season, at Svendborg fB.
Hardly anyone outside of Denmark had even heard of the tall and athletic keeper,[1] when English manager Peter Reid bought the 22-year old from Odense for about £510,000 in July 1998.[2] Sørensen was bought to strengthen Reid's Sunderland A.F.C. side, then newly relegated to the second level league of English football, the Football League First Division. This move helped Sunderland to promotion for the top flight English Premiership, when Sørensen and his team grabbed the League Championship title in 1999. Sørensen smashed the club's clean sheet record with 29 clean sheets in the process.[1]
World Cup woes
Sørensen made his debut for the Danish national team in November 1999, coming on to replace an injured Peter Schmeichel. Sørensen was a reserve keeper for Denmark at Euro 2000, when Peter Schmeichel was at the end of his career. Sørensen gained legendary status in Sunderland in 2001, when he saved a penalty kick from Alan Shearer in the dying moments of the game, to preserve a valuable win over arch rivals and neighbouring club Newcastle United.
For the 2002 FIFA World Cup qualifying campaign in 2001, he took over the job as goalkeeper and helped Denmark qualify. Sørensen was then instrumental, as Denmark won their first round group ahead of Senegal, Uruguay and defending World Cup champions France to book a second round clash against England. However, in the pouring rain at Niigata, Sørensen conceeded three goals, one of them an embarrasing blunder,[2] as he bundled the ball into his own goal from a Rio Ferdinand header in the 5th minute. England went on to win the match 3-0.
Sunderland to Aston Villa
Back in England, Sunderland were struggling both on and off the pitch and Sørensen could not save the club from relegation in 2003. Reid had already been sacked, and as a result of the club's mounting financial worries, Sunderland sold Sørensen for £2 million to Aston Villa,[2] who had held off interest from a handful of other clubs, including Manchester United and Arsenal FC. He played nearly 200 games on Wearside for Sunderland.
Once again representing his country in an international tournament, Sørensen played in all his country's games at 2004 European Championship (Euro 2004), gathering the official man of the match award after both the 0-0 draw with Italy and the 2-0 victory against Bulgaria. Despite his efforts, Denmark was once more eliminated in a 3-0 loss, this time to the Czech Republic in the quarter finals.
At Aston Villa, Sorenson has developed a reputation as a good, if somewhat eccentric, goal keeper. While generally a consistent goalkeeper, he is known to make high profile, highly noticeable errors, on an infrequent basis. Despite this, Sorenson's superb ability as a shot stopper has allowed him to retain his place as Villa's number one under both former boss David O'Leary and current boss Martin O'Neill, ahead of the likes of Stefan Postma and Stuart Taylor.
Sorenson is a popular figure with Villa fans. After an error against Middlesbrough on 14th April 2007, Sorenson commented on the Villa website that he was grateful to the fans for chanting his name as opposed to criticizing him, taking it as an affirmation of the job he was doing for the team.[1]
Honours
- Football League First Division (Level 2): 1998-99
References
- ^ a b EURO 2008 profile, UEFA, 2006
- ^ a b c Ronald Atkin, Why Sorensen is keeping to the Schmeichel strut holds, The Independent on Sunday, November 16, 2003