Meet the Grays
The Grey household’s footballing legacy spans three generations, with Archie simply the most recent to play for Leeds. His grandfather Frank and his nice uncle Eddie, each Scotland internationals, received the First Division collectively below Don Revie within the 1974.
Eddie, extensively thought of to be one in all Leeds’ best ever gamers, stayed at Elland Street his entire taking part in profession, returning in a training capability on a number of events, whereas Frank went on to win the European Cup with Nottingham Forest below Brian Clough in 1980 earlier than returning.
Archie grew up watching the latter levels of his father Andy’s profession, which included two spells at Leeds. Final season, he broke into the crew himself, beginning 42 Championship video games as Leeds narrowly missed out on promotion to the Premier League.
“It makes you proud,” his nice uncle Eddie tells Sky Sports activities. “Archie’s a young lad and he comes from a background that there’s always going to be a focus on him, especially at Leeds, and he stood up to that challenge.”
“It was great [watching him],” provides his father Andy. “I was very nervous at first. It’s hard to detach yourself from being a supporter and a parent at the same time. I’ll cherish those memories for the rest of my life.”
“It was great to see him play for Leeds,” provides his father Andy. ” I was very nervous at first, obviously being a Leeds supporter as well. It’s hard to detach yourself from being a supporter and a parent at the same time. Obviously it ended in tears at Wembley, but those are memories I’ll cherish for the rest of my life.”
The Grey footballing lineage doesn’t cease with Archie. He has a brother, Harry, who’s at Leeds too and performed in a first-team pleasant over pre-season aged 15.
“Harry will follow in the same footsteps as Archie barring any accidents,” says Eddie. “He’s very talented. He’ll come through the young teams at Leeds and hopefully play for our club.”
He adds: “I think they’re close enough in age to play together one day. When Frank and I played together, he was seven years younger than me.”
Archie and Harry, simply over two years aside, aren’t any strangers to competing. “They played football in the garden from a very young age and there’s been a few tears shed, a few fights,” their father Andy recollects.
“I remember we’ve had boxing gloves out in the garden to let them get on with it a few times,” he adds. “If they were playing out in the garden, I guarantee up to the age of about 15 that they’ll be fighting. One of them will come in crying at some point.”
The romantic prospect of a second generation of Gray brothers playing together for Leeds was put on ice after the Championship play-off defeat to Southampton last season.
Archie’s time at his family’s club perhaps would have been prolonged with a different outcome, but the money on offer from the Premier League proved too enticing to turn down for Leeds.
The transition is daunting, however one Archie has been ready for.
“I do not assume it can faze him,” says Eddie, a winner of two top-flight English titles. “He grew up in that atmosphere. His grandad, my brother, his dad [being footballers at that level].”
Archie was born to play in the Premier League.