Advertisement

Hong Kong set to be denied young talent who is targeting World Cup with homeland

Forward who grew up in the city is enhancing his reputation in Germany’s second-tier Bundesliga 2

Reading Time:2 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
The forward learned the game at Hong Kong Football Club, before leaving for Germany when he was 12. Photo: SSV Ulm

Hong Kong football chiefs look set to miss out on adding a gifted young attacker to the city’s representative team after he targeted playing in World Cups for his native Switzerland.

Aaron Keller moved to Hong Kong when he was three months old because of his Swiss father’s instructor job with Cathay Pacific.

At the age of 12, he left his family behind to follow his dream of becoming a professional footballer at the German Football Boarding School, where he was a teammate of Michael Udebuluzor – the Hong Kong-born striker who now does play for the city.

Advertisement

Keller, who while in Hong Kong was a pupil at Peak School and then attended Harrow, said he learned to love the game at Hong Kong Football Club, which he joined aged eight. He is still in touch with his old coaches, Wilfred Wong, Nam Nguyen and Mark Grainger.

But he said: “If I wanted to take football seriously, I had to go to Europe and through their system.”

Advertisement

Keller needed around six months to adapt off the field. On it, he was shocked to discover that being “one of the more talented players in Hong Kong” did not translate into matching Germany’s best youngsters, but he improved with high-quality training, coaching and opposition.

Aaron Keller, who describes himself as a “fast, dynamic player”, in action in Germany. Photo: SSV Ulm
Aaron Keller, who describes himself as a “fast, dynamic player”, in action in Germany. Photo: SSV Ulm
Advertisement
Select Voice
Choose your listening speed
Get through articles 2x faster
1.25x
250 WPM
Slow
Average
Fast
1.25x