Kenya has enough football talent; spot and nurture it early
Editorial
By
Editorial
| Jul 19, 2025
Aldrine Kibet, who was reportedly denied an opportunity to join St Peter’s Mumias High School football team because of his small size, was picked by St Anthony’s Kitale, which saw a raw talent wrapped in quiet determination, and nurtured him.
He scored both goals in the national final in the 2023 Kenya Secondary Schools Sports Association games, with his remarkable 25 goals and 27 assists throughout the season, earning him the Golden Boot and the competition's Most Valuable Player.
His exploits would attract scouts, which later elevated to Spain’s Nàstic Sports Academy in Barcelona, Spain. Aldrine continued his exemplary performance at Nastic, and in the 2024/2025 season, he won the best player of the season at the club.
His now four-year deal with La Liga side Celta Vigo (reserve team) is not just his win; it's a win for every overlooked boy in dusty pitches across Kenya. Kibet’s fate could easily have slipped into silence, but his rise to global recognition is a testament to the power of resilience, vision, and unwavering support.
Just like Kibet, his Kenya U20 captain Amos Wanjala is set to join another La Liga side, Elche FC. His rise is the result of talent, discipline, and deliberate nurturing as the heartbeat of the Kenya U20 team where he led with calm authority. His performance is not just out of physical strength, he has a football brain, one that reads the game with an instinct that belies his age.
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In a country where young talent is often overlooked, their success shows what is possible when young players are trusted and given responsibility. The breakthrough must serve as a reminder that there is enough talent within our borders, ready to compete at the highest level. But it must be identified early, supported consistently, and promoted boldly.
This journey underscores the fact that Kenya is not short of football talent. It is short of systems that identify, nurture, and protect it. Their success did not sprout in isolation but grew from a support system involving parents, schools, and a visionary sports policy.
And to the parents raising these disciplined, brilliant, and focused young men: Thank you. You are nurturing more than athletes, you are shaping Kenya’s future. Former Sports CS Ababu Namwamba, whose commitment to exposing young Kenyan athletes to the world stage, must also be applauded.
The Football Kenya Federation, Ministry of Sports, and school games systems should now invest even more in structured youth development programmes, build more academies, offer structured scholarships, reward excellence in school games and support talent early. The signing of the two young men is proof that with the right shepherding, Kenyan players can walk among the global elite.
Let it be the spark that reminds us that Kenya doesn’t need to wait for talent to mature abroad, it can be shaped right here. Equally, the Harambee Stars technical bench must open the door wider for U20 and U23 talents like Kibet and Wanjala, and let youth earn their stripes on the pitch, not on the bench.