NHAT NGUYEN WAS just six years old when he left Vietnam for a new life in Ireland.
It is no doubt an intimidating prospect for a child, having to learn a whole new language and way of life at such a young and impressionable age.
Now 17, looking back to that time is largely a blur for Nguyen. He can remember saying goodbye to his grandparents, but thatโs about it.
โI donโt remember much, but (Ireland is) definitely colder than Vietnam,โ he laughs, in conversation with The42.
โBut to be honest, I didnโt really understand what was going on. Iโd moved country to Ireland. I thought I was going on holidays or something like that.
โIt took a few years to settle in and then I was okay.โ
The badminton starlet has been back to the country in which he was born just once, last summer, to catch up with family and friends.
Those he left behind will no doubt be proud of the exciting life he is already forging for himself in Ireland.
Sport is his passion. Starting when he was nine, for roughly three years, he played soccer, featuring as a striker for Santry-based schoolboy club Woodlawn FC. He โwasnโt badโ at it, but this hobby quickly got side-tracked by a more all-consuming activity. It was his father, who himself was โa good club-level playerโ in his day, that introduced a young Nguyen to the sport of badminton.
At the start I didnโt really like it, because I just followed (my dad) around as he played,โ he recalls.
โBut as I kept playing and kept playing, I started to fall in love with it.โ
He adds: โI only started playing badminton when I came here. I joined the local club with my dad, just to play around and get to know the other kids.
โI guess it was one of the ways I tried to fit in and improve my English and socialise with people.โ
Racism, Nguyen says, is not something he has ever experienced any โmajor problemsโ with in Ireland.
All my friends always treated me the same, so it was always fine, it was always no problem,โ he adds.
So with a solid network of support behind him, Nguyen has excelled at his chosen sport. The teen sensation first garnered mainstream media attention last year, when he became the first Irish badminton player ever to win the U17 European championships.
โIt was a nice surprise,โ he told The42 afterwards, while the feat subsequently earned him a nomination for the Badminton Europe Young Player of the Year award.
Since then, Nguyen has continued to flourish. In 2017, he won his first senior titles in both singles and doubles at events in Wales and Poland respectively, while he also got as far as the quarter finals of the World Junior Championships.
โIt was quite a special moment to win my first senior title, I didnโt expect it at all,โ he says, of beating Indiaโs RMV Gurusaidutt, a player who has been ranked in the top 20 in the world.
โIt shows I can compete with and beat these senior guys.
โI think (becoming European U17 champion) was the beginning of my career. It gave me a good push (and told me) I was going in the right direction. And where I am now is at a good place.
โAll I had to do was keep pushing myself in training so I could push for a senior title. I didnโt know it would come this soon, but Iโll take it.โ
Earlier this month, he competed at the Irish Open, getting all the way to the final before losing out to Germanyโs Alexander Roovers.
Though it ended in disappointment, Nguyen reflects on the experience positively.
โI played some of the best badminton I ever felt I played. I was very determined, especially with the home crowd.
โI would have been hoping to win the final as I beat (my opponent) the week before in Wales.
โI donโt know what happenedโฆ I couldnโt get myself going โ it wasnโt my day.โ
On top of all this, the Dublin-based athlete has his Leaving Certificate to contend with in a couple of months. He admits that mixing competing in top-level badminton with his studies in St Davidโs CBS in Artane is a challenge.
โItโs quite hard. Iโm always behind in school. I miss a lot of days, so I have to play catch-up.
I always have to put in an extra hour, working at home, doing homework, trying to learn a new chapter in Biology, for example.โ
He adds: โMy daily routine is very strict. I get up really early in the morning to go training before school. I study in school and after school, I go training.
โI get home around seven or eight, do a bit of homework, eat, sleep and repeat the next day. Itโs a very boring life, but itโs a life I enjoy
I would get up around 5.45am to go to training before school. Weekends I would try to do a light encore system or a light gym session just to keep myself in shape for the following week.โ
All this hard work seems to be paying off. Last month, it was confirmed that Nguyen was one of four teenagers awarded funding scholarships for Tokyo 2020 from the Olympic Council of Ireland (OCI).
โIt helps my parents a lot,โ he says. โMy parents have to pay a little bit when I go away. Not that much. A little bit. But now itโs just all taken care of.
โItโs less stress for my parents, so they can just work and not worry as much.โ
Nguyen had originally planned to do a part-time third-level course after school, but now he has decided he will focus completely on badminton once his Leaving Cert is finished.
โI donโt want any other distractions,โ he explains. โI just want to play badminton and see what I can do in the sport.
Irish badminton has taken some significant leaps in recent times, such as three-time Olympian Scott Evansโ memorable run at the Rio Games, where he pulled off some big results and got as far as the Round of 16.
Nguyen, meanwhile, trains on a daily basis with two other experienced Irish Olympians โ Sam and Chloe Magee.
โIโm friends with them and they always give me good advice for how to deal with things.
โIt helps me a lot, talking, training and getting to know what they went through and what I will be going through.
Sam and Chloe tell me to enjoy it and not to take it too seriously at the moment โ (they tell me) to enjoy the journey rather than stressing about all these little things. I found that helpful.โ
The teenage starโs overriding long-term goal is to emulate and ideally build on the achievements set by the likes of the Magees and Evans.
Like most teenagers, Nguyen has big dreams, but he also has the talent and the potential to back up these lofty ambitions.
โObviously I want to compete in the Olympics, but I donโt want to go just to compete. I feel I have the hard work and dedication to go far.
โIโd like to medal in these events โ the Europeans, the World Championships and even the Olympicsโฆ So Iโll be pushing on now. Weโll see what the future holds, but Iโm feeling quite confident.
โWinning the titles and getting to the final of the Irish Open shows that I can compete with these guys. Give me a few years and Iโll definitely make my mark on the top level. Thatโs the plan.
โMy family are very supportive. My sister, my parents, there are only four in the family.
My sister was a weightlifter so she knows a lot about sport and what it takes to be at the top. She understands and my parents understand as well โ I hope Iโm doing them proud.โ
For now though, Nguyen must put his Olympic dreams to one side, with the less glamorous aspects of his life set to prioritised in the coming months.
โI have my Leaving Cert coming up so I have to reduce my tournaments a little bit. But after my Leaving Cert, I have the European Juniors, the Youth Olympic Games and the World Juniors.
โItโs a big stretch, Iโm quite behind, I have to do some study over Christmas.
โBut once the Leavingโs over, I can focus on badminton, so thatโs good.โ
The42 has just published its first book, Behind The Lines, a collection of some of the yearโs best sports stories. Pick up your copy in Easonโs, or order it here today (โฌ10):
if you gave a 16year old 80k he would go mad never mind 80k every weekโฆ
Is anyone really surprised this has gone Pete Tong
I hope raheem sterling doesnโt read the 42!!!
He may be talented but at 16 he is still a kid then add 80k a week on top of that, what did they really expect.
Hang on a second. Everyone here is blaming the kid. Not his fault at all as far as i can see. In his contract it supposedly states he must train with senior squad. Nothing wrong with that. Seems he wants to improve as a player by training with the best. Shows ambition. What he earns has nothing to do with the story here. Good luck to the lad.
80k a week at 16? Are the insane? If he really is as good as they say he is, imagine what heโll be demanding if he enters the first team. Madness.
he will end up on loan at Celtic himself and the manager had a great relationship I believe.
Freddy Adu 2.0
Freddy Adieu.
If that report is the caseโฆGood God. 16 years old and on 80k a week. Shut up and do as you are told. What a spoiled brat.
Itโs a professional sport and he has a professional contract. Age shouldnโt be the issue here. It sounds like Madrid are the ones not adhering to the agreement.
I think at Real it takes more than skill to succeed. A young man coming to a club full of large egos would need to be very strong mentality and be able to adapt to the club โ because Madrid wonโt change to suit him. They have soar out better and more experienced players in the past and look as if theyโre going to do the same with Bale at moment.
He grew up as a Liverpool supporter prob shouldโve followed his allegiance. The likes of Ajax and PSV are normally perfect for youngsters to get a good education and relatively easy path to the first team.
Real Madrid is a pressure cooker, I reckon no other club was willing to pay anywhere near 80k and his agent probably took a decision to get the money now just incase he doesnโt turn out to be a world beater.
Heโs just doing what it says in his contract. Tough shit on Madrid, they properly sealed the deal on that clause. Fair play to him for sticking to the contract.
Not really colm, itโs ludicrous that heโs on that much money and demands to train with the senior squad 5 times a weekโฆโฆ..that wouldnโt have happened if he went to Utd, he wouldnโt be on that much by any means and he would certainly be learning his trade with the under age and reserve teams rather then the first team.
Why shouldnโt he demand to train with the first team? Thatโs what his contract states and Real were happy to sign it
Iโd be retiring when I got to 18, after 2years with 80K a week, happy feckin days lol