Edwin Simiyu’s journey from Tusker Youth to first teamer pushing Harambee Stars custodian

©Edwin Simiyu

FKF Edwin Simiyu’s journey from Tusker Youth to first teamer pushing Harambee Stars custodian

Mark Kinyanjui 09:15 - 09.08.2023

The custodian has had to wait patiently for a chance to make the first team at Tusker, having joined the club's academy in 2019.

In modern football, it is increasingly becoming rare to find a player nurtured from the top club’s academy making it to the first team.

According to Arsenal’s head of academy Per Mertesacker in an interview with Football London in 2019, less than one percent of players who come through a club’s youth ranks end up making the first team.

The other 99 percent never make the cut, and of that remaining percentage, only 40 percent end up making careers in football at other clubs.

So for goalkeeper Edwin Simiyu to make the cut at Tusker after being nurtured at academy level since joining in 2019, it is a big milestone, not just for himself and his family, but also for Robert Matano, who had to witness the departure of the experienced duo of Michael Wanjala and Harambee Stars custodian Patrick Matasi from Ruaraka.

Simiyu has joined a list of players to be promoted from Tusker Youth to the senior team. He follows in the footsteps of Eric Zakayo, John Njuguna, and latest one being Collins ‘Kante’ Otieno who was promoted last year.

Naturally calm and collected, the 23-year-old spoke to Pulse Sports shortly after his unveiling as a senior team player last week.

Watching his fellow academy products, especially Collins 'Kante' Otieno who belongs to the same age group, get promoted is something he said motivated him to want to make the cut

“Kante’s promotion motivated me because we joined the youth team at the same time, and we spent much time together. It showed me that with hard work, you can achieve anything,” Simiyu said.

“For me, this is a testament that patience pays. I have been patient since I joined the team in 2019 and I knew my chance would come one day. I am delighted that it has finally come.”

Simiyu expresses his delight at working with goalkeepers of international pedigree, expressing just how much he has learned from working with Matasi, current vice-captain and first-choice goalkeeper Brian Bwire alongside the goalkeeper trainer Duncan Ochieng, himself a former Harambee Stars international.

"Training with Matasi (Patrick) and Bwire (Brian) and then coaching by Dunco (Duncan Ochieng) who have been regulars on the national team always motivated me. They pushed me and gave me advice and I can say it is because of them that I am here today.”

“I am happy, it is not easy to have made the team, but I am looking forward to the challenge ahead.“ 

Simiyu acknowledges that ousting Bwire will not be easy, but he is prepared to support and compliment him, and with a bit of luck, anything is very possible.

“It will not be easy. He is an experienced player. I have been with him for three years, but I will fight for my spot and give it my best shot.”

Last season, Tusker fell shot of winning the league title by a single point and also missed out on the FKF Cup final, which left the team naturally distraught. Simiyu says that being part of the “new Tusker” as head coach Robert Matano says, teamwork is key if they are to stand a chance of making amends this season.

“We need to be determined and move together as a unit. That way, we can make amends for our mistakes last season and do better this time round.”

“It is all God’s plan, I can only do my best and hope he does the rest!”

Simiyu could get his fair share of game time as the second-choice goalkeeper, which will give him much-needed exposure and experience that may help him make a career at Tusker or elsewhere.