Kenya's upcoming young talents should exploit any available opportunity to play for the big football club's academies whenever they come by.
Europe’s big boys including Chelsea, Juventus, Liverpool and Sporting Lisbon have a nice recruitment system that includes having scouts and scouting sessions at different parts of Africa.
There have been no double standards whatsoever in the recruitment system as all of the activities are based on merit.
As such, whenever these sessions are organized in any region in Africa or in the country for that matter, the parents or the guardians in charge of the kids should make an effort to have the kids display their talents and all that they are good at.
Chelsea's Cobham training complex has the reputation of looking for and identifying the finest talents across Europe. Making it to London could be mountainous and rocky to some parents or guardians but it is worth the sacrifice if the kid and the guardian are fully aware of the talent.
Juventus and Sporting Lisbon have training complexes situated all across Africa and have been responsible for the identification of the finest talents which the Turin club has been moving on and accumulating some fee on the transfers all through.
The recruitment is not accidental or by chance. The best example is the identification of Pierre Emerick Aubaeyang's talent by French club St. Ettienne. They went on to accumulate a lot of fee for his transfer to BVB and then to Arsenal as they have a sell on clause in his market value.
The same happened to English club Chelsea's identification of 15-year-old Bertrand Traore who was sadly let go but is flourishing having turned out as the star man for Ajax Amsterdam during their run to the Europa League final.
If it happened to the likes of Auba and Traore, it just means it can also happen to any Kenyan kid.
We would like to see them on trials at Liverpool, at Chelsea, at Sporting Lisbon or at Juventus.
Sporting Lisbon did just that when they snapped up wonderkid Mohammed Ramadhan who was dubbed the small Messi courtesy of his mastery of the game at a very early age.
The same should be replicated to all Kenyan kids.