Thank you, Dad
Indra would probably not be playing football if his father had not intervened
Struggling to make an impression in the sport he loves, Muhd Indra Moraga was 12 when he left Braveheart Football Academy (BFA), a local private youth football institution.
Two years later, he is a two-time National C Division champion with Hong Kah Secondary School.
The 14-year-old says his success in schools football is down to his father, 53-year-old Muhd Idris Basirun.
"I was never the best of players. I always got left out of the team, and my father noticed this, so he decided to pull me out of BFA when I was in Primary 6," said Indra, a Boon Lay Garden Primary alumnus.
"My father put in the effort to source for football opportunities for me at (S.League giants) Warriors FC, where I went for trials.
"That was the turning point, and it was all because of him."
Idris' endeavour worked wonders for his son, who now captains the club's Under-14 Centre of Excellence team.
When he started in Secondary 1, Indra was deemed good enough for the Hong Kah school team, who went on to win the National Schools C Division championship in 2013.
This year, the lean defender was promoted to vice-captain, and helped lead the team in a successful title defence after defeating Crest Secondary 2-0 in the final in July.
The win ensured that Hong Kah, a school boasting national team players like Fazli Ayob and Hyrulnizam Juma'at as former students, made it three titles in a row, a run that dates back to 2012.
Playing in a defensive position, Indra does not have many opportunities to go running at opponents with a bag full of tricks.
But Hong Kah's teacher-in-charge for football, Ng Han Liat, believes that Indra possesses a much more valuable skill set.
"Normally, players aren't very receptive to criticism, but Indra is different. He has a willingness to improve, and he always gives his 100 per cent.
"On the pitch, he is a leader, but not in the conventional sense. He is quietly confident and he leads by example, a lot like (Real Madrid and Spain defender) Sergio Ramos."
A shy and quiet teenager, Indra is not merely a promising football star.
GOOD STUDENT TOO
Away from the game, his academic achievements are also impressive.
Entering Secondary 1 as a Normal (Academic) student, Indra ended his first year in Hong Kah as the second-best student in his cohort.
A subsequent move to the Express stream followed in Secondary 2, where he outperformed most of his peers and achieved 16th position throughout the whole cohort in his mid-year examinations.
"My father made me a timetable to help me balance studies and football, so that I could stay focused on both," said Indra.
"There are always clashes, such as trainings and remedial classes. But my teachers always help me to balance the time.
"Also, if I end up neglecting my studies, my father's punishment is to confiscate my handphone and bar me from playing football!"
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