Andy Najar growing up fast in D.C.

Andy Najar growing up fast in D.C.

Published Sep. 8, 2010 9:39 p.m. ET

Amid the samba beats and dancing around the new Meadowlands Stadium a month ago, one face stood as anonymous as the rest.

He's still a relative unknown here, but he was unknown in Honduras too just four years ago.

Back then, Najar was a teenager with pro soccer aspirations he’d carried since the age of three, when he decided he wanted to follow in his father’s footsteps. When he moved to the United States, even he couldn’t have imagined the whirlwind that would follow.

A chance connection with the D.C. United Academy program paved the way for stardom, with Najar emerging as the program’s top prospect. When he signed a professional contract with the first team last March, the 17-year-old figured to be a long-term prospect who’d take time to develop.

Early on, it appeared that process would take a while. When he first joined the team, Najar didn’t say a word. He was with the team a month before he felt comfortable enough to talk to his teammates, but once Najar gained that confidence that came with feeling like a part of the team, his confidence on the field soon followed.

“It wasn’t easy for me, I was new and younger than everybody, so I didn’t say much,” Najar said. “Once I felt more comfortable, I was able to talk more and now (my teammates) probably wish they could shut me up.”

Najar didn’t just come out of his shell off the field. He blossomed on the field. He has wowed observers with his fearless and dynamic wing play and has served as one of the few bright spots in a nightmare season for D.C. United.

Before Najar can think about Europe, and his national team options, Najar is still just trying to be a teenager. He is working on securing his high school diploma, which became tougher when he left high school to turn pro. Najar is also trying to learn English and adapting to life as a professional soccer player.

Najar may not have the option of waiting much longer. With Honduras pressing him for a national team decision, and his professional opportunities growing with every impressive performance he delivers for a hopeless D.C. team, Najar is fast becoming a player who is harder and harder to ignore, a player who won’t have the luxury of relative anonymity much longer.

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Ives Galarcep is a senior writer for FoxSoccer.com covering Major League Soccer and the U.S. national team.

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