His mom, Ada Bell Baquedano Amador, said Colindres’ relatives in Honduras live around four hours away from San Pedro Sula, where deportees are flown from the United States. Colindres left Honduras when he was just 8 years old and previously told The Enquirer he barely remembers living in the country.
His mother moved to the United States with her two small children in 2014 to flee persecution from gangs, she said. She applied for asylum, but was denied. …
…
Colindres was detained by ICE officials on June 4, and his mother and sister were given less than 30 days to leave the country.
hopefully he gets adopted by a good club in Europe or South America
To be fair, if he were really an up and coming star, he wouldn’t still be in the US at 19.
Yeah, I think the word “star” is a bit of an embellishment. He might have been the star of his highschool team or a starter in college, but by 19 if you aren’t on a pro roster then you aren’t a star. You can become a pro later in your life after college, like many in MLS have, but almost none of them are stars.
EDIT: Found it: he was the star of his highschool club team but didn’t even get any offers for college. His club coach is trying to get him a college offer to help him get back to the US on a student visa. That’s really far from being a “star.”
Yeah. I mean, “star” is subjective. But, to me, “star” means at a bare minimum someone who plays professionally or has the potential to play professionally. Really it should be the best player on their pro team, playing in a good league too.