Keanu Baccus becomes the latest Aussie to back himself in Scottish 'dystopia'

By TheSecretScout / Roar Guru

With the bright lights of Glasgow less than ten minutes away, the town of Paisley is often left in the shadows of its bigger brother.

Its large, sprawling countryside is a smokescreen for a town that regularly has areas listed in the Scottish Index of Multiple Deprivation and was recently voted in the top five unhappiest towns in the United Kingdom to live.

While it is trying to change, with gentrification starting to bear fruit, vandalism, violence and crime are still common and it’s not the type of place you would like to wander around alone at night.

You need a battler’s mentality to survive and an unbreakable determination to reach the very top. Just ask Paisley’s favourite son, superstar actor Gerard Butler.

The town’s football team, St Mirren, have just signed a young Australian footballer who possesses both those above qualities in spades: Keanu Baccus.

Baccus will join a long list of Australians playing in Scotland, signing a two-year contract to play for St Mirren commencing in the summer.

It’s been quite the journey for Baccus to get to this point in his career.

He was born in Durban, South Africa. The family emigrated to Australia while Baccus was a young boy. They settled in Sydney’s football-mad western suburbs.

Growing up, Keanu lived in the shadow of his older brother Kearyn, who was a much more naturally gifted footballer.

Kearyn has played for three different A-League Men clubs, and had trials in Spain as well as two stints overseas – in France and currently in the country of his birth South Africa with the Kaizer Chiefs.

Keanu’s journey began when he was spotted much later than his brother, playing under-10s for Parklea, before brief stints at Fairfield and Blacktown Spartans.

Then he moved up to Blacktown City, which is a club that has produced many talented Australian players.

A move to the professional system of Australian football came knocking, when the Western Sydney Wanderers signed Baccus as a 15-year-old.

(Photo by Jonathan DiMaggio/Getty Images)

Less than two years later he made his senior debut for the Wanderers’ first team, in what was a great season for the player personally. He won the National Youth League player of the year award, as voted by his peers.

In the years since, Baccus has becoming a mainstay for the Wanderers, recently hitting the 100-game milestone.

The past five seasons have seen the Wanderers miss the finals, with many coaches and players coming and going. However, Keanu Baccus has been a quiet success in a period of dysfunctionality for the proud Wanderers.

Baccus has been able to navigate the toxicity within the club to become a Wanderers fan favourite as well as one of the most underrated midfielders in the league.

His dreams of playing in Europe were cruelly taken away from him due to the player being reluctant to leave Australia at the height of COVID-19 in 2021.

Hungarian giant Ferencváros immediately backed out of the deal, such is the cut-throat nature of European transfers.

Several clubs in the UK have been monitoring Baccus for some time now, but it comes as a surprise that St Mirren won the race.

If he becomes homesick or needs help adjusting to the Scottish lifestyle, long-forgotten Australian Matt Millar and young New Zealand tyro Alex Grieve are part of the Saints’ squad.

The Saints are perilously perched just above the relegation zone. Barring a disastrous end to the season, they should be fine to avoid the dreaded drop.

Coach Stephen Robinson is a big admirer and Baccus has been bought to be a starter in St Mirren’s stuttering engine room for next season.

Baccus’ composure, ability to recycle possession and work rate will serve him well in the frantic, hustle-and-bustle style that the Scottish Premiership is known for.

From the mean streets of Durban to the diversity of Sydney’s western suburbs and soon to be the dystopia of Paisley, Keanu Baccus has been fighting all his life for his European football dream.

The Crowd Says:

2022-05-03T10:31:37+00:00

Keith Griffen

Guest


That’s a bit over the top. Wentworth and Sydenham,in KZN is a far cry from mount druitt.

2022-05-02T23:35:33+00:00

josh

Guest


That's rubbish and you know it. I wonder if you're an AFL fan with a new found opinion on Western Sydney because your sport put a team in the area no one asked for, or you're a SydneyFC fan who claim your team is 'for all of Sydney' but make these comments to prove you're really just an Eastern Suburbs A League club? Hot or cold?

2022-05-02T10:40:02+00:00

Igor Oligarchov

Guest


"Paisley dystopian". Have you ever been to western Sydney? I bet his family wished they stayed in Durban.

2022-05-02T09:25:34+00:00

Keith Griffen

Guest


Alas, a big loss. Its a pity he was not picked by the Socceroos. Bacchus should have played for Bafana, would be utilised more wisely. Same with Bacchus Snr.

AUTHOR

2022-05-02T00:45:32+00:00

TheSecretScout

Roar Guru


you just answered your own question :laughing:

2022-05-01T22:20:40+00:00

Yesterday's Hero

Roar Rookie


the only thing you’re correct on, is ive never been there lol.. Well I hope your scouting goes beyond using google and copying and pasting things you know nothing about.. The first five paragraphs about Paisley came from where?

2022-04-30T21:29:40+00:00

Grem

Roar Rookie


Congratulations to Adelaide - hopefully they'll cement 4th place and a home final next week. Please tell me Craig Goodwin is staying. When he's on he is so good. And Carl Veart is proving himself to be a wonderful coach.

2022-04-30T06:55:20+00:00

josh

Guest


Happy for him, he's earned a chance to step up. As long as WSW replace him with someone better that's all that matters, onwards and upwards. Cancar is the more concerning loss at this stage.

2022-04-30T03:04:26+00:00

David V

Guest


We liked to think that domestically and internationally Australian football wasn't far off Europe. The harsh reality is that we are now being left behind. And our football admin is too deep in the sand to see it.

2022-04-30T02:30:22+00:00

David V

Guest


St Mirren has a long and quite accomplished history where producing and shaping players and managers go. Scottish football well be reversing its long-term decline. Rangers reach a European semi-final, the national team is in the WCQ play-offs, and Scotland's UEFA coefficient is in the top 10. Furthermore, attendances per capita are among the best anywhere - same with Portugal, Netherlands and Belgium.

2022-04-29T06:04:41+00:00

Brendan

Roar Pro


The list keeps growing. Going to Scotland seems like the thing to do. I’d like to think, possibly a few years ago, the A-League was bigger, but that could be blind optimism on my behalf. I look back at some highlights, & there was a time 60,000+ fans were going to the Sydney derby.

2022-04-29T03:57:03+00:00

Brainstrust

Roar Rookie


Keanu Baccus went from carrying a lazy team in the past seasons to on and off performances himself this season. Robinson didnt appreciate him in the past he should have been first name on the teamsheet and kept on for 90 minutes.

2022-04-29T03:55:54+00:00

Boaby barman

Guest


Whoever wrote this about Paisley has obviously never been there. Keanu will be given every chance at St Mirren who are widely known for encouraging talent shaping them for a higher level of football. He will be supported be safe in a team that won and retains the first European Cup which commemorated the opening of a new stadium for Barcelona FC. Good luck to Keanu and hope the article author gets out of that shiny chair before articulating inaccuracy.

AUTHOR

2022-04-29T00:00:23+00:00

TheSecretScout

Roar Guru


quite a contingent amassed there now, 8 or 9 players? i wouldn't be surprised if there's more movement to scotland this offseason by another a league player or 2 - they are all the rage over there currently

2022-04-28T23:49:19+00:00

Brendan

Roar Pro


I’m pleased for Keanu Baccus (& Blacktown City). There’s been some chatter about the Scottish Premiership, especially since Ange joined Celtic. I’ve openly joined the bandwagon. Although, I can’t say I’m thrilled with Rangers pulling the pin on their trip Down Under.

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