When Julius Mutisya joined Tudor Day Secondary School in
2002, his deskmate Jabir Yusuf struggled to pronounce his name.
But there was one thing Mutisya talked about relentlessly:
Milan Baros, the Czech international forward dazzling for his favourite
football club, Liverpool.
Soon, Jabir dubbed him “Baros,” and the nickname stuck. Even
today, in Mvita subcounty’s Tudor area, ask anyone about Baros and they’ll
point you straight to his house.
“Even our principal at the time, Mr Mwaruka, used to call me
Baros,” he recalls with a laugh. Football wasn’t just a hobby—it was the
compass that guided him through school, keeping him focused and disciplined.
Born in 1986 and raised in Tudor, Baros’s love affair with
the game began in 1997 while in Standard 4.
Kenya’s Harambee Stars were facing Nigeria’s Super Eagles in
Nairobi, and the young Baros was mesmerised by midfielder John “Baresi”
Odhiambo’s dazzling footwork.
“I remember that game vividly. We drew, but after that, the
football bug bit me. I started playing the very next day, and I have never
stopped,” he says.
Back then, a proper football was a luxury. Children
improvised with Caltex petrol bottles as balls and slippers as goalposts.
School life was far from orderly. Before Madam Omondi became headmistress at
Sparki Primary, truancy was rampant.
Baros and his friends would sneak off to Tudor beach to play
football, swim, or even escape to Tononoka for video games.
Sometimes he played with local teams whose members never
attended school. Misbehaving prefects who dared punish him and his friends
would often find themselves ambushed on their way home—faces covered, threats
in tow.
Things changed when Madam Omondi took charge. She introduced
a school football team and enforced strict schedules, keeping students engaged
from 6:30 am to 6 pm. “I no longer needed to sneak out. I could focus on
football and school,” Baros said.
At Tudor Day Secondary, his passion deepened under the
guidance of Coach Rilla, known for producing top talent.
Playing for Tudor’s Milan Youth, he was soon spotted and
signed by Nuru Sportif in Changamwe.
By 18, he had joined Magongo Rangers in the Kenya Football
Federation Nationwide League.
While initially welcomed, a coaching change sidelined him,
citing his small stature and perceived lack of strength. Intense sessions
became too much and inconsistency led to him being dropped.
He bounced back with Coast Boys, where his talent shone
across Mombasa and the Coast region. But adversity struck again in 2016, when a
serious knee injury while at Westham FC sidelined him for seven months. “I lost
hope of ever playing again. Even after recovery, I feared returning to the
game. I stayed inactive for three years,” he recalls.
In 2019, Baros’s resilience sparked a new dream: creating a
team to represent Tudor. He founded the Tudor Youth Soccer Warriors, nurturing
children as young as under-15. He trained youth sides, recording video sessions
and sharing them on social media, slowly building a reputation.
Two missed calls in 2021 changed his trajectory. Returning
the call, he discovered it was none other than former Harambee Stars skipper
Musa Otieno, offering sponsorship for a 10-day coaching course in Nairobi.
Attending the CAF D coaching course expanded his knowledge and network.
Soon after, Kenya Navy FC invited him to coach their team,
newly promoted to FKF National Division 2. By season’s end, his side was
unbeaten and earned promotion to Division 1.
Subsequent stints with Congo Boys FC and Mombasa Hamlets FC
gave him further experience, but disagreements with management saw him
eventually focus on his academy.
Today, Tudor Youth Soccer Warriors stands as his proud
legacy, producing talented players now scattered across top Coast region teams
like Mombasa United FC, Congo United and Mombasa Stars.
In December 2024, his teams competed at the Magnet Dar es
Salaam International Tournament. The Under-11s emerged champions, the
Under-nines were runners-up, and the Under-13s reached the quarter-finals—a
testament to Baros’s dedication.
“Football has shaped my life and opened doors I never
imagined,” he said. He notes that Mombasa is brimming with talent, often wasted
due to lack of grassroots structures.
For him, football is a discipline: it rewards dedication,
focus and hard work. “I have seen good players fail for lack of discipline and
mediocre players succeed because they stayed committed. You must pick a side
and work relentlessly toward your goal,” Baros said.
From improvised games on Tudor beach to mentoring the next
generation of footballers, Baros’s story is one of passion, resilience and
giving back to the community that raised him.
Instant analysis
In Tudor, Mombasa, “Coach Baros” is a name everyone knows —
but few remember he’s Julius Mutisya. Once a mischievous schoolboy sneaking to
play barefoot football on the beach, Baros rose through local teams before
injury halted his career. Refusing to quit, he founded Tudor Youth Soccer
Warriors, mentoring children as young as nine. His academy has already produced
players for top Coast teams and earned international invites. From a nickname
born in school banter to a respected grassroots coach, Baros’ story shows how
football can change lives, instill discipline and give young people a future
beyond the streets.