Teenager is ready to rise to the Max

The Straits Times honours outstanding Singaporeans who have been nominated for the 2021 ST Athlete of the Year award. They defied the odds, injuries and the pandemic to chase their sporting dreams, setting new standards of excellence for others to follow. Kitefoiler Maximilian Maeder is our fourth nominee.

Singaporean kitefoiler Maximilian Maeder, 15, believes he can achieve more after a breakthrough 2021, when he won two youth world championships. His next major goal is to qualify for the Paris 2024 Olympics.
Singaporean kitefoiler Maximilian Maeder, 15, believes he can achieve more after a breakthrough 2021, when he won two youth world championships. His next major goal is to qualify for the Paris 2024 Olympics.

For someone who spends most of his time outside Singapore, Maximilian Maeder is very clear about how he likes his curry puffs. His favourite snack has to be bigger than average, over-stuffed with a spicy filling of curry and soft potatoes and preferably homemade.

Constant travelling as an athlete means the kitefoiler does not eat them as often as he would like, so he found a workable solution. He learnt to make the snack from his mother Hwee Keng in 2020, but admitted his are not perfect.

"Simple to learn, difficult to master," remarked the 15-year-old, who can eat 10 to 12 curry puffs over two days.

It is this same determination that allowed him to have a breakthrough season last year, when he won two youth world championships in July and December, and the Formula Kite European Championships in September.

Max, who is homeschooled, also became the world No. 1 in his event for the first time last September, ahead of 149 competitors from over 20 nations.

All these serve as motivation for him as he continues his upward trajectory. His latest title was at the Formula Kite Asia Pacific Championships last month.

For his accomplishments, the Singaporean has been nominated for The Straits Times Athlete of the Year, an award backed by 100Plus.

At 15, he is one of the youngest nominees since the award was first introduced in 2009.

Max, who lives in St Gallen in Switzerland with his Swiss father, Singaporean mother and two younger brothers, said: "It's an honour to be nominated alongside other Singapore athletes who are doing so well. It goes to show that you shouldn't let anything hold you back and take things as positively as you can."

In kitefoiling, an athlete rides on a board and controls a kite as he or she is propelled across the water. A hydrofoil extends below the board, enabling the athlete to surf above the surface of the water.

After picking up the sport aged 10, he went on his first overseas race alone three years later in Mexico, flying from Switzerland with stops in San Francisco and Mexico City. He now trains mainly in Croatia and competes worldwide.

While most might marvel at a teenager fending for himself abroad, Max does not think it is anything exceptional.

He said: "It's the norm for me... I grew up with my parents teaching me to think for myself and do things on my own so it was just business as usual for me.

"I want people to know that you don't need to wait till a certain age to be successful. I'm not the only one in my teens up on the world stage. This shows that the sport is constantly evolving."

Hwee Keng, who is on the board of Wakatobi Dive Resort in Indonesia, said: "He wanted to do all these things, that's why he had to be independent from a young age. I'm not going to spoon-feed him because I don't have these ambitions for him, he has them for himself so he has to work for it...

"What's more important is trying to help him find his own way, rather than tell him what to do."

His father Valentin, 58, an entrepreneur, added: "What we point out to him is that as he gets a bigger platform, he can add significance to what he's doing by inspiring people and making contributions by giving back."

The world No. 3 is preparing for his goal of qualifying for the Paris 2024 Olympics, where the event will make its debut. And his stellar year has given him confidence that he can achieve more.

He said: "(2021) is a statement telling myself that I have the capability to do it. It also opens up the Asian scene a bit to say Asia is here too and Singapore is leading it.

"Hopefully, we can help bring more people into the sport and inspire young ones."

GIVING IT HIS ALL

It's the norm for me... I grew up with my parents teaching me to think for myself and do things on my own so it was just business as usual for me.

''

MAXIMILIAN MAEDER, Singaporean kitefoiler, on pursuing his dreams.

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A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on April 02, 2022, with the headline Teenager is ready to rise to the Max. Subscribe