Something very interesting about how Thelo Aasgaard learned he was going to the World Cup stands out. He wasn’t in the canteen at practice with all of his teammates. He wasn’t in the middle of a session on a perfectly groomed field. He was watching something on TV that afternoon with his siblings Ismael and Olga, his mother Georgina, and his siblings at home in Mossley Hill, Liverpool. That’s when the King of Norway made the announcement. So that’s how it went. And if that doesn’t show how strange and amazing professional football is, I don’t know what will.
It’s not like most football families that Thelo Aasgaard’s parents are. Johnathan, his father, is a famous cellist all over the world. Georgina, his French-born mother, works as a music and health practitioner. They both come from the art and sound worlds, not from stadiums and play-offs. That’s kind of ironic, or maybe it’s just the way life works. If your house is always loud, your kid might want to play football more than anything else. As a parent, the best thing you can do is let that happen.
Johnathan Aasgaard has been honest about when he got the call-up. He said, “I just gave him a big hug.” “I told him, I’m made up for you.” Nothing like pride or excitement, but relief, that’s what he called the feeling. This is the word a parent uses when they’ve seen their child go through years of setbacks and hoped, but never said out loud, that all the hard work would pay off in the end.
It did cost a lot to work so hard. Thelo was kicked out of Liverpool’s youth program when he was only 14. This is the kind of blow that ends the careers of many young football players before they even get started. Johnathan remembered asking his son straight out if this was still what he wanted. The answer came right away: “Yes, dad, 100%.” He moved to Wigan Athletic’s academy and then was hurt for about 18 months during his scholarship years. His father says that he never played during that time. That’s a very long time to believe in yourself.

There’s a chance that the hard years shaped him in ways that easy success could never have. There’s a pattern with players like Thelo: they didn’t come from top schools that make everything smooth, but from setbacks that made them rethink things. After making a name for himself with Wigan’s first team, he moved to Luton Town and then, for a reported £3.5 million, signed with Rangers in the summer of 2025. That didn’t all happen in a straight line.
Johnathan and Georgina have been through it all. Johnathan said that having a professional football player as a child “feels a bit volatile and a bit surreal at times.” That phrase stuck with me. The word “volatile” is interesting because it doesn’t sound dramatic or hard. Not predictable. Plans can change. A season falls apart. An injury shows up. A manager moves on. As their fans would say, the Rangers had a tough season. They came in just short of winning the league title. Things like this do happen. And families quietly take them in.
When Johnathan was finally called up for the World Cup, his thoughts quickly switched from how he felt to what he needed to do. He’s committed to concerts and other obligations as a professional cellist, but all of a sudden he has to change his plans for the summer to go to the U.S. and see his son play with Erling Haaland and Martin Ødegaard. The family has a strong bond with Norway. In Johnathan’s street, just north of Oslo, his father, Thelo’s grandfather, has apparently become something of a local celebrity. People are congratulating him in a way that only happens in countries that are crazy about football. They hadn’t been to the World Cup since 1998. For a country that has been waiting so long, it’s hard to say enough about how important this tournament is.
It’s true that Thelo left his mark on the biggest stage. Against France in the group stage on June 26 in Boston, he scored in the 20th minute. Still, there was something special about that moment: a kid from Mossley Hill, the son of a cellist and a music teacher, scored at the World Cup. It’s not really a fairy tale. That’s not how it is. More real. Which makes things better in some way.
