Some people have to go searching for a career path that clicks—one that challenges and excites them enough to get up every day and go to work, even when it’s hard. That wasn’t exactly the case for Algen Hamilton. Styling some of the best young players in football found him.

Hamilton grew up in London playing all kinds of sports, from hockey to diving and even horseback riding, but football always came first. In primary school, he met Reiss Nelson, now a winger in the Premier League playing for Brentford. Around the same time, he became friends with Joe Willock, now a midfielder for Newcastle United. They all connected over football, not knowing that fashion would become an equally bond-strengthening agent. “I grew up with them, so I was doing their looks,” the stylist tells me over Zoom a few short weeks before the World Cup. When his own sports career came to its natural end, Hamilton leaned into styling his two friends. “This was during a time in football when the space hadn’t evolved yet into fashion,” he says. “Everything that players were doing was predominantly sports-related, and everything they posted was about football. They weren’t showing their personalities or anything off the pitch.” Willock and Nelson felt like changing that and started posting their outfits on Instagram, wanting to show fans who they were away from the beautiful game. “They were very authentic about it,” Hamilton says. Their genuine interest—combined with Hamilton’s understanding of football and fashion’s overall rising interest in sports—acted as catalysts, kick-starting a shift toward the football landscape welcoming self-expression off the pitch, not warning against it.

According to Hamilton, football is a bubble, especially in London, so it didn’t take long for other players on Arsenal—the club Willock and Reiss played for at the time—to take notice and start asking questions about the stylist behind their looks. “Once you work with one person, people will be like, ‘I really love your outfit,’ and they’d introduce me to them,” he explains. It’s all word-of-mouth in the league, which is how his work changed from just helping a few friends develop their wardrobes to collaborating with various players. Soon, he started working on editorials and partnering with brands and clubs, like Arsenal, on commercial campaigns. “It just grew year over year like that,” says Hamilton. A career combining the two things he’d always been most passionate about naturally took shape.

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A slide with the title, "Meet Algen," featuring photos of Algen Hamilton from fashion parties, runway shows, vacations, and jobs.

(Image credit: Lia Toby/BFC/Getty Images; @suavo_brazy; Shane Anthony Sinclair/BFC/Getty Images; Jed Cullen/Dave Benett/Getty Images for British GQ)

It wasn’t as easy as it sounds looking back. When Hamilton started working at the intersection of fashion and football, it wasn’t just that players weren’t posting their outfits on Instagram. The sport itself was very serious, Hamilton tells me. Fans wouldn’t always react well to players posting their outfits or attending non-football events. Some bosses advised their players against it. “I’d work with players, and we’d have shot something, and it was time to post it, but then the agent or club is saying, ‘Don’t do this,'” he says. “There was a lot of restraint.” It was up to the player, but they were surrounded by influential voices who counseled against it.