Keller added on his own experiences and how Turner should have sought inspiration from those that went before him: “I had good people around me when I was starting out. I had just turned, by a couple of days, 22 when I came over to Millwall. It was go to a place where you have an opportunity to potentially play. I had 202 matches for Millwall, league and cup, and I couldn’t have asked for a better foundation to start my career – being able to beat Premier League teams in cup competitions and say ‘I can play against these guys and keep clean sheets at Highbury, at Goodison and Stamford Bridge’. So when the time came, you had not only the volume of the Championship, of playing 46 league games, having to prepare yourself physically knowing you would play six or seven matches a month, and being prepared mentally for the grind and having the opportunities against big boys in cup competitions and show that you can do that as well.
“Sometimes we get ahead of ourselves a little bit. You think ‘I can do that’ and then you need someone to say ‘wait a minute, let’s walk a little bit before we start running and trying to take some good steps up’. I think it was tough. Matt is a little bit older, which might be the issue, but I would have loved to have seen a situation like Brad did and said ‘okay, I’m going to take step down, get on a good team that has a chance of getting promoted and then take the experience I had before, the experience of going down and coming back up, and then restart my career’.”