Johan Kappelhof hopes to turn Chicago Fire run into Ghana national cap

Johan Kappelhof at NYCFC, April 10, 2016

NEW YORK -- Johan Kappelhofā€™s career started where many soccer players would kill to start theirs: at the fabled Ajax Academy, the cradle of Dutch excellence thatā€™s produced dozens of international stars. A virtual machine for producing creative, technically skilled attack-minded players, it prepped the 25-year-old defender for a crucial pro turn, with Dutch Eredevisie side FC Groningen.


But after five seasons at the clubā€”and five caps with the Dutch Under-21s--rangy, soft-spoken Kappelhof saw his career at a pause. And when he decided the best next move to continue to develop as a player, it may have raised some eyebrowsā€”he chose to join the newly revamped Chicago Fire.


ā€œAfter five years I developed, and I was ready to leave,ā€ he says. ā€œI planned it for the summer, but now, in the winter, the Chicago Fire came, so I had to make a decision.ā€


Since the Amsterdam native joined MLS this past February as a Discovery Signing for the team, Kappelhof has been a constant for the Fire, not missing a minute so far in 2016.


But Kappelhof aims to to fill that in with turning him into a key element of Veljko Paunovicā€™s new defensive strategy. In fact, though he says he was weighing offers from around Europe, it was Paunovicā€™s vision and convincing that finally swayed him to come stateside.


ā€œWe had a Skype conversation, and before that, I was not convinced,ā€ he says of a winter talk with both Paunovic and fire general manager Nelson Rodriguez. ā€œThey told me about the league, the team, and their planā€”they were talking about a family and they want to make players better and everything. They had a great plan. So after the conversation I was like, ā€˜Yeah, Iā€™m more convinced.ā€™ā€


At 5-foot-11 and 165 pounds, heā€™s reedy compared to some of the physically-dominant MLS strikers against whom he must defend. Still, Kappelhof stood out at Groningen for his skill in staying relaxed and winning duels. He also brings crucial, high-level experience to the squad. Not only did he figure on the KNVB Cup-winning team in 2015, but he also appeared in eight of the teamā€™s UEFA Europa League games last year.


ā€œIf the opponent puts high pressure, Iā€™m always easy on the ball. I never stress,ā€ he says of the experience he gleaned at both Groningen and the Ajax academy before that. ā€œIā€™m a difficult defender. I think I have the speed and I can jump to win duels.ā€


Kappelhof joins a new backline bolstered by other fresh additions, like Brandon Vincent, Rodrigo Ramos, and Joao Meira. (In the midfield, too, Kappelhof can find a fellow Ajax product, John Goossens.)


Together, he hopes they can learn to better ward off what he describes as ā€œa lot of big strikersā€ in MLS, citing Columbus Crew SCā€™s Kei Kamara as a particularly daunting example. ā€œI want to get better, and [the Fire] are taking care of that,ā€ he says. ā€œIā€™m pretty good on the ball, but [I want to] just win every duel from a big striker, and win headers and everything.ā€


Thereā€™s also one more crucial strategy point of Kappelhofā€™s move to the Fire: a possible change in national team allegiances. Though he grew up in Amsterdam with a Dutch father and figured on the countryā€™s U-21s, heā€™s never been called up for the senior side. Now, heā€™s hoping to represent Ghana, his motherā€™s home country, at the international level.


ā€œIā€™m 25 now, so I cannot play for the youth teams--I have to play for the first team in Holland and itā€™s not like Iā€™m in the picture for that,ā€ he says. ā€œBut I think Iā€™m close to playing for Ghana. And Iā€™m proud to play for Ghana because my mother is from there, so I hope itā€™s gonna be sooner or later.ā€


But before all that, thereā€™s the matter of making good at his new club. Itā€™ll prove a challenge for Kappelhof as he looks to distinguish himself, now that the new-kid jitters should be over and the season rolls on. And again, heā€™ll draw on those earliest experiences at Ajax.


ā€œItā€™s like the package, what the Ajax academy gives you. If you look at the Ajax academy, every player is good on the ball, they have good technique,ā€ he says. ā€œI think I can make a difference in building up from the back.ā€