In 2014, then-Helsingborgs forward David Accam lit up the Swedish Svenska Cupen, the countryâs domestic cup competition played since 1941. The diminutive Ghanaian bagged six goals in six matches during the teamâs run to the tournament final, an eventual 1-0 defeat to Elfsborg.
Fast-forward to August 2016. Accam has five goals in five total appearances in the Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup as a member of the Chicago Fire and is on the brink of appearing in another domestic cup final.
âCup games, itâs likeâŠyouâre always close to winning a trophy,â he said. âItâs four or five games to get to a final. I want to win trophies, so youâre really motivated to win a trophy. Itâs all about the cup. You want to do well and try to win something.â
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Standing in his way are the New England Revolution, whom heâll look to sprint past when the whistle blows to kick off Tuesday nightâs semifinal in Foxborough (7 p.m. CT, Watch ESPN, ESPN2). The Fire have played the Revolution twice already in 2016, both played at Gillette Stadium and both of which resulted in Fire losses. This weekâs third time â heâs hoping â will be a charm.
âIâm really excited because we lost both already, and - for us - I donât think we want to lose three times this season," he said. "Everyone is motivated and excited to have a go.â
Accam isnât the only current member of the Men In Red to make a deep run in a foreign domestic cup competition before heading to Chicago. Most notably, forward Michael de Leeuw and Johan Kappelhof captured Hollandâs KNVB Cup in 2015 with their former side FC Groningen. Kappelhof started six games in the teamâs tournament run, while de Leeuw scored seven times in just four appearances.
âWe have a lot of experienced players in the team,â Accam said. âMost of them have played in different competitions. Everyone brings their own experience to a team. Before the first game everyone spoke about the experience they had in cup competitions and how good and valuable it is for a player to win a trophy. We keep sharing experiences about our cup games so everyone is motivated to go all out.â
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Drawing from that collective experience has been a factor in the teamâs run to the 2016 Open Cup semis. Assistant coach Logan Pause â who appeared in 337 games for the Fire from 2003-14 â led a discussion among the team about playersâ successes and failures in cup tournaments both within the United States and overseas. Pause himself was a U.S. Open Cup winner in 2003 and 2006 with the Fire and a runner-up in 2004 and 2011.
âLogan started with it because heâs played here for a long time and won it twice, so he talked about him winning the cup for the Chicago Fire and how it felt as a player,â Accam said. âThen you have the guys from Holland, everyone started talking about their experience how, especially in Europe when you win the cup you go straight to Europa League, so thatâs huge. Here itâs different. When you win you go to the Champions League, so itâs a lot of motivation behind winning a trophy.â
One of the Fireâs most experienced players in domestic cup competitions both at home and abroad is midfielder Arturo Alvarez. Alvarezâs FC Dallas made the U.S. Open Cup final in both 2005 and 2007, and his Hungarian side Videoton made runs to the League Cup final in both 2013 and 2014.
âSome guys here have experienced cup games overseas and also here,â Alvarez said. âI myself have been to two Open Cup finals that didnât go my way, so Iâm looking forward to the third one and maybe that will change things. Weâre excited about the opportunity to play New England. Itâs a good side, but I think we have what it takes to make sure we win that game.â
Read: Chicago Fire looking forward to "most important game of the season" after loss
Alvarez scored three goals in nine appearances during Videotonâs 2014 League Cup run. When asked how his experience both domestically and overseas in cup tournaments translates to his current teamâs run in the U.S. Open Cup, he notes that a willingness to learn and share experiences sticks out as a difference.
âEver since I got here, I saw it was a young group,â he said. âItâs been great. The young guys listen to you - they want to learn - which is something good. Iâve been in teams where maybe sometimes they feel like they donât need that much advice from other players, but here itâs been different. I think itâs been great. Itâs a good group of guys. These guys want to learn. They want to get better, so Iâm trying to help them as much as I can. I went through it. I learned from older players myself, so Iâm just trying to pass that down.â
Whether itâs Accam, Kappelhof, de Leeuw, Alvarez or any other of head coach Veljko Paunovicâs men, drawing from prior experience and applying it to Tuesday nightâs 90 minutes in Foxborough will ultimately play a factor in their current team advancing to the final.
âIâm telling you, itâs a great experience. Itâs a good way for the team to get used to winning ways, to winning cups. Itâs always a good feeling, so Iâm looking forward to doing that here with the Chicago Fire.â