First Team

What Ever Happened To: John O'Brien

John O'Brien with Ajax (away kit)

Legendary Dutch Eredivisie side AFC Ajax is in DC this weekend to take on the Black-and-Red (5:00 p.m. ET, Sunday - Tickets). D.C. United has enlisted former Ajax and U.S. National Team standout John O’Brien to help with a D.C. United/AFC Ajax soccer clinic on Friday and to contribute content to dcunited.com.


Former U.S. National Team Coach and current LA Galaxy boss Bruce Arena once called O'Brien, "as talented a midfielder as U.S. soccer has ever had - a terrific passer of the ball, read the game well and scored goals as well, even though it wasn’t his forte."


In February, Greg Seltzer of MLSsoccer.com filed the following report about the player many fans knew as "Johnny O." O'Brien's article on his time with the Ajax youth system will appear on Friday, May 20 on dcunited.com


What Ever Happened To: John O'Brien


You can take John O'Brien out of Amsterdam, but you can't take the Amsterdam out of John O'Brien. When MLSsoccer.com caught up with the former US star, now age 33, he was studying philosophy in an LA café.

"I'm a full-time student," O'Brien said. "I should be done with my bachelor's [degree] this summer."


Chasing his college sheepskin was not the immediate plan for after his playing days; O'Brien gradually waded his way into academia and is now a full-time psychology major at Antioch University.


"When I stopped playing in 2007, I started taking some classes at UCLA and other schools," recalled O'Brien. "I traveled a bit, did some soccer coaching things. I decided about two-and-half years ago to go to school full-time."


With his general aim to get into sports psychology, he brushes aside an old Amsterdam interview in which he stated a desire to one day manage Ajax with the hearty laugh of a prankster.


"I said that kinda as a joke," chuckled O'Brien. "But it's great that people took it seriously. At this point, I'm not interested in being a serious coach, but I may get my coaching license – I'm not sure yet."


That's not to say he's completely departed the soccer world. O'Brien still finds time to contribute with a pair of global footie endeavors. The first is Soccer Without Borders, an organization that offers marginalized youth in six countries both soccer and social-development training.


"They have different soccer and life skills programs in more of poor areas," said O'Brien, a volunteer ambassador. "Some areas don't have the facilities that others do. I do some coaching things with them."


O'Brien has also become involved in Ajax Online Academy, which he describes as an online resource for coaches and players to be schooled in the ways of the legendary Dutch club.


Back to De Toekomst

Still the most recent American to suit up for Ajax, O'Brien has little troubling detailing the advantages of a soccer education at the famed De Toekomst academy with appreciation.


"I went when I was 16," he recounted. "It's just an institution, man. There's knowledge in institutions. They have really good coaches, a good idea of how they want people to play and how to get players to progress. They do a lot of great technical work and they're very rigid in their 4-3-3 system. It's all about learning all the different roles. It makes it easy when you switch from team to team."

"The next step was always ahead of you and you could see where you wanted to go," he added. "You could finish training and go see the first team train. That's something that was definitely missing a bit in American soccer when I was growing up, but now it's a bit more clear with MLS development."


When it comes to the injury troubles that curtailed his career, the student displays that his philosophy classes are taking hold.


"A lot of people have things get in the way when they chase their dreams," said O'Brien. "How you deal with that is something that's been written about in books for ages. But yeah, I've had my share of frustrations."


While many of his injuries were simply bad luck – a piece of turf coming up against PSV or an opponent stepping on his heel at Willem II – it was the recoveries that always proved most vexing.


"My brother and I have the same issues: We're a little off balance," explained O'Brien. "I have a little bit of scoliosis, a little bit of rotation of my spine and my left hip just kind of functions differently than my right hip."


"Some of my physical difficulties felt like something I was battling against, but a lot of people manage to play with different physical discrepancies. But there is an ideal. The more balance you're in, the better you can handle the load of being a professional athlete."


Among his few regrets is the fact that he never got a proper chance to make an impact showing his stuff as a wily vet in MLS.


"Having grown up with US Soccer and abroad, I would have loved to have been able to participate in American soccer at that level," he explained. "And also as a player, experiencing the transition to being one of the older players and how your role changes with that. Those are two things I definitely missed out on."


Read Greg Seltzer's original article on MLSsoccer.com