“Finland was the place to start because I wanted to have a big career in Europe,” said the soft-spoken Baah over the phone from his home in Morristown, New Jersey, recalling his opening goal in HJK’s famous 2-1 win over Italian Serie A side Torino.
“It was an amazing time and things were really happening. I mean the Europa League group stage is a high level. Aside from the cold,” the Ghanaian joked, “everything was great [in Finland]!”
Those two outstanding seasons in Scandinavia earned Baah a first cap for Ghana’s senior Black Stars, a 1-1 friendly draw against Canada in October of 2015 in Washington DC.
Ghana Debut a Dream Come True
“Every player, every kid, wants to represent his country. It’s just that pride you feel,” said Baah, who came on as a sub in the 87th minute. “I wasn’t surprised I was called up because I was in the shape of my life.”
His international debut was a long way from his roots as “just another kid on the streets of Accra, where people worship the game.”
But not all rockets clear the launchpad. It’s often the cruel reality of football. And life. Baah, one of the game’s top defensive prospects of the time, couldn’t have known that his international career wouldn’t extend past the five minutes he spent on the pitch at RFK Stadium that day.
He also had no way to know that it would be the likes of Шахтер" футбол клубы (FC Shakhter Karagandy of Kazakhstan) and its Shakhtyor Stadiony, not Real Madrid and its Bernabeu in his future.
“I had so many career-threatening injuries,” said Baah, who was handpicked by now-Leeds United manager Jesse Marsch to replace Chelsea-bound U.S. international Matt Miazga in his New York Red Bulls team ahead of the 2016 season.
MLS Next Step Proves a Tumble
It was a move which looked, on paper, so promising for club and player. But it turned into a mutual disaster. Baah tore his hamstring three weeks into the season. He rehabbed and returned, only to break his leg (for the second time in his career) against the Portland Timbers. That ended his 2016 season.
The recovery process proved trickier than expected and Baah missed the whole of the Red Bulls 2017 season – and their run to the Final of that year’s U.S. Open Cup. He managed only a handful of games near the end of the season with the club’s second team (Red Bulls II).
That’s where Baah’s time in Major League Soccer ended and his career prospects, once so bright, dimmed.