LOS ANGELES ā Aside from a hiccup in Carson last week against the Galaxy, LAFCās midfield has been nothing short of phenomenal this season.
Theyāve been called the most dominant force in MLS. There have been suggestions that their regular center-of-the-park trio of Eduard Atuesta, Mark-Anthony Kaye and Latif Blessing could be the MLS All-Star Game midfield. All that before considering former MVP-candidate Lee Nguyen is ready to fly in off the bench at a momentās notice.
While all four have contributed significantly to LAFCās stellar 2019 form, Blessing has actually titled the odds in LAFCās favor every time he features, according to teammate Steven Beitashour.
The Ghanaianās transition from winger to midfielder, which first occurred in a 2-2 draw against New York City FC at Yankee Stadium March 17, has been the turning point.
āI was shocked and impressed,ā Beitashour said of that performance. āYou donāt think someone thatās on the outside or up front his whole career, to go into the midfield and just seamlessly transition, itās difficult. Itās not like youāre playing against amateurs and you can get away with stuff. Youāre playing against some of the best professionals in the world. In the middle of the park, itās got some talent in there and he looks completely fine.ā
LAFC coach Bob Bradley was more measured regarding Blessingās transition.
āWe try to develop players to be all-around players, to understand the game, to understand the responsibilities of the players around them in the game, and in doing so, weāve felt that Latifās qualities came through, in a good way in the midfield,ā Bradley said. āHeās quick, [he has] energy. I think technically heās really improved. You could see on the days when we did that how heās so alert to pick up loose balls, so quick to pressure opponents and those things were making a big impact in training so we continued to build on that.ā
How has that initial kernel of impact during training manifested itself on the field? Try leading the league in duels won and hovering in top-ten for most other defensive metrics that matter for midfielders.
āEvery player has his year,ā Blessing told MLSsoccer.com this week. āLast year I played good, but itās not that good. But this year, I say to myself, āIām going to prove more.ā When I go home, I train more so I have more energy. So when I came in [for preseason], Iām ready to go.ā
Blessingās drive to succeed hasnāt gone unnoticed at LAFC, which has documented his journey from rural Ghana to MLS and picked up his contract option for 2020, but LAFCās game-changer is quick to redirect where to put the plaudits.
āFirst of all, I just thank Bob [Bradley] for believing in me,ā said Blessing. āItās not any coach who is going to believe in you to put you in that position. Bob likes me. He likes the way I was laughing. He likes the way Iām disciplined so I thank Bob. Itās not me, I thank Bob. Bob makes me a great player.ā
When asked whether other teammates helped guide him into his new role, Blessing was also generous with the gratitude, noting the partnerships heās formed with his fellow midfielders and singling out Beitashour for being vocal.

Blessing and Kaye have been two parts of a dominant trio in 2019 | USA Today Sports Images
And thereās Carlos Vela, who Blessing calls the best player heās ever played with ā though not only for the reasons one might think.
āWhen I lose the ball this guy never talks [negatively] he just says, āletās go, lets go,āā Blessing said of Velaās encouraging style of leadership. āThatās why I love Carlos because, he just motivates me, and says ālets keep going.ā That makes my tempo calm down and then start like, āIām going to correct myself.āā
Improving every day has become part of the āLAFC Wayā Bradley and his staff have worked to implement over their season and half, but how drastically Blessingās midfield contributions have helped is hard to understate.
Blessingās constant hustling in the middle of the park ā winning balls back quickly, preventing counterattacks, creating turnovers in dangerous positions, pressuring and frustrating opponents ā is what gives them that extra 10 percent advantage this season, according to Beitashour.
āLast year that was our biggest deficiency," said Beitashour. āWe didnāt have that. If you look at last year, there were so many times we were doing 60-70 yard sprints all the way back and obviously we want to be a high pressure team so then youāre getting up, then youāre chasing and then the ball bounces out. This year weāre winning those 50-50s.ā