The difference from last year to this year for LAFC? It's Latif Blessing

Latif Blessing - LAFC - Celebrate

LOS ANGELES ā€” Aside from a hiccup in Carson last week against the Galaxy, LAFCā€™s midfield has been nothing short of phenomenal this season.


Theyā€™ve 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 momentā€™s notice.


While all four have contributed significantly to LAFCā€™s stellar 2019 form, Blessing has actually titled the odds in LAFCā€™s favor every time he features, according to teammate Steven Beitashour.


The Ghanaianā€™s 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.


ā€œI was shocked and impressed,ā€ Beitashour said of that performance. ā€œYou donā€™t think someone thatā€™s on the outside or up front his whole career, to go into the midfield and just seamlessly transition, itā€™s difficult. Itā€™s not like youā€™re playing against amateurs and you can get away with stuff. Youā€™re playing against some of the best professionals in the world. In the middle of the park, itā€™s got some talent in there and he looks completely fine.ā€

LAFC coach Bob Bradley was more measured regarding Blessingā€™s transition.


ā€œWe 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, weā€™ve felt that Latifā€™s qualities came through, in a good way in the midfield,ā€ Bradley said. ā€œHeā€™s quick, [he has] energy. I think technically heā€™s really improved. You could see on the days when we did that how heā€™s 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.


ā€œEvery player has his year,ā€ Blessing told MLSsoccer.com this week. ā€œLast year I played good, but itā€™s not that good. But this year, I say to myself, ā€˜Iā€™m going to prove more.ā€™ When I go home, I train more so I have more energy. So when I came in [for preseason], Iā€™m ready to go.ā€


Blessingā€™s drive to succeed hasnā€™t gone unnoticed at LAFC, which has documented his journey from rural Ghana to MLS and picked up his contract option for 2020, but LAFCā€™s game-changer is quick to redirect where to put the plaudits.


ā€œFirst of all, I just thank Bob [Bradley] for believing in me,ā€ said Blessing. ā€œItā€™s 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 Iā€™m disciplined so I thank Bob. Itā€™s 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 heā€™s formed with his fellow midfielders and singling out Beitashour for being vocal.

The difference from last year to this year for LAFC? It's Latif Blessing - https://league-mp7static.mlsdigital.net/images/Blessing%20Kaye.jpg?um9ME9EouDZ28Mam27dte5cnYsEJXu6B

Blessing and Kaye have been two parts of a dominant trio in 2019 | USA Today Sports Images


And thereā€™s Carlos Vela, who Blessing calls the best player heā€™s ever played with ā€” though not only for the reasons one might think.


ā€œWhen I lose the ball this guy never talks [negatively] he just says, ā€˜letā€™s go, lets go,ā€™ā€ Blessing said of Velaā€™s encouraging style of leadership. ā€œThatā€™s why I love Carlos because, he just motivates me, and says ā€˜lets keep going.ā€™ That makes my tempo calm down and then start like, ā€˜Iā€™m going to correct myself.ā€™ā€


Improving every day has become part of the ā€œLAFC Wayā€ Bradley and his staff have worked to implement over their season and half, but how drastically Blessingā€™s midfield contributions have helped is hard to understate.


Blessingā€™s 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.


ā€œLast year that was our biggest deficiency," said Beitashour. ā€œWe didnā€™t 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 youā€™re getting up, then youā€™re chasing and then the ball bounces out. This year weā€™re winning those 50-50s.ā€