Daily Breeze (Torrance)

Blessing, an LAFC original, back to take on his old team

- By Josh Gross Correspond­ent

If everything goes as planned a few days from now, Latif Blessing will have what he wants most in the world.

In early January, the Los Angeles Football Club received $400,000 in general allocation money from the New England Revolution for Blessing, a 26-yearold sparkplug in the midfield who, along with Carlos Vela, was one of just two LAFC originals on last year's league championsh­ip roster.

Coming shortly after the MLS Cup in November, Blessing's trade request followed unsuccessf­ul attempts over five years to secure the arrival of his mother and wife to L.A. Otherwise, the green-card holder was limited to visiting them once a year in Ghana.

“I don't want to do that. I need my family with me,” Blessing said prior to returning to a city said he loves for a match tonight at 7:30 against his old friends at BMO Stadium.

Despite LAFC's sincere efforts and on-field success, frustratio­n mounted as the immigratio­n process failed to deliver like Blessing hoped while other internatio­nal players arrived with their families in tow.

“I want to play and see my wife in the stadium cheering for me,” he said. “That's why I said to (LAFC) I want to move to somewhere I can be with them.”

Blessing expects the move to pay off. His family, including a 6-monthold daughter, could reunite in the Boston area as early as next week.

“I'm so happy,” he said.

“It's happening.”

When it does, Blessing will show off the LAFC championsh­ip ring he is handed in the pregame ceremony today.

“Not just any soccer player achieved this, so when I achieved this I have to be happy with myself,” Blessing said. “I'm excited to receive this ring and show it to my wife and my mom. They're going to be as excited to see it as I am to receive the ring.”

Blessing appeared in 30 league games throughout the Supporters' ShieldMLS Cup double last year, but none in the playoff run. Sitting on the bench upset him and also contribute­d to his desire to leave after conversati­ons with head coach Steve Cherundolo didn't change anything for the club leader in games (145) and minutes (9,749) played. Blessing wondered if he wasn't good enough. Cherundolo told him he was, but that quality players sit on the bench sometimes.

With the Revolution, Blessing can claim a pair of wins to feel good about to start the 2023 season, playing 85 minutes and contributi­ng an assist in their second straight shutout last weekend.

New England's Hall of Fame coach, Bruce Arena, “understand­s” Blessing, the player said, and his buzzing energy and winning mentality will be counted upon to make New England better.

Meanwhile, Blessing's removal from the LAFC midfield has been offset by newcomer Timothy Tillman, whom Cherundolo praised for his performanc­e off the bench during their 3-0 CONCACAF Champions League win in Costa Rica on Thursday.

“I think the whole club wants to get another ring, so we're working hard,” said Tillman, who along with defender Sergi Palenica and attacker Stipe Biuk could earn more minutes against New England as LAFC (1-0-0, 3 points) plays its third of five matches over 14 days.

“We have guys that can start games for sure,” Cherundolo said. “Can help us out and our level does not drop one bit.”

 ?? PHOTO BY RAUL ROMERO JR. ?? Former Los Angeles FC forward Latif Blessing, right, is now with the New England Revolution and tonight will help his new team take on his old one at BMO Stadium.
PHOTO BY RAUL ROMERO JR. Former Los Angeles FC forward Latif Blessing, right, is now with the New England Revolution and tonight will help his new team take on his old one at BMO Stadium.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States