Orlando Sentinel

Cristian Higuita has earned a lineup spot with Orlando City after preparing to play a new position.

- ardelgallo@ orlandosen­tinel.com

When Orlando City hired Jason Kreis as its new head coach midway through last season, Cristian Higuita saw a potential problem.

“I actually went over tapes of his past teams and I noticed that he liked to play with the diamond,” Higuita said through a translator. “So I knew he was going to ask for that eventually.”

The problem? That formation, a 4-4-2 with a diamond-shaped midfield, allows for one true defensive midfielder. Higuita played as a defensive or box-to-box central midfielder for Orlando City in a 4-2-3-1 formation the last two seasons, paired with

Darwin Cerén, now with San Jose, or Servando Carrasco or Antonio Nocerino.

If Kreis changed to that formation, he could lose his spot in the lineup. So he decided to be proactive.

“I know we have players like Servando and Nocerino who play more as a No. 6, a little more defensive, and I knew I was capable of going forward and also defending,” Higuita said. “So I knew it was a possibilit­y for me and I was preparing myself to be able to take that role.”

That required increased fitness from the 23-year-old Colombian, different movement and positionin­g and more involvemen­t in the attack.

Higuita was one of many Orlando City players to suffer a setback during preseason, straining his adductor during training on Valentine’s Day. His recovery timeline was at least a month, but Higuita came on in the final minutes of Orlando City’s season opener against New York City FC on March 5. He then subbed on for 19 minutes in the next match and 28 minutes in the third game in Columbus, replacing Carrasco in both matches.

Then the Lions were playing in a traditiona­l 4-4-2, with essentiall­y two central midfielder­s, one holding and another who played box-to-box.

Higuita’s first start of 2017 came when the team hosted the New York Red Bulls April 9, the day Orlando City also debuted the diamond. The performanc­e was far from perfect, but Orlando City pulled out a 1-0 victory and Higuita cemented his place on the left side of the midfield.

“Cristian is a player that needs to be on the ball,” Kreis explained when asked what Higuita provided that allowed the team to switch to that formation once he was fully healthy. “He’s the type of midfielder who is desperate to have the ball in his team and so he gives you that real work rate to try to win it back. And then when we’re on it, he’s a player who wants to combine with players around him.

“So he’s a player that I think this system is geared for and really kind of forced himself in the lineup through his performanc­es in the training sessions in the weeks leading up to his first start this year.”

He’s started every game since, and has continued to prove himself as a gritty, tough defender — he wanted to continue playing after dislocatin­g his shoulder in New York City last month — while creating goal-scoring opportunit­ies as well.

Last week, in arguably the team’s best performanc­e to date, Higuita’s contributi­on became tangible when he passed the ball through two defenders to Carlos Rivas, who netted what Rapids coach

Pablo Mastroeni called a “world-class goal” to spark a 2-0 Lions victory.

There still are improvemen­ts to be made all around, but Higuita said he’s happy his foresight paid off and he feels comfortabl­e in his new role despite the tactical difference­s needed to succeed.

“Most of all it’s the movement,” Higuita said. “I need to go more to the sides, so that’s the main difference and I need to be 100 percent physically to be able to last 90 minutes.

“Obviously, I like playing better as a No. 8, but I’m happy that I’m playing that new position and I’m performing well.”

 ?? JOHN RAOUX/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Orlando City’s Cristian Higuita, left, trained to make sure he would be a good fit in coach Jason Kreis’ new system. Higuita’s offseason work helped him earn time on the field.
JOHN RAOUX/ASSOCIATED PRESS Orlando City’s Cristian Higuita, left, trained to make sure he would be a good fit in coach Jason Kreis’ new system. Higuita’s offseason work helped him earn time on the field.
 ??  ?? Alicia DelGallo Sentinel Soccer Writer
Alicia DelGallo Sentinel Soccer Writer

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