Paul Arriola wants to be DC United's man in the middle

Paul Arriola on the ball-RSL-DC-5.12.18

WASHINGTON ā€“ When a red card suspension forced Paul Arriola out of D.C. Unitedā€™s visit to the Philadelphia Union last month, the 23-year-old Designated Player embraced his task in training ā€“ impersonate Union captain Alejandro Bedoya with the second team in scrimmages against the starting XI.


Matchday came and United suffered a 3-2 loss in Chester. And yet when training resumed, D.C. United coach Ben Olsen slotted Arriola centrally again in preparations for another trip, this to Real Salt Lake.


Thatā€™s when Arriola tells MLSSoccer.com he spoke up.


ā€œIt was either Monday or Tuesday of last week leading up to the RSL game,ā€ said Arriola, who had played primarily as a right winger since signing for D.C.. ā€œI pulled [Olsen] aside afterward. And I said, ā€˜Hey look, I donā€™t know if the plan is to play me there or not, but I promise you if you play me there Iā€™ll be the best player on the field.ā€™ā€


Olsen listened, swapping Arriola and Ulises Segura in D.C.ā€™s 4-1-4-1. Arriola scored his first goal of the season to give D.C. an early lead.


And although United suffered another 3-2 defeat, that owed largely to right back Joseph Moraā€™s 25th-minute dismissal, D.C. finished trailing only 17-14 in shots and 8-7 in attempts on goal despite playing most of the game down a man.


ā€œEven with 10 men, we were out there for 65 minutes of the game, just grinding, and still pressuring,ā€ Arriola said. ā€œAnd I think it was a different D.C. United team than people have seen in the past seven games. One that wasnā€™t scared to go and risk it.ā€


Olsen also left Utah believing his US international midfielder had lived up to his word.


ā€œI thought Paul was the best player on the field,ā€ Olsen said. ā€œI thought he was active, connected a bunch of passes. He was scrappy, won a bunch of duels. He did a good job of making their backs feel uncomfortable.ā€


With Segura sidelined 6-8 weeks with a sprained knee, and Ian Harkes last seeing MLS action on March 24, it appears Olsen will stay with Arriola as a No. 8 for the immediate future.


ā€œHe played well when we put him in there, so I donā€™t see a huge reason to change him,ā€ Olsen said. ā€œBut he is versatile, and heā€™s played wide his whole life. So if it makes sense to play him somewhere else, weā€™ll do that.ā€


Arriola says heā€™s played some central midfield back in his days in Liga MX side Tijuanaā€™s 5-3-2 formation.


With D.C., he knows a central role gives him a chance to put a greater stamp on the team until expected big-name help arrives in the summer, though it also brings more responsibility.


ā€œIt forces me to be a lot sharper,ā€ Arriola said. ā€œBecause the midfielder that plays in the middle, the balls that you lose are a lot more meaningful than if youā€™re losing a ball out wide, 50 yards from your goal.ā€