How important is Kevin Molino to Orlando City's playoffs hopes?

Kevin Molino - Orlando City SC - Celebration

ORLANDO, Fla. ā€” Kevin Molino is not essential to Orlando City SCā€™s ability to win games. Head coach Jason Kreis wants to make that clear right up front.


But the Trinidadian international is definitely developing into a major asset, and Kreis certainly hopes to have him back in the lineup for Sundayā€™s game at the Chicago Fire (4 pm ET, UniMĆ”s, MLS LIVE in Canada). Thatā€™s when the Lions urgently need to get back in the points to keep their playoff hopes from stalling.


Molino was a late scratch with a hamstring injury from last weekendā€™s disappointing 3-1 home defeat by Seattle, and it was clear the team lost some of its attacking potency without the slender, five-foot-eight midfielder in the lineup.


He is already a fan favorite from the teamā€™s USL days, but observers around the league are fast becoming acquainted with the quick-footed verve Molino displays on the ball. He also enjoys a seemingly instinctive relationship with Brazilian ace KakĆ”. In fact itā€™s probably highly appropriate that if you combine the two into the portmanteau ā€œKalino,ā€ you get a Hawaiian word for ā€œbrilliant oneā€ ā€” which effectively sums up the result of their combination play.


Molino was back in full training again this week, and, while coach Kreis wasnā€™t releasing too many pre-game lineup secrets on Friday, he was ready to admit his Caribbean spark plug could be ready to go again at Toyota Park.


ā€œI would never want anybody to think that because we didnā€™t have Kevin Molino, we couldnā€™t win the game. I donā€™t believe that at all,ā€ Kreis said. ā€œBut I do think Kevinā€™s an important player. From my point of view, he just has a knack for being in good positions in the attacking half of the field, and he has a knack for finding himself in effective spaces and making good choices with the ball, to help us create goal-scoring chances and to score some himself.


ā€œHe is also a developing player and it is interesting to say that for a 26-year-old. You wouldnā€™t typically say that [of a regular player of that age]. But, in his soccer background and development, he is not a typical player, and so he has the mindset as well that he still needs to learn and improve, which I think is an incredible characteristic in players.ā€


With the arrival last week of Matias Perez Garcia from San Jose in a trade that took Darwin Ceren in the opposite direction, Kreis now has a much greater combination of attacking midfield options. He says he is considering the idea of playing Perez Garcia alongside KakĆ” and Molino in what could be a formidable offensively inclined trio.


Finding the right balance from this new array of attack-minded players is still the key for the Lions head coach. But he says heā€™s happy he now has the right personnel at his disposal, and he does not intend to make wholesale changes in the way Orlando plays.


 ā€œOur idea is to just make slight tweaks around our shape and maybe a little bit philosophically about how we approach matches. Within that, it is a certainly consideration to play all three of those guys at once,ā€ Kreis said. ā€œWe have a little bit of a different look if we play guys like Brek Shea, Hadji Barry or Carlos Rivas in those positions as well, so I feel like with the addition of Matias, we literally have two players in all three of those spots underneath the high striker.ā€


Returning to the subject of Molino, Kreis remains critical of some aspects of the Trinidadianā€™s game. But heā€™s convinced there are signs of improvement, and that could mean a lot more for opponents to handle in future.


ā€œI think itā€™s important to have players that can do different things with the ball for sure," Kreis said. ā€œSo I think [with Molino] itā€™s a positive. It brings us some diversity in how we attack.


ā€œFrom the defensive side of things, as weā€™ve already said, thatā€™s where he needs the biggest part of his development, and so it is something he needs to focus on improving. Thatā€™s how we see it; he is not the finished all-round product, but heā€™s definitely moving in that direction.ā€