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Orlando City vs. Toronto FC: Final Score 2-0 as Lions Again Held Scoreless at Home

The struggles at home continue for the Lions, who fell 2-0 to Toronto on the strength of a Jozy Altidore brace. That’s 270 minutes of soccer for Orlando City without a goal in the Citrus Bowl.

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Nick Leyva, The Mane Land

Another home match and another home loss for Orlando City (2-4-2), as the Lions fell 2-0 to a visiting Toronto FC side on Sunday night in the Citrus Bowl. Orlando City has now scored only one goal through four home matches, and is scoreless in its last 270 minutes at home.

The first half was a largely tepid affair, with neither team able to take control of the match. Orlando City managed 60% of the possession in the opening 45 minutes, but in an all-too-familiar stat line, City only had two shots on goal.

Toronto FC (2-4-0) almost started off the match in a big way in the opening minute. An early corner bounced out to midfielder Jackson, who fired an absolute blast on the volley from nearly 30 yards. Donovan Ricketts was up to the task though, as he extended to his left to parry the shot away.

City’s best chance of the half came in the seventh minute, when Cyle Larin hustled to beat keeper Joe Bendik to the ball. It bounced to Kevin Molino, who fired a shot from the corner of the box on the out-of-position Bendik, but the Toronto keeper was able to make a sprawling save.

In a sign of things to come, Toronto came very close in the 21st minute, off a quickly taken free kick from Jozy Altidore. Michael Bradley ran at Aurelien Collin, and then laid it off to Altidore on his right in the box. It took a last-ditch tackle from Seb Hines to keep the striker’s shot off frame.

The half ended knotted at zero, with Toronto largely content to sit deep and counter. Bradley and Sebastian Giovinco didn’t spend much time on the ball, but they did look very dangerous on the counter. City held more possession, but they were clearly missing the width that Rafael Ramos provides on the wing.

Five minutes into the second half, the Lions showed they hadn’t learned from their earlier mistake. Altidore again rushed up to take a quick free kick and laid it off to Giovinco. The Italian passed it right back to Altidore, who fended off Darwin Ceren, dribbled right through Hines, and beat Ricketts low for the goal. Okugo could also shoulder some blame for failing to prevent Altidore from playing the quick kick.

“The first goal was a bit of naivety on our part,” Head Coach Adrian Heath said after the game.

Heath responded quickly, inserting winger Carlos Rivas and forward Danny Mwanga into the match, but it was no use. The Lions pressed, but they earned only a few weak attempts for their troubles.

Tyler Turner had struggled all night to make an impact in his relief appearance for a suspended Ramos, and he cost his team dearly in the 83rd minute. His poor trap opened up the counter for Toronto, and Altidore beat Hines again for his brace. Turner clearly realized he’d helped take his team out of the match, and he fell to the ground near the sideline with his hands over his face.

There were a few more shots well over the bar for Orlando, and a near-miss for Bryan Rochez, but the scoreline held at 2-0 to give Orlando its second straight loss.

The Lions clearly missed Ramos at right back, but it was more of the same deficiencies in the attacking third that truly cost them. There were a spattering a boos from the home fans at the final whistle, as Orlando has only managed one (deflected) goal through their first four home matches in MLS.

“Overall I don’t think we were good enough to win the game and obviously that’s a disappointment,” Heath said. “I think we have enough quality in the team to be better in the final third. Sometimes it’s the final ball, sometimes it’s the movement.”


The Lions have a bye week friendly against Brazilian side Ponte Preta next Saturday, May 2, at 7 p.m. They return to MLS action the following Friday, May 8, against the New England Revolution in the Citrus Bowl.

Orlando City

Orlando City vs. New York Red Bulls: Five Takeaways

Here’s what we learned from Orlando City’s disappointing playoff exit against the Red Bulls.

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Image courtesy of Orlando City SC / Mark Thor

Orlando City looked to advance to the MLS Cup final as the club hosted the Eastern Conference final for the first time in its history. Unfortunately, for the sold-out crowd at Inter&Co Stadium, the Lions came up just short and lost a 1-0 defensive battle to the New York Red Bulls. Getting to the Eastern Conference final is no small achievement, but the loss likely leaves many with a sense of “what if,” as the postseason finally has arrived. What follows are our final five takeaways of the Lions’ 10th year in MLS.

Bland Start

For a team that usually does not dominate possession, the Red Bulls came out of the gate on the front foot and likely surprised Orlando City with their early aggression. The Red Bulls started the game with the type of drive and desire that I would have assumed to see from Orlando City as the results during the playoff run where OCSC has been the aggressor were far more desirable. Instead, Orlando looked content to let the visitors dictate the pace of the game and attempted to find attacks on the counter. While there were some such chances, they proved unsuccessful.

Lack of Connectivity

Throughout the match, Orlando committed many careless giveaways. Several of these came in the team’s defensive third throughout the first quarter hour of play, but as the game wore on, some promising buildups collapsed with errant passes in the attacking half. The Lions’ passing rate in the first half was below 75%, which is uncharacteristic of their usual quality. While New York’s pressure was responsible for some of that, Orlando City players looked at times like they expected different runs or positioning from their teammates once they started to enter the final third.

Golden Opportunity Missed

Orlando City grew into the first half and started to inject more of its preferred style of play as the game hit the half-hour mark. Orlando’s best chance came in the 32nd minute when a pass from Wilder Cartagena released Designated Player Martin Ojeda down the left side of the field. Ojeda did well to run onto the ball with pace and draw the remaining two Red Bulls defenders toward him before squaring a pass for fellow DP Facundo Torres. The Uruguayan had time and space in the box to pick out a spot, but he may have felt rushed and fired his shot far too close to goalkeeper Carlos Coronel. Torres will likely lament his shot placement and a missed opportunity that could have put his team ahead before halftime. It was a relatively easy save for the goalkeeper, and in that moment, one would expect a player of Torres’ quality to do better after Orlando had executed a perfect buildup.

One is Enough

It is ironic that the deciding and lone goal of the match came from a set piece, as Orlando was one of the league’s best during the year in not conceding goals from set pieces. The shocking moment came before most fans were likely back in their seats from their halftime beverage run and bathroom breaks. Ivan Angulo committed an unnecessary foul on the right side of the penalty box, setting up a free kick by the left-footed John Tolkin. The kick had plenty of pace and was swinging in toward the far post. Andres Reyes made an unimpeded run to the post as the Orlando City defense left him completely unmarked. Reyes made good contact with his free header, leaving no chance for Pedro Gallese to make a save. It was New York’s only shot on target of the night, meaning the Orlando defense allowed just one shot on target — and 14 total shot attempts — in the team’s final two playoff games of 2024.

No Late Magic Off the Bench

The final 45 minutes plus stoppage time of game play after the breakthrough goal involved Orlando sending on every attacking component that the coaching staff could muster, looking for an equalizer. Duncan McGuire, Luis Muriel, Jack Lynn, and Nico Lodeiro all entered the match as second-half substitutes, looking to change the outcome. The Lions were unable to muster many successful looks, as New York looked to pack in the defense and grind out the game. Ultimately, with no goal to show for their efforts and by allowing the NYRB to score on their only shot attempt on target, the Lions came up just a little short of advancing to the clubs’ first-ever MLS Cup final.


Those are our takeaways from a 1-0 home playoff loss to the New York Red Bulls. The 2024 season will be remembered as a long and winding one, which started in Victoria, British Columbia and ended with the first conference final appearance in team history. Let us know what your takeaways were in the comments below and as always, vamos Orlando!

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Orlando City vs. New York Red Bulls: Final Score 1-0 as Toothless Lions Fall at Home

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Image courtesy of Orlando City SC / Mark Thor

Orlando City’s playoff motto for 2024 was “All Teeth,” but the team again showed no bite offensively in a 1-0 loss to the New York Red Bulls at Inter&Co Stadium in the Eastern Conference final. A redirected John Tolkin free kick by Andres Reyes early in the second half was the difference as the Lions were shut out for the second time in these playoffs — finishing with four goals in five 2024 postseason matches. It was the fourth time in the club’s last nine postseason matches. Despite conceding only twice across five playoff games, Orlando City is out.

The team had its chances, although they were few, but lacked lethality in front, particularly on a first-half chance that could have put the visitors on their heels. As a result, Orlando finished 0-2-1 in three games against New York in 2024, without scoring a goal against the opposition. The lone draw featured a goal in Orlando’s favor, courtesy of a Red Bulls own goal by Noah Eile.

“Obviously, a few words will not tell the whole story about how we feel tonight after not getting this result,” Orlando City Head Coach Oscar Pareja said after the match. “I thought we had a good season and we had a bunch of things just to be proud of, but it’s very painful at this moment that we’re not achieving that objective. And that tells us that we have grown. This is a playoff game. I thought New York had two shots. It was a very rocky game for both. But in those options they took it and we didn’t take ours when we had the chance.”

Pareja’s lineup had no changes, with goalkeeper Pedro Gallese starting behind a back line of Rafael Santos, Robin Jansson, Rodrigo Schlegel, and Dagur Dan Thorhallsson. Cesar Araujo and Wilder Cartagena started in central midfield behind an attacking line of Ivan Angulo, Martin Ojeda, and Facundo Torres, with Ramiro Enrique up top.

The game was cagey from the onset, with New York holding more of the ball than it normally does. Orlando stayed well organized and didn’t give up many good looks, but also rarely broke down the Red Bulls’ attack to go the other way. The Lions were untidy in their passing as well, which broke down opportunities to get into the final third.

The game was back and forth for more than half an hour before a scoring chance materialized, and it was a good one. Cartagena unlocked the defense with a pass to Ojeda, sending the Argentine down the left side. Ojeda did well to draw two defenders toward himself and fed a pass to Torres in the box. Torres had time and space but fired his shot too close to goalkeeper Carlos Coronel, who made a good, if not difficult, save to keep the match scoreless in the 32nd minute.

New York’s first shot came two minutes later when Lewis Morgan went down softly, drawing a free kick from referee Rosendo Mendoza. The kick was from at least 30 yards out so the service was sent short, as Dante Vanzeir deflected it out front. The redirection didn’t miss the upper right corner by much.

The Lions should have had a good opportunity to score in the 39th minute when Enrique stole a ball in the attacking half. Entering the box on the right side, he had a trailing defender and rather than rip a shot with his right foot, he tried to make a move to improve his positioning inside, but he couldn’t finesse it past and the chance evaporated.

Vanzeir got inside of Santos in the 42nd minute but his angle was severe and he put a shot into the outside netting.

That was about it for the good looks at goal in the first half, as the teams went to the break without a goal on the board.

The visitors held the halftime advantage in possession (57.4%-42.6%), shots (4-1), corners (1-0), and passing accuracy (80.4%-74.3%). The Lions had more shots on target (1-0). But it was mostly a dull half with few chances and little play of note from the Lions.

“We had two or three chances in the first half that were really good chances for us that could have changed the game,” Ojeda said.

The decisive play came just moments after the restart on an unnecessary foul by Angulo just to New York’s attacking right side of the penalty area. Tolkin sent in the cross to the back post, where no one bothered to mark Reyes, who knocked it off the inside of the post and in to make it 1-0 in the 47th minute.

“A very unnecessary foul,” Pareja said about conceding the set piece. “We’re dealing with this obvious frustration. I have not seen (the goal on film). But what I saw in the game is not just that (Reyes) came out free, but the ball was very tight. I would have to see it. In this kind of games, it seems that those things sometimes are the tiebreaker.”

That was all the scoring the visitors needed, as Orlando rarely threatened Coronel’s goal frame, putting two more shots on frame in the second half, but neither was much of a threat.

Orlando managed to win a few set pieces over the next several minutes but couldn’t do anything with them. Jansson had a ball come off of him in the box in the 59th minute that pinged around but didn’t threaten goal. He felt he was knocked down from behind in the aftermath, and there was some contact, but no foul was given and it was a speculative shout for a penalty.

Chasing the match, Pareja sent Duncan McGuire and Luis Muriel on in the 61st minute for Enrique and Thorhallsson, moving Angulo to right back. The move nearly paid off three minutes later, when Reyes, already on a yellow card, raised a high boot that caught McGuire in the head. Mendoza inexplicably didn’t give the obvious second yellow card, allowing New York to keep 11 men on the pitch. There could hardly be an easier yellow card decision, but none was forthcoming.

Reyes then took a shot to the face from an Ojeda free kick a few minutes later and left the match either for precautionary reasons or because he’d gotten away with a second yellow offense already and the Red Bulls didn’t want to push their luck.

New York cleared a corner kick in the 78th minute that fell to Santos well outside the box. The Brazilian fired a shot on target but it was from too far out to trouble Coronel, who made the save. A minute later, McGuire ran onto a good ball over the top and fired with his weaker left foot from the left side, but the ball squirted off his foot sideways and sailed wide.

The Lions got a chance in the 84th minute on a Santos cross that skipped off the head of a defender and fell near the back post. Angulo knocked it just wide of the right post. Moments later, Ojeda won a corner and then picked out Torres in front, but the Uruguayan couldn’t get much power on his knockdown header, which bounced straight at Coronel.

Orlando again shouted for a penalty in the second minute of stoppage time. A set piece into the ball was cleared to the top of the box and looked as if it may have caught Cory Burke’s outstretched arm. It wasn’t given, and Burke streaked down the field on a breakaway. Gallese came well out of his box and did well to knock it away and Schlegel prevented further danger by holding a player back, picking up a yellow card for the professional foul.

The Lions couldn’t mount much of anything after that, and the full-time whistle blew on Orlando City’s 2024 season.

The Lions finished with the advantage in possession (60%-40%), shots (9-7), shots on target (3-1), corners (5-2), and passing accuracy (79.6%-71.6%). The Red Bulls got their smash-and-grab spot in the MLS Cup final on their lone shot on target.

“They’re a really tough team to play against,” Ojeda said. “They really take away those spaces that we like to play into, and they press really high. And it’s a situation where I think we have to have a little bit more patience and a little bit more calm in those moments.”

“Everybody is disappointed,” Jansson said. “Didn’t really get out what we wanted from this game. We didn’t really break through their pressure. We had some good chances in the first half to put it in the goal, and in these types of games we have to put the goals in there.”

“It was there for us and we didn’t take it, and it’s difficult,” Pareja said. “And I said to the players in the locker room that I was not going to prepare any speeches to lift their souls. It’s painful. We did have a bunch of things that we would be proud of and we will feel that this club is growing in a great direction, but I’m not going to mention that today because my frustration’s bigger than that. We will die for this club. Today, we have to accept that we’re not in the final of the MLS Cup.”


That’s a wrap on the season. Orlando went further than ever before but came up short on its own home field against a team it failed to score on in three matches.

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Orlando City vs. New York Red Bulls: Preview, How to Watch, TV Info, Live Stream, Lineups, Match Thread, and More

The Lions meet the Red Bulls in another semifinal as the teams meet for the right to advance to MLS Cup.

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Image courtesy of Orlando City SC / Mark Thor

Welcome to your match thread and preview for a Saturday night Eastern Conference final matchup between Orlando City and the New York Red Bulls at Red Bull Arena (7:30 p.m., MLS Season Pass on Apple TV). This is the third meeting of 2024 between the teams this season and the first-ever meeting in the postseason.

Here’s what you need to know for the match.

History

The Lions are 8-10-3 in 21 league meetings with the Red Bulls in the all-time series (9-10-3 in all competitions), with a record of 4-4-2 in home league matches and 5-4-2 in Orlando in all competitions.

The teams last met on June 1 at Red Bull Arena, with the hosts coming away with a 1-0 win on a set piece goal from John Tolkin. Orlando City wasn’t in the best run of form at the time, and it was the third shutout the Lions suffered in a five-game span. The first meeting of the season came at Inter&Co Stadium on March 30, with the two sides playing to a 1-1 draw. A Kyle Smith foul in the box allowed Lewis Morgan to put the visitors ahead, but a late own goal by Noah Eile resulted in a stalemate. Ivan Angulo and Jack Lynn combined to force the own goal.

Orlando City got the sweep last year and did not concede a goal in the series, winning the last meeting 3-0 at Red Bull Arena. Facundo Torres scored twice — once from the spot — after Angulo opened the scoring for an easy road win. The two sides met in Orlando on opening day of 2023, with Orlando City winning 1-0 on a Torres penalty kick on Feb. 25. Sean Nealis’ handball allowed the Lions to start the season with a victory.

Orlando City won at Red Bull Arena 1-0 on Aug. 13, 2022, thanks to a Torres goal. That allowed the Lions to split the regular-season meetings and take two of three against New York in all competitions in 2022.

The Lions scored five unanswered goals to turn a 1-0 deficit into a 5-1 romp in the U.S. Open Cup semifinals on July 27, 2022 at Exploria Stadium. Cesar Araujo scored his first two professional goals on set pieces, while Mauricio Pereyra, Torres, and Benji Michel also found the net. Lewis Morgan scored New York’s lone goal.

The win in August had allowed the Lions to snap a four-game winless streak (0-3-1) in the regular-season series. The last of those non-wins came on April 24, 2022, when the Lions were walloped 3-0 at home on goals by Luquinhas, Cristian Casseres Jr., and Morgan, and Orlando City failed to get any of its measly three shot attempts on target.

The Red Bulls swept the season series in 2021. The teams met at Exploria Stadium on July 3 of that season with New York taking home a 2-1 win. Casseres opened the scoring just six minutes in, but Chris Mueller pulled the Lions level early in the second half. Fabio’s late goal lifted the visitors. Pereyra’s poor penalty was saved by Carlos Coronel, which cost Orlando City a better result.

The Red Bulls also handed Orlando City its first loss of the 2021 season, a 2-1 affair at Red Bull Arena, on May 29, 2021. Nani was suspended for that match and it showed, as the Lions were sloppy in possession and lacked composure on the ball. New York took the lead on goals by Caden Clark and Casseres, before Silvester van der Water pulled one back late. The Dutchman had a golden opportunity to tie the match moments later but skied his shot well over the bar.

The Lions got a road draw on Oct. 18, 2020, with Brian White equalizing deep in stoppage time in a 1-1 match. Nani had put the Lions ahead in the second half with a penalty kick goal and Orlando clinched its first ever MLS playoff spot despite spilling those late two points. That was the last match in the club’s record 12-match unbeaten streak in MLS play.

Orlando got the better of New York at Exploria Stadium on Oct. 3, 2020, winning 3-1 on goals by Daryl Dike, Junior Urso, and Antonio Carlos. Florian Valot scored for New York.

The Red Bulls won 1-0 at Exploria Stadium on July 21, 2019. White’s goal stood up as Carlos Ascues, Tesho Akindele, and Sacha Kljestan each hit the woodwork in the second half. Prior to that, the Lions eked out a 1-0 win at Red Bull Arena on Kljestan’s goal on March 23, 2019. Before that game, the home team had won each of the previous five home games in the series, splitting a pair of matches during the 2017 and 2018 seasons.

The teams split two meetings in 2018, with the Red Bulls grabbing a 1-0 result in the 2018 season finale to capture the Supporters’ Shield and the Lions pulling off a 4-3 home victory on March 31, 2018. Each team won at home in 2017 to split the two-game series, with New York winning 3-1 on Aug. 12, and Orlando City opening the season series with a 1-0 win on April 9 behind Servando Carrasco’s goal.

The teams met three times in 2016, with New York going 2-0-1. The teams split two games in 2015, with the road team winning both times, including Orlando City’s 5-2 win in New Jersey behind a Cyle Larin hat trick.

Overview

Orlando City is coming off a 1-0 home win Sunday against Atlanta United. It was the third consecutive ugly game of the playoffs for Orlando, with Ramiro Enrique providing the only goal on a scramble off a corner kick that fell in the box. It was another offensively challenged postseason game for Orlando, and that’s unlikely to change tonight. The Red Bulls defend well, have a great goalkeeper, and have recently turned these matches into rock fights.

The Lions were 7-6-4 at home in the regular season and are 11-6-4 at home against MLS teams in all competitions in 2024. However, they have not scored a goal of their own against the Red Bulls this season, a year after blanking New York in both meetings. This is the second consecutive playoff opponent Orlando did not beat in the regular season.

New York is coming off a 2-0 “road” win over New York City FC at Citi Field a week ago. While that wasn’t NYCFC’s home stadium, it was still a baseball field, and the Red Bulls have been impressive in the postseason after going just 4-6-7 away from home in the regular season. That draw in Orlando was one of those seven deadlocks. Since the regular season, New York defeated defending champion Columbus 1-0 at Lower.com Field in the first-round, best-of-three series — then won in penalties in Game 2 to sweep the series — and then beat the Pigeons away to advance to the conference final.

As usual, the Lions will need to take care of the ball and avoid New York’s dangerous transition attack. Morgan led the Red Bulls in goals (13) and chipped in seven assists. With his history of scoring against Orlando, he’ll be a player the Lions will want to keep quiet. However, Emil Forsberg has been the player who has taken over as the leader of the offense, with the team slumping during his injury absence in the second half of the year. Forsberg scored nine goals and added five assists in the regular season. Dante Vanzier had a team-high 10 assists to go along with four goals. That’s the trio Orlando’s defense will need to try to slow down.

“We have tried during the week to stay concentrated on our responsibilities and the opportunity that we have in front of us,” Orlando City Head Coach Oscar Pareja said ahead of the match. “Certainly, we’re very proud to see that the group has achieved this for our club and our fans, but we’re eager to go for much more than that. And now we have this opportunity, but as we said before, we always play one game at a time, and now we’re so focused on New York [Red Bulls], trying to be prepared the best we can and have a good game to advance. Thats’ the process, nothing else than that.”

Both teams are mostly healthy entering the match. Orlando City will be without Mason Stajduhar (lower leg). New York will be without Roald Mitchell (knee) and Kyle Duncan (knee), while Cory Burke (illness) is listed as questionable.

Match Content


Official Lineups

Orlando City (4-2-3-1)

Goalkeeper: Pedro Gallese.

Defenders: Rafael Santos, Robin Jansson, Rodrigo Schlegel, Dagur Dan Thorhallsson.

Defensive Midfielders: Cesar Araujo, Wilder Cartagena.

Attacking Midfielders: Ivan Angulo, Martin Ojeda, Facundo Torres.

Forward: Ramiro Enrique.

Bench: Javier Otero, Luca Petrasso, Kyle Smith, David Brekalo, Felipe, Nico Lodeiro, Luis Muriel, Jack Lynn, Duncan McGuire.

New York Red Bulls (3-4-1-2)

Goalkeeper: Carlos Coronel.

Defenders: Sean Nealis, Andres Reyes, Dylan Nealis.

Wingbacks/Midfielders: John Tolkin, Peter Stroud, Daniel Edelman, Cameron Harper.

Attacking Midfielder: Emil Forsberg.

Forwards: Lewis Morgan, Dante Vanzeir.

Bench: Ryan Meara, Noah Eile, Dennis Gjengaar, Wikelman Carmona, Julian Hall, Elias Manoel, Ronald Donkor, Serge Ngoma, Cory Burke.

Referees

REF: Rosendo Mendoza.
AR1: Cameron Blanchard.
AR2: Jeremy Hanson.
4TH: Lukasz Szpala.
VAR: Carol Anne Chenard.
AVAR: Tom Supple.


How to Watch

Match Time: 7:30 p.m.

Venue: Inter&Co Stadium — Orlando.

TV/Streaming: MLS Season Pass on Apple TV.

Radio: Real Radio 104.1 FM (English), Mega 97.1 FM (Spanish).

Twitter: For rapid reaction and live updates, follow along at @TheManeLand, as well as Orlando City’s official Twitter feed (@OrlandoCitySC).


Enjoy the match. Go City!

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