Orlando Pride
Orlando Pride vs. North Carolina Courage: Player Grades and Player of the Match
The Pride came out as one team at the start of the game, and a completely different one at the half, but the electric second-half push wasn’t enough to keep the Pride riding high, as they fell to the North Carolina Courage, 4-3.
Time to break it down and see how the players rated and determine our player of the match.
Starters
GK, Ashlyn Harris, 5 — While the team played horribly in the first half, and came on strong in the second, it was the opposite for Harris. She singlehandedly kept the game 1-0 instead of 3-0 (or worse) with a couple of fantastic saves. But then in the second half, she let a couple go in that normally would have been stopped. For the first 60 minutes, she was setting up easily to be my player of the match.
D, Kristen Edmonds, 4.5 — Kristen had a poor clearance on the Courage’s opening goal, and seemed largely out of sync with Ali Krieger throughout the match to determine who was dropping back to defend. I think because of that first half, she didn’t get forward very often going deeper into the match, and it left the team with fewer options in the attack.
D, Ali Krieger, 4 — I’m not sure what was going on in the first half, and I’m not entirely sure Ali knew either. Almost every attack in the first half came because Ali was either a step behind, or left a player unmarked. Crystal Dunn had a field day for the first 45, and should have come away with a couple of goals. Ali rebounded in the second half and had a couple of good stops, but that first half is just seared into my brain, and will be for a long time.
D, Shelina Zadorsky, 5 — Shelina often in the first half pulled off some heroics to quell the onslaught from the Courage. As the defense got more organized in the second half, so did her game except for two costly moments. She lost her footing on the Debinhna goal, and the awkward/poor attempt to clear that final ball from going into the net in the 90th minute.
D, Carson Pickett, 4.5 — Carson had a decent match, but a lot of the early attacks from the Courage came from the space they were being given on that side of the pitch. I thought she was good at getting the ball forward and out of danger but she is still lacking that quality we know she can achieve, and has in the past.
MF, Alanna Kennedy, 6 — Alanna, along with the rest of the midfield, struggled to connect with the attack for a large part of the match. To echo what I’ve said elsewhere, once things settled down in the second half, she played a large part in keeping things a bit more organized on the defensive half. She also got on the end of a corner to bag her first goal of the season.
MF, Emily van Egmond, 6 — In the run of play, everything seemed just a bit early or late when transitioning into the attack for Emily. She did slide the through ball to Marta to set up the Pride’s first goal, and then headed a perfect pass to Marta again for the Pride’s final goal. So although she played a big part in those two moments, there is still a lot of room for improvement. After this match, she just topped 300 minutes of play, so things should start to settle for her soon. Which is exciting to think about.
MF, Christine Nairn, 5.5 — Short corner after short corner yielded nothing, and then Nairn decided to put one in the box. It got Nairn her third assist on the year when Kennedy snuck around a defender and placed it in the net. In the 61st minute, she let Crystal Dunn beat her and put the cross in for the Courage’s third goal on the night.
F, Marta, 7.5 (PotM) — She’s baaaaack. (Hopefully.) The entire Pride team faced a very tough team to break down, and with that perspective, I look at what Marta stepped up and got done, and I thought she was great. She was all over the pitch, and it made it hard on the Courage to keep track of her. The break in the season appears to be just what she needed. She assisted on two of Orlando’s three goals and worked hard throughout the match, including one sequence when she saved a ball from going out of play, then shook off a blatant hold by a defender to set up a scoring chance.
F, Alex Morgan, 5.5 — There were bits and pieces of the game that showcased what Alex can bring even when she doesn’t score, whether it’s drawing defenders, or almost always having the right amount of touch on a ball to spring another attacker, but this was just a tough match and nothing else was able to come together for her.
F, Chioma Ubogagu, 5.5 — Oh, Chi. Chi, Chi, Chi. The roller coaster that is Chi struck again. Just when you’ve had enough, she puts herself in the perfect spot to remain the leading goal scorer for the Orlando Pride. Not only that, she’s in a four-way tie for second in the league with most goals scored. The company she’s keeping is Megan Rapinoe, Crystal Dunn, and Jessica McDonald. Not too shabby Chi, you just keep being you.
Substitutes
MF, Dani Weatherholt (74’), 6 — Dani came in a bit later than I would have preferred because she has a very specific set of talents that were begging to see the pitch in this match. Control was officially taken once she stepped on the field, quickly followed by Rachel Hill. The Courage didn’t really threaten again, and had to send a long ball over the middle to break the Pride in the final minute.
F, Rachel Hill (75’), 6.5 — There wasn’t a threat from the Pride on the right side of the pitch for just over 80% of the match. Rachel changed that and eight minutes later buried one into the top of the net from a pinpoint Marta cross.
D, Poliana (78’) 5.5 — Poliana was the last of a quick succession of substitutions and did her part to change the game as well. There was a lot of fault to spread around on the Courage’s final goal, and she could have played Jessica McDonald a bit tougher. Other than that, I think she stepped in and helped control possession a bit more.
There we have it. Let me know what you saw and be sure to vote for your player of the match below.
Polling Closed
| Player | Votes |
| Alanna Kennedy | 2 |
| Emily van Egmond | 0 |
| Marta | 26 |
| Rachel Hill | 7 |
| Other (Comment below) | 0 |
Orlando Pride
The Pride Need to Tie Barbra Banda to Their HIP
A look at the NWSL’s new High Impact Player classification, and how the Pride might allocate those funds.
Is it just me, or has the off-season seemed even longer than usual this year? It feels like forever since any of the Orlando clubs played a match, and while we are getting social media pictures and videos from their respective preseasons, we are still weeks away from the season openers. The off-season just seems to keep going and going.
It reminds me of “Rapper’s Delight,” the 1979 song that is often cited (incorrectly, but that is a story for another time and website) as the first-ever hip hop song. It’s a 14-plus-minute audio experience that also just seems to keep going and going, and it starts off with one of the most well-known lines in contemporary pop music: “I said a hip hop, the hippie, the hippie to the hip, hip hop and you don’t stop.”
The hips that Wonder Mike was rapping about are not the same ones that were in the news recently, as those are not hips but HIPs, as in High Impact Players — the NWSL’s new roster mechanism (introduced in December) that will allow teams to go beyond the salary cap to sign certain players to much higher salaries than previously.
Without belaboring over the details, a simple definition for a HIP is that the player must have met at least one classification from the list below:
- 2025 SportsPro Media Top 150 Most Marketable Athletes.
- 2025 Ballon d’Or voting (top 30 players).
- 2024 Ballon d’Or voting (top 30 players).
- 2025 Guardian Top 100 football players in the world (top 40 players).
- 2024 Guardian Top 100 football players in the world (top 40 players).
- 2025 ESPN FC Top 50 football players in the world (top 40 players).
- 2024 ESPN FC Top 50 football players in the world (top 40 players).
- 2025 minutes played for the USWNT (top 11 field players, top goalkeeper).
- 2024 minutes played for the USWNT (top 11 field players, top goalkeeper).
- 2025 NWSL MVP Finalists.
- 2024 NWSL MVP Finalists.
- 2025 End of Year NWSL Best XI First Team.
- 2024 End of Year NWSL Best XI First Team .
As of December 2025, The Equalizer reported there are 102 players around the world who qualify, though that number is fluid because some of the 2024 lists will be replaced by new lists, once they are released. The Pride currently have two players on the roster who are HIP eligible: Barbra Banda and Marta, each of whom qualified under eight of the 13 possible qualifications, though in reality they went eight for 11 since Banda is Zambian and Marta is Brazilian, making neither eligible to play for the United States Women’s National Team (USWNT). Emily Sams was also eligible while a member of the Pride, but she is now a member of Angel City, so she is dead to me.
Just kidding, I will still root for Sams, but only when she is playing for the USWNT. Or if she comes to her senses and asks to return back to a club that actually has won something in the league.
The Washington Spirit signed Trinity Rodman to the NWSL’s first-ever deal using the HIP mechanism last week, making her the highest paid women’s soccer player in the world, earning more than $2 million annually according to reports. Unlike MLS, the NWSL does not release contract details, so we do not know how much more that is than the next-highest-paid players in the league, but we know that she just set the new bar, and deservedly so.
But is it deservedly so? Let’s take a look.
Let me start by saying that Rodman is one of my favorite athletes to watch across all sports. Not among women’s athletes, among all athletes. She plays with speed, power, skill, and joy, and even though she plays for a rival team in the NWSL, I root for her to succeed, because her style of play is one that every athlete should aspire to replicate. It certainly helps that she also plays (and when healthy, starts) for the USWNT, my second favorite soccer team behind the Pride, but even if she was playing elsewhere I am confident I would still be a fan. How could you not, when she makes plays like this and then gets her coach to join the celebration?
That combination of success on the field and likeability is what makes her one of the most marketable athletes in the NWSL as well, and marketability was included in the list of HIP criteria, so I think it is a quick and resounding yes, it is deservedly so that Rodman set the new bar.
But once a bar is set, another player will want to jump over it. Rodman has a tremendous mix of soccer skills and marketability, but NWSL general managers want to win championships more than just the hearts and minds of fans, so they are generally more interested in bringing in the best players than they are the most marketable players. Rodman is a great player and has set that bar very high, but now every GM in the league has a target they can use to try to acquire a new player by pulling a Jerry Maguire and showing them the money.
Rodman might not have many peers in the marketability space, but let’s take a look at a few players on the soccer side. Just for fun we’ll call them Player B and Player M, to see if they match up with her and might want a similar salary. Here are their stats per 90 minutes from the combined 2024 and 2025 seasons with their NWSL ranks included in parentheses:
| Metric | Rodman | Player B | Player M |
|---|---|---|---|
| Goals Contributions | 0.70 (5) | 0.83 (3) | 0.41 (37) |
| Chances Created | 2.05 (8) | 1.42 (32) | 2.25 (4) |
| Goals Added | +0.24 (4) | +0.37 (2) | -0.02 (130) |
| Plus/Minus | +1.07 (15) | +1.13 (12) | +0.62 (46) |
| FotMob Rating | 7.58 (4) | 7.60 (3) | 7.35 (16) |
*data from what’s still available on fbref.com (goal contributions, plus/minus), as well as FotMob (chances created (a.k.a. key passes), FotMob rating) and American Soccer Analysis (goals added).
You did not need to be a Bletchley Park-level codebreaker (deep cut for the history buffs) to figure out that Player B is Banda and Player M is Marta. Banda compares quite favorably to Rodman, exceeding her performance in nearly every category, and while Marta lags behind the other two in a few categories (reminder, she played those seasons at 37 and 38 years old and is the oldest player in the league), she surpasses both of them, and the rest of the soccer world, in the categories of heart and, you know, being the greatest of all time. That, however, probably will not translate into the Pride signing her to a HIP deal at this point in her soccer career, even though there is no player in soccer who more perfectly fits the definition of high impact than Marta.
Banda does not have Marta’s global profile or status, but at 25 years old (she will turn 26 in March) she is already a superstar, with high-level achievements already in the Summer Olympics and World Cup for Zambia, a goals-scored-per-90-minutes ranking of fourth in NWSL history (0.62 per 90), and she played a pivotal role in helping the Pride win the NWSL Shield and the NWSL Championship during the 2024 season. The injury she suffered during the 2025 season did not completely derail the Pride’s season, but the offense was not the same without her in the lineup — one of the main reasons that the Pride came up short in their quest to win back-to-back titles.
When she was acquired in 2024, Banda reportedly (again, it would be ideal for the NWSL to actually release this information instead of forcing people to use words like “reportedly”) signed a four-year deal worth up to $2.1 million over the life of the contract, but with Rodman’s deal now worth nearly that amount per year, it is certain that Banda’s agent has already been in discussions with the Pride’s front office about signing her to a brand new contract using the HIP mechanism.
Her current contract runs through the 2027 season, but in recent months the trends have pointed to more players wanting to go to Europe than stay in the NWSL. While that is not exclusively about money, the ability of European teams to offer whatever they want certainly has played a role in enticing players to make a move. With two years left on her contract the Pride are not at risk of losing Banda imminently, but there are few strikers like her in the world (she is one of only 44 women across fbref.com’s database of 16 women’s leagues who have averaged more than 0.60 goals scored per 90 minutes while playing more than 3,000 minutes in the last two seasons), and she is still in the early prime of her career.
I expect the Pride to offer Banda a HIP contract in the upcoming months, as now that Rodman’s deal has been signed, every team has a benchmark in place, and they can negotiate with the agents and players using that deal as a starting point. Banda’s statistical performance and age is similar to Rodman’s, though the Pride will likely offer her a lower amount as she does not have the same commercial profile. There are no hard and fast rules to defining “commercial profile” or “marketability,” so it is more about perception than anything, but I think the Pride will discount something off of Banda’s offer, even though a good argument can be made that Banda delivers more on the field than Rodman.
Hopefully, the Pride’s front office and Banda can come to an agreement on a new contract in the near future, and when they do, it will only be right that we all shout out HIP HIP hooray!
Vamos Pride!
Orlando Pride
Reading (Into) the Minutes: How The Pride Might Allocate Playing Time This Season
Here’s how the Pride might replace the minutes played by those players who departed the club during the off-season.
On Tuesday, the Pride held their first practice of the preseason, and even though it is not November, I am giving thanks that they are finally back on the field. There are only so many stories out there during the off-season, when news comes in drips and drabs. It was great to see players back in their Pride practice uniforms and smiling together on the field, and with every passing day, the Pride’s roster will get closer and closer to being set for the 2026 season, and we will know which players will compete to replace the minutes of those who departed the club during the off-season.
At almost this exact time last year I wrote an article about how the 2025 Pride were bringing back nearly every player from their 2024 team, and while just two weeks later the Pride said “oh really, Andrew?” and transferred Adriana to Al Qadsiah in Saudi Arabia, a robust 87% of the minutes played by Pride players during the 2025 NWSL regular season were played by players from that 2024 team. That percentage would likely have been even higher if not for the injury to Barbra Banda, but 87% is still the second-highest percentage of minutes played in the subsequent season by returning players from the league champion in NWSL history, as you can see from the table below:
| Year | Playoff Champ | Mins. Played the Next Season | Regular Season Finish the Next Season | Playoff Finish the Next Season |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2013 | Thorns | 54% | 3rd | 3rd |
| 2014 | FC KC | 66% | 3rd | 1st |
| 2015 | FC KC | 53% | 6th | Did Not Qualify |
| 2016 | Flash | 80% | 1st | 2nd |
| 2017 | Thorns | 73% | 2nd | 2nd |
| 2018 | Courage | 96% | 1st | 1st |
| 2019 | Courage | 61% | 6th | 5th |
| 2020 | No Season | |||
| 2021 | Spirit | 81% | 11th | Did Not Qualify |
| 2022 | Thorns | 86% | 2nd | 3rd |
| 2023 | Gotham | 60% | 3rd | 3rd |
| 2024 | Pride | 87% | 4th | 3rd |
| 2025 | Gotham | TBD | Hopefully last place | TBD |
The 2025 Pride had a lot of continuity from that 2024 team, and while we will never know what would have happened if Banda had stayed healthy (my completely unbiased prediction: back-to-back champs, wins in every playoff game by at least 10 goals), we know that when she played, the team had a +10 goal differential in 16 (but really 15) games, and the team was +1.04 goals per 90 minutes better with her on the field than off the field. That stat is courtesy of fbref.com, a phrase I sadly may not be able to say again this season, as fbref’s data provider cut off its data access this week, and sadly one of the world’s best free databases for men’s and women’s soccer statistics is now gone. I am feeling more verklempt than Mike Myers in an SNL sketch. Let’s move on.
There is only a weak negative correlation between the percentage of minutes played by returning players in the subsequent season and a champion’s finish in the subsequent regular season. So, while a negative correlation means as the percentage of minutes played by returning players increases, a team’s regular-season finish decreases (decreasing being good, because the number is getting closer to one, which is first place), the correlation is weak. In plain language, that means just because a lot of players return, it does not imply the team will challenge for the regular-season title.
The correlation is also weak and negative for the relationship between returning player minutes and a team’s finish in the subsequent playoffs, and the numbers back up what most of us inherently think anyway, which is that while it is good to have continuity and bring back championship-winning players, it does not guarantee anything.
This leads me to the roster, as we know it, for the Pride. I wrote a piece in our most recent newsletter, which you can subscribe to by clicking here, about the positional breakdown of the players currently on the Pride’s roster. But if we step back and look at the macro view for the Pride, the following players, who played at least one minute during NWSL play in 2025, are no longer with the club: Emily Sams, Ally Watt, Carson Pickett, Morgan Gautrat, Prisca Chilufya, Simone Charley, Grace Chanda, and Bri Martinez. Those players combined to play almost exactly 25% of the NWSL regular-season minutes last season, and some quick math tells us that means the Pride currently have 75% of their minutes played in 2025 returning for 2026, as it stands today.
Kylie Nadaner’s return date is still to be determined, so that is another 6% currently unavailable (dropping the total down to 69% returning) but will probably be back during the season. The upshot of all this is the team returns approximately two-thirds of its minutes from last year from a team that, when healthy, was among the best in the league.
It is not ideal that the minutes that have to be replaced include one of the league’s best center backs in Sams, who played the full 90 minutes in every game except one, but at the same time, it is ideal that Banda is likely to play 500+ more minutes and Jacquie Ovalle will probably play 1,000+ more minutes than they did in 2025. If those two hit those benchmarks they will replace all or nearly all of the minutes played by the now-departed Watt and Charley, and while they were solid contributors, minutes played by Banda and Ovalle will be considered an upgrade.
Pickett’s departure will likely be covered by a combination of the new defenders who have signed with the Pride in recent weeks, some Kerry Abello minutes in the midfield instead of at left back, and increases in minutes for Julie Doyle, Simone Jackson, or Summer Yates, who hopefully will be fully healthy this year and return to her 2024 form. Thus far, the Pride have signed two attacking players — rookies Solai Washington and let’s-hope-she-doesn’t-wear-number-six Seven Castain — but both players primarily played forward in college, so we do not yet know if they have the ability to play out on the wing.
If they do, those two could also be in the mix to replace Pickett’s midfield minutes as well as the minutes played by Chanda, Chilufya, and some minutes at their natural position of forward. That leaves the one minute played by Martinez, which will be absorbed by the Pride’s deep list of right backs (Cori Dyke, Hailie Mace, Oihane, Nicole Payne). The midfield minutes played by Gautrat can be filled by Ally Lemos, Luana, and Viviana Villacorta, though most likely by the first two.
You surely noticed that I skipped over replacing the minutes from Sams and Nadaner (while she is out). While there are players on the roster who can do that, there is also the ever-present risk of a Rafaelle injury, as she has not been the most durable player while in Orlando. Zara Chavoshi and the recently acquired Hannah Anderson are both center backs, though last season Anderson was the third center back for a bottom-of-the-standings Chicago team and Chavoshi was the fourth center back in Orlando. Both players are young and have the potential to improve, and in Chavoshi’s case she was behind three really good center backs last season, so being fourth on the depth chart is not an indication of her talent.
Some of the Pride’s other outside back players like Abello, Dyke, Mace and potentially others could also play some center back, but it still feels like that position is unsettled at the moment and there is not enough depth, especially with Rafaelle’s injury history and an even longer schedule this year due to the two new expansion teams joining the league.
Speculation season will come to an end soon, but new Vice President of Soccer Operations and General Manager Caitlin Carducci still has weeks left to make additional signings or trades and firm up the roster (hopefully she ensures Own Goal stays for another year). As the preseason opens, it seems like the Pride have backfill options already on the roster to adequately cover every departed player except for Sams, but that $650,000 they received for her is some dry powder that Carducci surely will make use of at some point to acquire additional new talent. Perhaps Anderson, Chavoshi, or another defender will show so much in preseason that those funds can be deployed elsewhere, or maybe Carducci will go center back shopping, but either way, there will be a new center back pairing when the season opens.
The countdown is on until the season opener on March 15 at home against Seattle, and while right now most fans are focused on how many days are left until that game, you can be assured that in the front office and among the coaching staff they are having just as many conversations about how to allocate the game minutes as they are how to allocate those practice days.
Both conversations matter, but none more than how game minutes will be allocated. Pride leadership will make minute examinations of minute details, parsing minute distinctions to determine who ultimately earns major minutes.
Vamos Pride!
Orlando Pride
Orlando Pride Sign Jamaican International Forward Solai Washington
The Pride add attacking depth by signing former Florida State forward Solai Washington.
The Orlando Pride announced today that the club has signed Jamaican international forward Solai Washington. The former Florida State Seminole through the 2027 season with a mutual option for the 2028 season.
“Solai is a player we’ve had an eye on for a while during her two years in college,” Orlando Pride head coach Seb Hines said in a club press release. “Her composure on the ball, her ability to break lines, and the maturity she showed at Florida State make her a fantastic fit for what we’re building here. She brings energy, versatility, and a real competitive edge, which is what we look for in players. We’re excited to have her here in Orlando and to see the impact she can make in our environment both on and off the field.”
The 20-year-old attacker from Atlanta made 35 appearances in her two years in Tallahassee, scoring eight goals and adding four assists while helping the Seminoles win the 2025 NCAA national championship and the 2024 ACC tournament. Washington was a member of the 2024 ACC All-Freshmen Team, the 2024 All-ACC Academic Team, and was named to TopDrawerSoccer’s postseason Top 100 Freshman list (at No. 42).
On the international stage, Washington has already represented Jamaica at the senior level on the biggest stage, making three appearances with the Reggae Girlz at the 2023 FIFA Women’s World Cup, debuting in a scoreless draw with France.
What It Means for Orlando
The Pride’s need for depth in the attacking positions is well documented, and Washington is a young player with a ton of upside in an area of need. From that perspective alone, this is a signing that makes sense. While it would be nice for the club to sign some proven NWSL-level scorers to provide depth for Barbra Banda, Marta, and Jacquie Ovalle, it’s always good to develop young talent. Since the abolition of the NWSL Draft, teams must work harder to secure the services of players like Washington.
It will require some time to know whether Orlando’s faith in Washington will be rewarded, and she wasn’t the most prolific scorer at FSU, but it says something about a player that they can get minutes at age 17 in a World Cup. It will be up to Hines and his staff to develop Washington, who will have no shortage of great mentors as teammates.
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