Orlando Pride
Ashlyn Harris: Fan Support is Missing Piece for the Orlando Pride
The Orlando Pride are off to a good start in 2018, slightly ahead of last season’s playoff pace in points per game, the attendance at home matches has not been commensurate with the team’s season. Orlando has earned points in nine of the last 10 and enters this week in second place in the NWSL standings, but has also set two franchise lows for single-game attendance in just five home dates this season.
The Pride are 2-1-2 in those five home matches and the lone loss was an exciting 4-3 final against league-leading champion North Carolina. So the team has been successful and competitive.
Why is attendance lagging? That question was put to veteran Pride goalkeeper Ashlyn Harris after Monday’s training session by ProSoccerUSA’s / The Orlando Sentinel’s Jordan Culver and captured here on video by Austin David.
“You probably should ask the front office that. I mean, we have a winning record, we have creative players, we play a good brand of football — something this city should be proud of,” Harris said. “So, we’re doing our job. As far as getting people in the stands, I mean, we need to be asking questions why people aren’t showing up. Our job is to step on the field and have a good result and good performance and we’re doing that. Good question. I wonder the same thing.”
The Pride averaged 6,186 fans per game in 2017, which was good enough for second in the NWSL, but it was still 11,467 fewer fans per match than the Portland Thorns — last year’s second-place finisher in the regular season standings and ultimate playoff champions. Portland is obviously a different animal than the remainder of the league. Orlando finished more than 1,500 fans per game ahead of the Houston Dash, who were third in average attendance last year.
So far in 2018, the Pride are drawing just 5,103 fans per match through five home dates. Those included record lows of 3,890 in the second home game of the year — a Sunday afternoon 1-0 win over the Houston Dash — which was eclipsed by the 3,104 fans who showed up for a battle against the first-place Courage. The latter was a Wednesday night game, which at least makes some sense.
The high water mark this season came in the season opener, when the Pride drew 9,017 in the team’s first ever meeting with the Utah Royals on March 24. That is a significant drop from the 14,452 who turned out for the 2017 season opener against the Washington Spirit.
Harris said that the only thing missing for the club at the moment is that raucous support enjoyed by the MLS team.
“We’re kicking butt and we deserve it. There’s a lot of incredible women here and we sacrifice a lot to do this every day,” she said. “It would be great to have some support here in the city and bring your kids out. It’s such a great environment. I think that’s just the missing piece right now.”
The lower attendances this season — more than 1,000 fewer fans per game — have not gone unnoticed by the players.
“Honestly there’s nothing worse than being in the tunnel, being all hyped up, and walk out to a dead crowd,” Harris said. “They’re supposed to be your 12th man. I think so many people said ‘oh it’s so great to bring soccer to this city,’ but the greatest gift you can give someone is showing up and I think the city needs to start showing up. When things don’t pan out and work out [they’ll say] ‘oh well, we hate to hear the women’s team is no longer.’ Well, this is your chance. If you want to be able to see games in your back yard and have your kids have good role models to look up to.”
Orlando City SC has assembled a team of quality players from all over the world to build the Pride roster, and the side, led by striker Alex Morgan and midfielder/forward Marta, is capable of competing for trophies.
“You have two of the greats out on the field. You have a lot of international talent. Your job is to show up,” Harris said. “That’s something the city has to do. I know they show up for the men’s team and they’re supporting the men’s team and that’s great, but it’s time to show some support for the women’s team.
“We’re second place right now, we had a playoff run last year. We’re doing all the right things. So that’s my biggest, I guess, upsetting factor here is the fact that people aren’t showing up. We say so much about this city is a soccer city and there’s all this buzz. I don’t want to be harsh or immature but let’s see some action and not just words.”
Only time will tell if Harris’ words resonate with the fans or if those who have put off attending games this year will start to show up at Orlando City Stadium. We won’t have to wait long to find out, though. The Pride host two matches this week — tomorrow night against the Houston Dash at 7:30 p.m., and Saturday afternoon at 3:30.
Orlando Pride
2025 Orlando Pride Season in Review: Marta
The captain once again provided the competitive spark for the Pride in 2025.
Marta signed with the Orlando Pride way back in 2017. She has been the constant for the club through ups and mostly downs. That all changed last season as she captained her club to two trophies. In 2022, she signed a new two-year contract, taking her through 2024. She then signed yet another two-year contract through 2026.
Marta didn’t have the same type of year as she did in 2024, but she was still one of the better players for the Pride. She remains the heart of this team, showing the others what passion and effort looks like even as she edges closer to the end of her playing career. Let’s take a look at the GOAT’s 2025 season.
Statistical Breakdown
Marta started and played the full 90 minutes in the 2025 Challenge Cup match. She did not record a goal contribution and took two off-target shots. However, her free kick was blocked, resulting in Rafaelle’s opening goal. Marta also set a shot up for the defender in the match but the effort was off target. The Brazilian legend completed 26 of her 37 passes (82%), took four corner kicks, and she did not record a completed long ball. Defensively, she recorded three tackles and won three headed duels. She committed one foul, drew one on the Washington Spirit, and was not booked.
During the regular season, Marta made 22 appearances (18 starts), playing 1,599 minutes. She contributed four goals and an assist, putting 13 of her 27 shots on target. She completed 519 of her 731 passes (71%), 13 crosses, and two of her four long balls (50%) with 43 chances created. On the defensive end, the Brazilian contributed 22 tackles, 19 interceptions, and one blocked shot. She committed 14 fouls, drew 28 on the opposition, and was not booked.
Marta started both playoff games, playing all 180 minutes. She took one shot but did not record a goal contribution, although she was involved in both goals against the Reign, working a give-and-go with Julie Doyle prior to Haley McCutcheon’s opening goal and drawing the penalty that handed Luana the late insurance tally. The captain completed 52 of her 69 passes (75.4%), including three of her six long balls (50%) and four key passes. She recorded one tackle, two interceptions, and one clearance defensively while committing one foul, drawing six on her opponents, and being booked once.
Marta participated in one of the Concacaf W Champions Cup matches against Pachuca. She played all 90 minutes and scored the Pride’s only goal on two shots, one of which was on target. She completed 27 of 34 passes (79%). Defensively, she recorded three tackles, while committing two fouls, and suffering two fouls. She was not booked.
Best Game
While Marta had several good games, I think her best game was the Pride’s 3-2 victory over the Washington Spirit on Oct. 18. Marta was named Player of the Match by both Michael Citro and myself on SkoPurp Soccer: An Orlando Pride PawedCast. The captain caused an own goal and scored on a penalty kick to give the Pride an important road win heading into the playoffs. Washington scored first on a Kerry Abello own goal, but Abello then corrected that mistake by scoring one for her own team minutes later. The Spirit took the lead again and held it at halftime. Seb Hines substituted Marta in at the start of the second half, and it’s a good thing he did. It literally only took her 52 seconds to even the score.
In the 70th minute, Ally Watt was fouled in the box, setting up a penalty for the Pride. There was no doubt who would take the kick, and it turned out there was no doubt Marta would bury it in the back of the net for the winning goal.
Marta might have only played 45 minutes plus stoppage but her impact was monumental. In this match, she took one shot, which was on target, scoring the aforementioned goal. She had 27 touches, completed nine of her 13 passes (70%), two of her three long balls (67%) and took one corner kick. Defensively, she contributed one block and one clearance. She committed one foul, did not suffer any fouls, and was not booked.
2025 Final Grade
The Mane Land staff gave Marta a composite rating of 7 out of 10 for her ninth season with the club. This was a point lower than the 8 we gave her last year. Much like many of the Pride’s players, Marta’s 2025 wasn’t as good as her 2024, but she was still a critical part of the successes of the team. In 2024, she had a banner year, but despite being a year older, she was still productive in 2025.
2026 Outlook
The 39-year-old is entering the last year of her contract, and it would be surprising — though not totally inconceivable —that she will get another. Despite the fact she will turn 40-years-old before the beginning of the season, she will remain the Pride’s captain as long as she can take to the pitch. Assuming she’s healthy, there’s no reason to assume she can’t contribute to at least the same level as she did in 2025. There’s even a possibility that she finds something closer to her 2024 form. No one plays with more passion than Marta, and I will not doubt what she can do when she has the look in her eye.
Previous Season in Review Articles (Date Posted)
- Luana (11/17/25)
- Cosette Morché (11/18/25)
- Elyse Bennett (11/19/25)
- Simone Charley (11/20/25)
- McKinley Crone (11/20/25)
- Grace Chanda (11/21/25)
- Viviana Villacorta (11/22/25)
- Summer Yates (11/23/25)
- Julie Doyle (11/24/25)
- Simone Jackson (11/25/25)
- Zara Chavosi (11/26/25)
- Oihane (11/27/25)
- Cori Dyke (11/28/25)
- Ally Lemos (11/29/25)
- Kylie Nadaner (11/30/25)
- Rafaelle (12/1/25)
- Kerry Abello (12/4/25)
- Haley McCutcheon (12/4/25)
- Angelina (12/5/25)
- Barbra Banda (12/6/25)
- Anna Moorhouse (12/7/25)
- Emily Sams (12/8/25)
- Jacquie Ovalle (12/10/25)
This concludes our 2025 Orlando Pride player-by-player Season in Review series. We hope you’ve enjoyed looking back on the players’ performances from the past year as we move closer toward seeing what lies ahead in 2026.
Orlando Pride
2025 Orlando Pride Season in Review: Jacquie Ovalle
The Pride broke the world transfer record to land the Mexican international in 2025.
The Orlando Pride signed Mexican international winger Jacquie Ovalle for a then-world record transfer fee on Aug. 21, acquiring the attacker’s services from Tigres UANL in Liga MX Femenil. While the club did not announce the transfer fee, it was reportedly around $1.5 million. That transfer record has since been broken a couple of times since, but it was an ambitious move by the Pride to try to provide Barbra Banda a playmaking wing of the highest caliber.
The move ultimately didn’t pay many dividends in 2025, as Banda went down with a season-ending injury before Ovalle arrived, and the Mexican international struggled to get comfortable with her new team, the new league, and a new culture in what could best be described as an inconsistent performance after she joined the Pride.
Let’s take a look at Ovalle’s first season in the City Beautiful.
Statistical Breakdown
Ovalle was signed well after the season-opening NWSL Challenge Cup, so she saw no action in the competition. She made her Pride debut in the regular season on Sept. 7 off the bench. It was an inauspicious start, as Orlando got flattened 5-2 at Chicago that day, with all of the goals happening in the second half. Ovalle played in eight regular-season matches with Orlando, starting seven and logging 666 minutes. She contributed a goal and two assists in her time on the pitch with the Pride, attempting 20 shots and putting seven on target. She completed 84% of her 201 passes during the regular season, with 18 key passes. Ovalle was accurate on 19 of her 48 crosses (39.6%) and three of her seven long balls (42.9%). Defensively, Ovalle chipped in 13 tackles, three interceptions, and five clearances but no blocks during the regular season. She committed six fouls, drew five, and received one yellow card.
In the playoffs, Ovalle started both of the Pride’s matches and played 173 minutes. She did not log a goal contribution in the postseason, putting one of her six shot attempts on target. The winger completed 34 of her 42 passes (81%) with two key passes but completed just three of her 13 crosses and neither of her two long balls. On the defensive end, Ovalle recorded three tackles, one clearance, and two interceptions. She committed three fouls, drew two on her opponents, and was not booked.
Ovalle appeared in two of Orlando’s games in the Concacaf W Champions Cup, logging 57 minutes off the bench without a goal contribution, attempting one off-target shot. She completed 10 of her 13 passes (76.9%) without a key pass, chipping in three tackles on the defensive end. She committed two fouls, drew two on her opponents, and she wasn’t booked in the competition.
Best Game
There were a few possible games to choose from in this category, and while I was close to choosing the match with her lone goal of the season (Sept. 26 in a 2-1 road win over San Diego), I ended up going a different route. Still, she scored a nice goal, so here it is:
Instead, I’m going back to her first NWSL start. Ovalle started for Orlando for the first time on Sept. 13 in a 1-1 home draw against Bay FC. She was excellent all game long, but her best moment came in the 70th minute, when La Maga sent in a perfect cross for Ally Watt to flick home with a header to equalize, rescuing a point for Orlando.
Ovalle was Fotmob’s highest rated player in the match from either side with a rating of 8.4 and was a danger all night. She fired eight shot attempts, putting three on target and one off the woodwork. She also completed six of her nine crosses in the game, creating four scoring chances in the game with key passes. One of those should have been an assist on a Marta goal on a beautiful back-post ball, but the captain hit the left post with her shot. She chipped in two tackles, one interception, a clearance, and a recovery on the defensive end, committing two fouls and drawing one in what was a standout performance.
2025 Final Grade
The Mane Land staff gave Ovalle a composite rating of 6.5 out of 10 for her 2025 season. While the Mexican winger played inconsistently, that was to be expected after a midseason move to a new team that was missing its attacking focal point with Banda out. There were signs of the kind of magic moments Ovalle can bring to the Pride attack, they were too few and far between. In fairness, in most of the matches she played there was no one close to her level in the attack with her, and she looked at times too eager to make something happen. Three goal contributions isn’t bad for her first eight NWSL games, but Ovalle clearly needs another threat up top with her to help provide her the space she needs to shoot or deliver one of her lethal passes.
2026 Outlook
Ovalle will be a starter next season and will get to go through a full preseason training camp with the club, which should help her get a better understanding of both what Seb Hines wants from her and how her teammates like to play. She should also get to play with Banda (finally), which could create one of the most dynamic attacking tandems in the league, because some of Banda’s struggles were due to poor service, which Ovalle can help with, and some of Ovalle’s issues were down to a lack of the kind of quick, decisive attacking movements that Banda provides. I expect Ovalle’s production in both goals and assists to jump in 2026 for multiple reasons, but with a healthy Banda, there will be a lot more room for her (and Marta) to operate. A front line of Marta, Banda, and Ovalle is tantalizing.
Previous Season in Review Articles (Date Posted)
- Luana (11/17/25)
- Cosette Morché (11/18/25)
- Elyse Bennett (11/19/25)
- Simone Charley (11/20/25)
- McKinley Crone (11/20/25)
- Grace Chanda (11/21/25)
- Viviana Villacorta (11/22/25)
- Summer Yates (11/23/25)
- Julie Doyle (11/24/25)
- Simone Jackson (11/25/25)
- Zara Chavosi (11/26/25)
- Oihane (11/27/25)
- Cori Dyke (11/28/25)
- Ally Lemos (11/29/25)
- Kylie Nadaner (11/30/25)
- Rafaelle (12/1/25)
- Kerry Abello (12/4/25)
- Haley McCutcheon (12/4/25)
- Angelina (12/5/25)
- Barbra Banda (12/6/25)
- Anna Moorhouse (12/7/25)
- Emily Sams (12/8/25)
Orlando Pride
2025 Orlando Pride Season In Review: Emily Sams
The center back was once again one of the best defenders for the Pride, helping them reach their second straight NWSL semifinal.
The Orlando Pride drafted defender Emily Sams with the No. 3 overall pick in the 2023 NWSL Draft. The former Florida State player signed with the National Women’s Soccer League through 2025 and was loaned to Swedish side BK Hacken FF prior to being selected by the Pride and signing a three-year contract through the 2026 season.
Sams had a breakout year in 2024, winning NWSL Defender of the Year and helping the club win the NWSL Shield and NWSL Championship. She signed a new deal on Feb. 13, 2025, keeping her in purple through the 2027 NWSL season.
The defender showed her versatility this year, playing several games at right back and center back. She was another key player in a successful season for the Pride, helping them to finish fourth in the league and reach the NWSL semifinals.
Let’s take a look at the defender’s 2025 NWSL campaign.
Statistical Breakdown
The defender’s first appearance this year came in the NWSL Challenge Cup against the Washington Spirit. Sams started and played all 90 minutes without recording any shots or goal contributions. She completed 44 of her 52 passes (87%), including four long balls. Defensively, Sams recorded a tackle, an interception, and an aerial duel won.
Sams played in 25 of the team’s 26 regular-season games, starting 24 times and playing 2,183 minutes — the second-most minutes of any Pride player and the most by an outfield player. She took two shots without putting any on target, so she obviously didn’t score any goals. The defender completed 1,284 of her 1,457 passes (88.1%), including 85 of her 146 long balls (58.2%), but didn’t record any assists. Defensively, she added 42 tackles, 33 interceptions, 92 clearances, and 13 blocks. She committed 11 fouls, suffered 25, and was booked once with a yellow card.
Sams started both playoff games, playing all 180 minutes. She didn’t take any shots or record a goal contribution, completing 82 of her 97 passes (84.5%), including five of her 12 long balls (41.7%). She recorded three tackles, four interceptions, a block, and 10 clearances defensively while committing two fouls, drawing five on her opponents, and being booked once.
While a primary starter in the regular season, Sams only played in three of the four Concacaf W Champions Cup games, starting two and playing 164 minutes without a goal contribution. She took one shot that was off target and completed 85 of her 100 passes (85.%). The defender had five tackles and wasn’t booked.
Best Game
Sams’ best game came on Oct. 18 when the Pride traveled to Washington, D.C. for an afternoon clash with the Washington Spirit. The Pride came back from two deficits to defeat their rivals 3-2 and claim a huge three points.
Sams started alongside Rafaelle at center back and was excellent. She completed 41 of her 46 passes (89%), including both long balls, a key pass, and three into the final third. She finished with one tackle, five clearances, four interceptions, and four recoveries. The defender won two of her four duels (50%) in a game where she helped the Pride keep their late lead.
2025 Final Grade
The Mane Land staff gave Sams a 7 out of 10 for the 2025 NWSL season. It’s a decrease from her exceptional 9 in 2024, but still higher than her 6.5 grade in 2023. The grade ties Sams with Rafaelle for the second-highest grade on the team, one point behind Barbra Banda, who was given an eight for her injury-shortened season. Overall, Sams was excellent this year and fully deserves one of the highest grades as she further cements herself as one of the best defenders in the NWSL.
2026 Outlook
Perhaps no player on the Pride is a more definite starter next season than Sams. She’s arguably the team’s best defender and has been a mainstay in the starting lineup over the past three seasons. Her new contract in February means she’ll remain in purple through the 2027 season.
The only question will be where she plays. She’s started at center back and right back several times over the past two seasons, but is best in the middle of the field. However, when Kylie Nadaner and Rafaelle are available, Pride Head Coach Seb Hines has opted to use her at right back.
Regardless, there’s no question that Sams will be a regular starter on the Pride back line as long as she remains healthy. Her presence is something that will be essential if the Pride hope to make a run for a second NWSL Championship next season.
Previous Season in Review Articles (Date Posted)
- Luana (11/17/25)
- Cosette Morché (11/18/25)
- Elyse Bennett (11/19/25)
- Simone Charley (11/20/25)
- McKinley Crone (11/20/25)
- Grace Chanda (11/21/25)
- Viviana Villacorta (11/22/25)
- Summer Yates (11/23/25)
- Julie Doyle (11/24/25)
- Simone Jackson (11/25/25)
- Zara Chavosi (11/26/25)
- Oihane (11/27/25)
- Cori Dyke (11/28/25)
- Ally Lemos (11/29/25)
- Kylie Nadaner (11/30/25)
- Rafaelle (12/1/25)
- Kerry Abello (12/4/25)
- Haley McCutcheon (12/4/25)
- Angelina (12/5/25)
- Barbra Banda (12/6/25)
- Anna Moorhouse (12/7/25)
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