Orlando Pride
Orlando Pride vs. North Carolina Courage: Preview, How to Watch, TV Info, Live Stream, Lineups, Match Thread, and More
Welcome to your match thread as the Orlando Pride (4-14-2, 14 points) take on the reigning NWSL champions, the North Carolina Courage (11-4-4, 37 points). This is the third and final meeting between the two teams this season.
History
This will be the ninth meeting between Orlando and North Carolina. The Courage lead the all-time series, 6-2-0 and have won the last five matches versus Orlando. These teams also played this preseason, when the Courage dominated the Pride, 4-0. The Courage franchise was formerly known as the Western New York Flash before relocating after the 2016 season, and the teams split their two matches when the Courage were still the Flash.
The Pride went 2-1-0 against the Courage during their first year in North Carolina in 2017. In the first meeting of the season Jessica McDonald, Samantha Mewis, and Lynn Williams all found the back of the net as North Carolina won, 3-1. The Pride got revenge a few weeks later as they won, 3-1 for their first win of 2017.
The final match of 2017 was probably the best match of the series, and possibly in Orlando Pride history. It was a back-and-forth affair, and the Pride found themselves up 2-0 with goals from Kristen Edmonds and Marta. Williams haunted the Pride again, as she recorded a second-half brace and the game looked to be heading to a draw. However, Alanna Kennedy found the game-winner in stoppage time off a perfect free kick that put Orlando into third place in the final league standings — the club’s best finish to date.
Last season, North Carolina dominated the Pride, winning the three games by a combined scoreline of 10-3. The last meeting of 2018 looked like the one Orlando would finally win as the Pride were the better team. However, play was suspended in the 22nd minute and had to be resumed the next day. Upon the restart, it once again was all North Carolina, as the Courage came away with a 3-0 victory.
The first meeting this season was on April 17. In the first half, the Pride had one of their best 45-minute periods of the season. However, self-inflicted wounds cost Orlando and North Carolina ran away with it in the second half, winning 5-0.
The last match was a different story. The Pride’s attack stalled and errors gifted Kristen Hamilton a hat trick. Orlando fell 3-0 and failed to score in 260 consecutive minutes after the match.
Overview
The Pride enter this match after a disappointing loss during the week against the Chicago Red Stars. Orlando was outplayed for the entire match but, thanks to a world class performance from Ashlyn Harris, Orlando stayed in the game. Goalless through 90 minutes, the referee award five minutes of stoppage time. Poor defending led to Sam Kerr playing a perfect cross to Casey Short, who headed it in for the win at the death.
Meanwhile, North Carolina is coming off a 6-0 pounding of the Portland Thorns. Williams recorded a hat trick and Debinha scored a goal and added three assists. The win jumped the Courage into first place in the NWSL.
“I think North Carolina has a certain style of play that you know what they’re going to do, but you’ve got to be able to manage it in both the defensive quick transition because they’ve got quick players. They’re an athletic team and that’s how they’re able to score goals quickly,” Head Coach Marc Skinner said. “We’ve got to manage the transitions really well and when we have the ball we’ve got to be offensive. You can’t defend for 90 minutes, we have to be able to take the game to North Carolina and exploit their limited weakness.”
Both teams played a midweek match so expect some rotation. Marc Skinner was very happy with his back line so there likely will not be much change there. However, Carson Pickett could get the nod.
There is no single player to watch out for on North Carolina. Countless players have the ability to change the game and the Pride could come out more defensive. The Courage are, as Skinner noted, particularly strong on the counter and so the Pride will attempt to limit this as much as possible. In the first half on Wednesday, the Pride played with a back five at times, having a winger drop into the defense. This could happen tonight as well.
Williams and Hamilton are second and third in the NWSL Golden Boot race with 10 and nine goals, respectively. Meanwhile, four Courage players are in the top five in assists, and six are in the top 10. North Carolina has the most goals scored (40) and the most assists (33) in the NWSL. The Courage also have the second fewest goals allowed.
Sydney Leroux (maternity), Toni Pressley (45-day Disabled List), Emily van Egmond (left ankle surgery), Alex Morgan (right knee), and Marta (left hamstring) are all out for Orlando. While North Carolina will only be missing Hailey Harbison (left knee) and Leah Pruitt (right knee).
Projected Lineups
Orlando Pride (4-3-3)
Goalkeeper: Ashlyn Harris.
Defenders: Carson Pickett, Shelina Zadorsky, Ali Krieger, Erin Greening.
Midfielders: Dani Weatherholt, Alanna Kennedy, Bridget Callahan.
Forwards: Kristen Edmonds, Rachel Hill, Claire Emslie.
Bench: Haley Kopmeyer, Camila, Marisa Viggiano, Joanna Boyles, Abby Elinsky, Morgan Reid, Danica Evans.
North Carolina Courage (4-4-2)
Goalkeeper: Sephanie Labbe.
Defenders: Jaelene Hinkle, Abby Erceg, Abby Dalhkemper, Merritt Mathias.
Midfielders: Crystal Dunn, Denise O’Sullivan, Sam Mewis, Debinha.
Forwards: Lynn Williams, Kristen Hamilton.
Bench: Katelyn Rowland, Heather O’Reilly, Jessica McDonald, McCall Zerboni, Meredith Speck, Cari Roccaro, Julia Spetsmark.
Referees
Ref: Natalie Simon.
AR1: Brooke Mayo.
AR2: Meghan Mullen.
4th: Laura Rodriguez.
How to Watch
Match Time: 7 p.m. (ET).
Venue: Sahlen’s Stadium at WakeMed Soccer Park Stadium – Cary, NC.
TV: None.
Streaming: Yahoo! Sports app (U.S.), NWSLsoccer.com, NWSL app (international).
Twitter: For live updates, follow along at the Orlando Pride’s official Twitter feed (@ORLPride) and on The Mane Land’s Twitter (@TheManeLand).
Match Thread Rules
This is your live thread for posting comments on the match. So use our comments section below to talk about the game in real time with other supporters. If you’re new, welcome to our happy home! While you’re here, please observe a few basic rules:
- Absolutely no links to illegal streams. They can get us in trouble, and no one wants that.
- Try not to be the person who spews nothing but venom and hate for the team. It’s OK to be critical, and, let’s face it, sometimes even the best teams can be frustrating to watch, but being overly negative relentlessly can sap the enjoyment for others.
- Keep it somewhat clean and fair when criticizing players / officials. You never know who might be reading.
- Do unto others in the match thread, the way you would have others do unto you. We are a fun community and want to keep it this way. We have a moderator, but we’d rather let him enjoy the game instead of having to play babysitter.
Enjoy the match! Go Pride!
Orlando Pride
2025 Orlando Pride Season In Review: Haley McCutcheon
The midfielder reached a career high for goal contributions while providing solid defense and leadership as a vice-captain.
The Pride acquired Haley McCutcheon (née Haley Hanson) in a midseason trade with the Houston Dash on Aug. 18, 2022. Following the 2022 season, the University of Nebraska product signed a new contract through 2024, which the club then extended through 2026 a year later on Dec. 20, 2023. Earlier this year, on June 25, the Pride extended McCutcheon again, and she is now under contract with the Pride through the 2028 season.
Though she joined the Pride having primarily played on the back line while with Houston, during the past two seasons she has played almost exclusively as a defensive midfielder, providing a strong bridge between the defensive and attacking groups.
Let’s take a look back at the midfielder’s fourth season with the Pride.
Statistical Breakdown
McCutcheon started and went the full 90 minutes in the NWSL Challenge Cup game against Washington, playing alongside Morgan Gautrat in the middle of the field in the beginning of the game but moving to right back in the second half. The one shot she took did not hit the target but nearly every pass she played did, as she completed 92% of her passes with one key pass late in the game that nearly led to a Barbra Banda goal. She also added two tackles on defense and committed one foul. She was not booked.
In NWSL regular-season play McCutcheon appeared in all of Orlando’s 26 matches, starting 25 and playing a total of 2,177 minutes, which was third most on the team. She put nine of her 25 shots on target and converted three of them into goals — a career high. The former first-round draft pick completed 77% of her passes with a team-leading and career-high four assists (tied for 11th most in the NWSL) from her 16 key passes and four successful crosses. On the defensive side, she compiled a team-high 56 tackles, while also tallying 22 interceptions, seven blocked shots, and 75 clearances. She committed 33 fouls, suffered 13, and received two yellow cards.
McCutcheon went the distance in both of the Pride’s playoff games, playing all 180 minutes. As compared to the regular season, she was considerably less accurate with her passing, completing only 67% of her passes with one key pass, but she rose to the moment by opening the Pride’s playoff scoring account with a goal against Seattle. That goal came on her only shot on target during the playoffs out of her three attempts. She was an active defender though, contributing five tackles, five interceptions, two blocked shots, and three clearances. She committed four fouls, suffered none, and was not booked.
Seb Hines rested McCutcheon for most of the Concacaf W Champions Cup, playing her in only one game and for 45 minutes. McCutcheon came off the bench in the final group stage game against Pachuca and took an off-target shot, completed 17 of her 20 pass attempts (85%), and did not contribute any defensive statistics of the few that were tracked during that competition. She was not booked.
Best Game
McCutcheon’s most prolific game of the season came in a loss, so I will honor her one goal and one assist game against Chicago by mentioning it,, but for her best game I am going to go with the the playoff-opening 2-0 win over Seattle, when McCutcheon once again became McClutcheon, scoring the game’s opening goal and her third playoff goal in her fourth playoff appearance for the Pride.
That goal was huge, but just as huge was the defensive effort put forth by McCutcheon after scoring, as she contributed a season-high eight interruptions (tackles + interceptions), as well as a blocked shot and two clearances. Seattle outplayed the Pride for most of the game, nearly doubling the Pride in shots taken and more than doubling them in expected goals from open play, but Orlando’s defensive effort, led by McCutcheon, the team leader in both tackles and interceptions, kept the visitors off the scoreboard. It was a strong all-around performance by the midfielder in a do-or-die game, and I believe it was her best of the 2025 season.
2025 Final Grade
The Mane Land staff gave McCutcheon a composite grade of 6 out of 10, a slight step down from the 6.5 we gave her last year. It matches the 6 we gave her in 2023 and is much better than the 5 out of 10 grade she received in her first season in Orlando in 2022. She increased her goal contributions but slightly declined in her pass completion percentage, defensive interruptions per 90 minutes, and touches per 90 minutes — all critical areas for a defensive midfielder. On the whole, it was a solid season for the midfielder, but there were some consistency issues, and like many of the Pride’s players, there was a slight bit of regression from 2024 to 2025.
2026 Outlook
The Pride signed McCutcheon through 2028 earlier this season, so unless they trade her in the off-season she will be back with the club in 2026. Since joining the Pride in 2022, she has started nearly every NWSL game, and that likely will continue next season as well. The Pride’s issues this season were more offensive than defensive, and with nearly every key defensive player coming back, the team will plan to rely on that continuity and stability in the back while trying to figure out how to execute better on the attacking side of the field.
McCutcheon figures to be alongside Angelina in the central midfield for many of the Pride’s games next season, and the club will hope that she can replicate her offensive output while continuing to be a defensive destroyer. She is still in her prime, so I expect that she will play heavy minutes again in 2026, while reaching 100 games played with the club (she is currently at 89), and she will be one of the Pride’s key players as they target another run at the NWSL championship.
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)
Orlando Pride
2025 Orlando Pride Season In Review: Kerry Abello
The left back wasn’t able to “Vamos!” as much in 2025.
The Orlando Pride selected Kerry Abello 24th overall in the 2021 NWSL Draft, but she didn’t sign her contract until Jan 28, 2022, as she decided to return to Penn State for a fifth season. On Feb. 23, 2023, the Pride re-signed Abello to a new two-year contract through 2024 with an option for 2025, and on March 1, 2024 they re-signed her to a new three-year contract through the 2026 season.
Like many of her teammates, Abello’s 2025 fell short of her 2024 season, when she was named to the NWSL Best XI Second Team. That is not entirely surprising given how the team and the players performed in 2024, but it is still somewhat disappointing. Let’s take a look at Abello’s 2025 season. Vamos!
Statistical Breakdown
Abello made her 2025 debut in the NWSL Challenge Cup against the Washington Spirit. She started at left back and played the full 90 minutes. Abello completed 28 of her 40 passes (76%). She had 56 touches and did not take any shots or have a goal contribution. Defensively, she recorded a tackle and two interceptions.
In the NWSL regular season, Abello played 23 games (18 starts) and recorded 1,552 minutes. She completed 680 of her 863 passes (78.7%) but did not record an assist. She scored one goal on 10 shots, three of which were on target. Defensively, Abello recorded 31 tackles, eight interceptions, 34 clearances, and one block. She committed 14 fouls, drew six on the opposition, and picked up two yellow cards.
The defender started both playoff games, recording 180 minutes. She completed 48 of her 65 passes (73.8%) without a key pass or an assist. She took one shot but she did not score a goal. Defensively, Abello made five tackles while recording one interception, one block, and seven clearances. She committed three fouls, drew one on her opponents, and was not booked in the postseason.
Abello did not appear for the Pride in the Concacaf Women’s Champions Cup, though she was on the bench for the Pachuca match.
Best Game
Oftentimes we will designate a defensive player’s best game as one when they score a goal. Kerry Abello did score a goal this season, and it was a doozy. The problem is she scored an own goal a few minutes earlier, so I will not in good conscience make the 3-2 win over the Washington Spirit her best game. However, here is that goal.
Instead, I will give it to her defensive performance in the 1-0 win over the Portland Thorns on Oct. 11. In her 90-plus minutes of action, Abello recorded 71 touches and completed 39 of her 50 passes (78%), including three of her six long balls (50%) and 10 passes into the final third. She also took one shot that was blocked. Defensively, she shined with five tackles, two clearances, and four recoveries. Additionally, she won seven of her eight duels (88%) and her only aerial duel (100%). She did what a defender is supposed to do — keep a clean sheet.
She also earned Player of the Match on SkoPurp Soccer: An Orlando Pride Podcast for her efforts in the 2-0 loss to Racing Louisville on June 6, and the 1-0 loss to Angel City on Aug. 21, but I still felt the Portland game was her best.
2025 Final Grade
The Mane Land staff gave Abello a grade of 6 out of 10 for the 2025 season. This is a drop from the 7 out of 10 she received for her 2024 performance. It’s still an improvement over her 5.5 out of 10 from 2023, and 5 out of 10 from 2022. As you can see, it’s not that she had a bad year, but rather a slight regression from her best professional year in 2024.
2026 Outlook
Abello is signed through the 2026 season, and I expect that she will remain with the club. She showed in 2024 that she can contribute consistent defense on a championship squad. There may be some competition for the starting role depending on who the Pride bring in on defense. The addition of Hailie Mace on the right might push Cori Dyke over to the left. There’s also the possibility that Kylie Nadaner moves out from center back to the left creating competition for the spot.
Abello will be playing for a new contract or auditioning for her next stop if she doesn’t re-sign. I expect she’ll up her game in 2026 as the Pride look to return to the mountain top. As of now, I still have her as the presumptive starter at left back though there’s a lot that can happen between now and the start of the new 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)
Orlando Pride
Orlando Pride Sign U.S. International Defender Hailie Mace
Former Kansas City Current defender signs a three-year deal through 2028.
The Orlando Pride continued their roster building ahead of the 2026 season today by adding defender Hailie Mace. The club announced today that the former Kansas City Current player has signed a three-year contract that will keep her in purple through 2028.
“We are thrilled to have Hailie join our squad and contribute to this team both on and off the field,” Orlando Pride Head Coach Seb Hines said in a club press release. “Hailie is exactly what we look for when we want to bring players in with her versatility, quality on the ball and experience in this league. Really excited to see what she is able to bring and can’t wait for her to get integrated with the squad.”
The 28-year-old native of Ventura, CA spent the last five seasons with the Kansas City Current, where she scored five goals and added 11 assists in 95 appearances (79 starts), logging more than 7,000 minutes played. She was originally drafted out of UCLA by Sky Blue FC (now NJ/NY Gotham FC) with the No. 2 overall pick in the 2019 NWSL College Draft but opted not to sign and instead started her professional career with Melbourne City in Australia’s top flight as a guest player, scoring a goal in her debut against the Newcastle Jets. After two appearances as a guest player, Mace signed with FC Rosengard in Sweden’s Damallsvenskan in February of 2019, where she played in 16 games and scored four goals. Rosengard won the Damallsvenskan on Oct. 30, 2019.
Following her contract in Sweden, Mace signed her first NWSL contract in after Sky Blue traded her rights to the North Carolina Courage in exchange for midfielder McCall Zerboni. The UCLA product registered an assist on a Debinha goal in her first match with the Courage in the 2020 NWSL Challenge Cup. She played only six matches with the Courage, scoring two goals, before going on loan to Kristianstads DFF in Sweden from August to November 2020, helping the club finish in the top three, qualifying for the UEFA Women’s Champions League. She scored five goals in 10 matches with Kristianstads.
The Courage sent Mace to Kansas City on July 22, 2021, in a blockbuster trade, along with Kristen Hamilton and Katelyn Rowland, in exchange for Amy Rodriguez and $60,000 in Allocation Money. Her debut with Kansas City coincidentally came against her old Courage teammates on July 23, 2021. Mace re-signed with the Current on Dec. 19, 2022 to a three-year contract that expired at the end of the 2025 season. She announced on social media in November that she would not return to the Current, and now she’s landed in Orlando.
Mace is tied for the Current’s career assist record (11), and she is coming off a season in which the club won the Supporters’ Shield while setting NWSL single-season records in clean sheets (16), consecutive shutout minutes (869) — breaking the record Orlando set in 2024 — and consecutive shutouts (9). She was named to the NWSL Best XI Second Team after the 2025 season, in which she appeared in 24 matches (including playoffs), starting 16 and playing 1,639 minutes. She did not score a goal in 2025 on just five shots (one on target), but she recorded five assists for the Shield winners. Mace completed 80% of her passes in 2025, with 93 accurate long balls (46.7%), nine key passes and a successful cross.
Adept with the ball at her feet, Mace was successful on 59.1% of her dribble attempts. She won 35 tackles on the year, won 51.8% of her duels, and racked up 42 interceptions and six blocks. Mace committed 24 fouls, won 17 from the opposition, and was booked twice.
On the international stage, Mace has earned nine caps with the United States Women’s National Team, debuting on April 8, 2018, in a friendly against Mexico — a wild 6-2 win. Mace was the only college player named to the 20-player roster for the 2018 Concacaf Women’s Championship, playing 90 minutes in a shutout win over Panama en route to the U.S. winning the tournament. She previously has participated in U.S. Youth National Team camps at the U-20 and U-23 levels.
Mace played both as a forward and a defender at UCLA, and competed at Inter&Co Stadium (then known as Orlando City Stadium) previously in the 2017 Women’s College Cup, where she was an All-Tournament selection for the NCAA women’s soccer tournament. Mace’s UCLA side lost the final 3-2 to rival Stanford in the final. During her four years at UCLA, Mace made 79 appearances (74 starts), playing 6,342 minutes, scoring 24 goals, adding 12 assists, and putting 76 of her 148 shots on target. She was a MAC Hermann Trophy semifinalist in 2017.
What It Means for Orlando
The addition of Mace is a good one, as she’s a skilled player, but it’s also not in an area of need. Mace has versatility, but projects mainly as a defender at the professional level (she moved from center back to forward during her UCLA career). She has played a lot of right back and some center back in a three-player back line — a position in which the Pride currently have Oihane and Cori Dyke, with Emily Sams also playing there at times.
It’s possible this is a signing with another roster move already in mind, which we’ll find out in due time. The Pride are up to 24 players under contract after yesterday’s roster status update. Unless there are more moves to come, it appears that Orlando will continue forward with Kerry Abello at left back, with Dyke or someone else serving as the backup in that spot following Carson Pickett being out of contract.
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