Uncategorized
TML Staff Roundtable: 2020 Orlando City Preseason Thoughts
The 2020 season is upon us. Orlando City has overturned part of the roster, filled some of the holes from last season, and is preparing for its first year under a new coach. With the 2020 schedule almost upon us, I reached out to the full staff of The Mane Land to find out what we’re all thinking ahead of the Lions’ sixth season in MLS.
Not everyone responded but those who did are represented below in full. Since I usually cherry pick the best answers, this will be longer than the usual roundtable piece, so be forewarned: you may need to put a pin in this and come back to finish it later.
What is your biggest concern with Orlando City entering 2020?
David Rohe: Scoring goals. Without an MLS 3.0 level striker (at least for now), several things will need to happen for the Lions to be successful on offense. Nani will need to keep his form from last year, or improve upon it. Of course, we don’t have him to start the season. Dom Dwyer needs to get back to scoring when he wants. I’m not that worried about his dreaded “lower body injury,” but he will need to get back on track. Contributions from the youngsters will also need to be better than last year. With Daryl Dike, Chris Mueller, Benji Michel, and Tesho Akindele as options, the scoring committee needs to be in the mix.
Ben Miller: Creating scoring opportunities. I’m not quite sure Orlando has enough creative pieces in the middle of the field. I’m not worried about Nani or either of the fullbacks when it comes to making things happen out wide, and while Mauricio Pereyra showed good things last year, I simply haven’t seen enough of him yet to know what things will be like. Between Dwyer, Dike, Michel, Nani, and Mueller I think the Lions have plenty of capable finishers but I just don’t know if they have enough creativity to create chances for them to finish. If Pereyra spends time injured or suspended then i think OCSC might really struggle to score.
Guilherme Torres: Striker. We all know Dwyer can score when he’s in good form, but that wasn’t the case last year and it doesn’t seem the Lions currently have a plan B for him. It’s not unlikely that Dom performs better in 2020 than he did in 2019, but if he doesn’t Orlando will be in trouble. I’d like to see another starting-caliber winger signed too, but I think the team can get away without one.
Jenn Glasheen: I’m concerned that with Nani out the first two matches and Dom possibly out due to injury, the season will be off to a rocky start. With the exception of Dike, the club hasn’t added enough attacking pieces to be without both Dom and Nani. My hope is, if that is the case, the team can shake it off and not let it effect their mentality entering future games.
Scott Carnevale: The thing that is most concerning is that it is yet another rebuild year. There are so many new faces this season that things could go in many different directions. On paper it looks like an improvement from 2019 but nobody knows how these new players will acclimate into the league and if they could live up to expectations.
Sean Rollins: My biggest concern for Orlando City remains the striker position. Dwyer and Akindele have the potential to score 15 goals a season but they have yet to show that in purple. This is a position that has been a problem since the departure of Cyle Larin and has yet to truly be addressed.
Bearded Guy: Scoring goals. It goes without saying that City has had some finishing issues, and with a new coach, new players, new system, and Dom sidelined yet again with an injury, it is a major question as to where the goals will consistently come from.
Elliot Evans: Depth at fullback.
Joshua Taylor: Strikers. Orlando City only scored 44 goals last season. Akindele, Michel, and Mueller will have to step up if/when Nani and Dwyer go down.
Marcus Mitchell: My biggest worry is that a sluggish start to the season could set the Lions too far back too early on. With plenty of new faces this season, it will take some games for the players to get used to playing with one another under Pareja’s system. Add in Dwyer’s injury and Nani’s suspension, and wins could be hard to come by in Orlando’s first few weeks. Big matches with Atlanta United, the Portland Timbers, Minnesota United, and a pair against the Montreal Impact all come before June and the Lions could find themselves trying to keep their heads above water when the summer comes.
Alek Pierce: The lack of a true goal-scoring threat has me worried. It feels like the midfield and defense has shored up, and with Gallese in goal, that should help tremendously. I still have my worries about the center backs, but I love Ruan and Joao Moutinho on the flanks in defense and I can see them shining this year in all facets of the game. I’m hoping that Tesho shines this season, Dike grows into a bit player, and the club moves off of Dwyer. It’s just my personal opinion, but I’m ready for Dom to be gone.
My Take: I certainly share the staff’s concerns about goal-scoring in 2020, but I expect Dwyer to bounce back a bit this year and I think we’ll see more offense from Benji. If pressed, I think my biggest concern is the start of the season. With Nani and Dwyer both out at the start and many other players trying to build chemistry, the team could get off to a slow start. If that happens, hopefully it won’t have a snowball effect.
On the flip side, which part of this team are you completely unconcerned about?
Dave: The goalkeeper situation is probably the best it has ever been in Orlando City. Pedro Gallese is a top class MLS keeper, and Brian Rowe showed last season that he is a serviceable starter when needed.
Ben: It feels surreal to say this but I feel oddly confident about the team defensively. We know what we’re getting with Robin Jansson, and assuming Antonio Carlos is the other starter, he also seems to be more than capable, and more mobile than Sane was last year; which should be an additional help. Combine that with starting Peruvian international Pedro Gallese in goal and I think the team will do pretty well for itself on the defensive side of the ball.
Guilherme: Goalkeeper. Rowe wasn’t great last year, but I’m more than fine with having him as a backup. And I really believe Gallese will bring the solidness Orlando has long needed between the posts. He’s physical and experienced and, even if unspectacular, will get the job done.
Jenn: I think the midfield is going to be a strong and consistent piece for OCSC this season. Is typing this jinxing it? Am I jinxing it right now?!
Scott: Goalkeeper. Rowe is not a bad goalkeeper. He is a veteran who will make the necessary saves when called upon. There is not much more you can ask from a backup. Gallese is a top five goalkeeper in the league. I think he will have a bigger impact than Miguel Gallardo did in the USL.
Sean: The position that is in the best condition is the midfield. This year will see a full Mauricio Pereyra, which should be fun for Orlando City fans. They bring back Uri Rosell as a defensive midfielder and still have Nani, who can play several positions in the midfield.
Beard: Surprisingly, I have little to no concern on the defensive side. It might take a few matches to finish the seamless cohesion, but I think the defensive side, from central defensive midfield on back is my least concern.
Elliot: Goalkeeper.
Joshua: Midfield will be solid this year with many returning players like Oriol Rosell, Mauricio Pereyra, and Sebas Mendez, along with new faces like Junior Urso. I expect the midfield to help carry the offense this season.
Marcus: Orlando City allowed 52 goals in 2019, the fewest in one season since joining MLS. With Pareja running things and most of the defense returning, I expect an even lower total this season. Lamine Sané may no longer be on the team, but Jansson is a force at center back and should be able to build a rapport with Antonio Carlos. This will also be the second season together for talented players like Ruan, Moutinho, and Kamal Miller. The biggest difference maker though could be Gallese, who is an upgrade at the position compared to the serviceable Rowe.
Alek: Nani’s leadership and Orlando’s fullbacks. Nani should be able to build off of his excellent first season with the Lions, and Ruan and Moutinho, as I already mentioned, should shine this season.
My Take: I think my compadres are correct about Gallese in net, but I’m anxious to see more of him after having only seen 90 minutes out of El Pulpo with my own eyes in the preseason. I’m least concerned about wherever Nani lines up and the starting fullbacks.
Which of these young players — Sebas Mendez, Chris Mueller, Ruan, Benji Michel, Joao Moutinho, Kamal Miller, and Santiago Patino — will improve the most over last season?
Dave: I think that Benji has a real chance to make an impact. The main reason being the need for goals by committee. He will have the opportunity, especially with Dom injured to start the season. Depending on how he is utilized, he could double his production from five goals to 10. The sophomore slump is a potential with any second-year player, but I think Benji will buck that trend and have a breakout season.
Ben: I think it’ll be Mendez. He’s only 22 years old and even though he had a dip in form as the year went on, I think that was a product of him being a young player in an unfamiliar league who’s still developing. I think partnering him with Pereyra will make a big difference in what he’s asked to do, and I expect him to have quite a good year in 2020.
Guilherme: I’d say Moutinho. The Portuguese showed very little in 2019, so the only way for him to go is up. I think we can all see the skills are there and I hope that with another season under his belt and the presence of a veteran coach like Pareja can make him good, even though that wasn’t the case with Bob Bradley at LAFC. I think Mendez, Ruan and Mueller will all be better players than Moutinho in 2020, but they’re currently nearer to their ceilings than the Portuguese.
Jenn: In my opinion, it’s Moutinho, hands down. I predict Mendez and Michel will have a great season but a healthy Moutinho will finally get to prove himself and with some of those perfect crosses we saw in preseason, I’m excited to watch his performance this year.
Scott: Kamal Miller. The Canadian was very good last season, but I think he has the potential to be an every day starter by the end of this season. He made a few caps for Canada and I think he will become a regular on that back line. His versatility of playing in the center and out wide will also be a factor and help him get more game time.
Sean: The players best suited to improve from last season are Michel and Miller. Michel has played significantly during the preseason for Oscar Pareja and appears to be in his plans throughout the season. He improved as he continued to play last year and I don’t see that changing. Miller is a natural center back that has been used at left back for club and country (Canada). Last year was really the first year he played that position at any level so there was some unfamiliarity with it. As he continues to play significant minutes at the position, I think we’ll see tremendous improvement.
Beard: I think it will be a coin flip between Benji and Sebas. Benji looked like a man possessed in the preseason match I attended, and I think Sebas is going to come into this season with an extra chip on his shoulder.
Elliot: Benji Michel.
Joshua: Mueller was a super sub coming off the bench last year and started 16 games. I expect him to get a chance to be on the wing and have the chance to get more than 5 goals this season.
Marcus: Benji could absolutely break out in 2022. Most eyes will be on Dwyer, Dike, Nani, and fan favorite Chris Mueller, but Michel had a decent rookie season last year with five goals in fewer than 1,000 minutes. I don’t think he will lead the team in scoring or anything, but I think he can reach 10 goals this year. Dike is the only new forward on the team and Dom’s injury could open the door for Michel to prove he is Pareja’s best choice among Mueller, Patino, and Dike. Also as an honorable mention, Moutinho can only improve after a 2019 plagued by injury. I just think Miller can hold him off at the left back position.
Alek: This one’s close, and I don’t think Ruan should even be on this list as he’s one of our best assets, but I hope to see Mueller continue to grow into a threat in the final third. I’m sick and tired of his “super sub” reputation — he’s much more than that and I hope the club’s supporters recognize it this season.
My Take: I think my colleagues have covered this one pretty well. If Moutinho stays healthy I certainly expect this team to be a lot better in 2020 due to his service and because teams can’t cheat so much to Orlando’s right to stop Ruan. But Michel looks like a real player once he finds some consistency and he could turn out to be the first Homegrown to truly star for the team in MLS. Mendez and Miller should also show some improvement. I suspect Mueller may be close to his ceiling, although I’d be happy to be proven wrong. I still love him as a sub for the last 25-30 minutes of a game with the energy he brings off the bench — all due respect to Alek’s response. No one talked much about Patino, and I believe Dike may have surpassed him on the striker depth chart but we’ll find out soon due to Dwyer’s injury.
Orlando City’s record for wins in the club’s MLS era is 12. I’m setting that as the over/under. Are you taking the over or the under and how many total wins are you predicting for 2020?
Dave: I’m taking the under. This team still has a lot to prove, and I’ll be happy to be wrong at the end of the season. I think the team will win 11 matches (two better than last season). Those six points, combined with more draws will help the Lions in 2020.
Ben: I’ll take the over and predict 13 for 2020. The team won nine games last year and a number of the Lions’ 10 draws and 15 losses were either one-goal losses or games in which the team gave up points from a winning position. I think the team will be better organized and better disciplined under Pareja and should be able to turn at least four of those 25 games into wins.
Guilherme: I’m taking slightly over, with 13. This roster seems to be the most talented the club has ever had, even if not by much, but I think Pareja is far better than any other coach the Lions have ever had. Competition will be tougher though.
Jenn: Over! I predict 13 Ws for the Lions.
Scott: Under. I will continue to pick the under until this team proves that it can consistently win games. I’ll give them 10 wins this season. I think they have the potential to get around 14-16 wins, but somehow they always find a way to lose games.
Sean: I think this will be a difficult season for Orlando City. I see them winning at or fewer than 12 games. This is primarily because it will take time for everyone to adjust to the changes. The club is dealing with a new head coach, new second-team coach, several new players, and this is Luiz Muzzi’s first full year really being in charge. I think this team has a bright future but I think the improvements will be seen in the next two or three years. Even Muzzi said this is a slow process and fans have to be patient.
Beard: Over. I think the season plays out opposite much of the past season, and this club struggles out of the gate. They find their form late in the first quarter of the season and just progress from there. I predict 16 wins.
Elliot: Over — 13 wins.
Joshua: Over. I expect the Lions to get 15 wins this year and finish third in the Eastern Conference.
Marcus: Call me a dreamer, but I’ll take the over on this one and go with 14. Pareja’s game plan should keep the Lions in most games and give them an opportunity to win late. I don’t think we will see a resurgence of the Cardiac Cats’ late-game heroics, but I believe this team will hold onto leads much better than last year and surprise teams when they’re on the road. When he joined FC Dallas in 2014, Pareja led the club to their most wins in a season (16) since 2006. While I don’t think Orlando will reach that total, I think the club record will be broken.
Alek: I’ll take the over. I have faith in Pareja — more than I’ve had with any other manager the Lions have had over the last few years.
My Take: A mixed bag from the staff here and I’m not going to help matters because I’m predicting a push. Ben provided great reasoning. It seems like the team should be better and able to turn a few draws into wins and/or a few losses into draws. The schedule is a little easier (in theory) with LAFC and Seattle — two teams Orlando has never beaten — off this year’s slate, along with San Jose. However, I’m predicting a slow start due to Dom and Nani’s absences early and tougher games late in March. Orlando has to jell and get used to Pareja’s system, and Muzzi’s overhaul isn’t quite finished, as he has said and as Sean reminded us above. I don’t know if Carlos will be as good as Lamine Sané was last year. I don’t know if Ruan will go from “fast guy” to “fast guy who doesn’t easily go down looking for calls and instead fights to set up goals.” I will be ecstatic if this team surpasses 12 wins in 2020. There will be growing pains, but I do expect some growth in the right direction or it will be a disappointing season.
Which of the new Lions will be the most valuable of all the team’s off-season signings?
Dave: This was a tough choice for me. I had already mentioned Gallese as a top level MLS keeper, but I’ll have to go with Júnior Urso. Obviously, Urso adds experience to the midfield, but that isn’t why I picked him. His ability to cover ground, connect passes, and shoot from distance will give Orlando something different. He will be a threat outside that will help unlock defenses and allow the forwards to score more goals.
Ben: I have to go with Gallese here. Make no mistake, Rowe was a lot better last year than plenty of people gave him credit for, especially in front of a defense that faded badly down the stretch and didn’t do him a ton of favors. With that being said, I think a lot of people around the league are sleeping on just how good Gallese has been in recent years — he has 62 caps with Peru for a reason. Having someone of that caliber in goal should be a massive help, and while OCSC has had some good goalkeepers I think he’ll become the new standard by which we judge them.
Guilherme: If Pareja is an option, I’d go with him. He’s proven in MLS and brings a background that fits well with the several Latinos the team has, which should make communication very smooth. On the field, I take Junior Urso. He’s an intense, two-way player and was successful in a Brazilian league which is far superior than MLS, so I see no reason why he wouldn’t succeed in the U.S. too. I don’t he’ll be a Best XI player or anything, but his production will help a lot.
Jenn: Gallese. His calmness and experience in goal is something a lot of people are counting on this season. I’m hopeful that he won’t have to work too hard with the defense, but I putting my trust in him to clean up.
Scott: I have to go with Gallese here. He will make some amazing saves this season that will keep Orlando in games. Having a top goalkeeper is a huge blessing that Orlando has yet to have in MLS. A huge save on one end can turn momentum and provide a goal on the other. Even if the season doesn’t go as planned, he will get the fans on their feet.
Sean: Goalkeeper has been a struggle for Orlando City during most of its five previous years in MLS. Joe Bendik had a short period of excellence but they’ve been unable to find that one guy. I think that Gallese has the experience and determination to be a great goalkeeper in this league. It will take time for Jansson and Carlos to get used to each other and I think Gallese will be called upon a lot in the first few weeks.
Beard: El Pulpo. Eight hands down it will be Gallese.
Elliot: Gallese.
Joshua: Goalkeeper Pedro Gallese looks to establish himself as the top keeper for the Lions. With his World Cup and Copa America experience that will bring valuable experience as the Lions will push for the playoffs.
Marcus: I think Junior “The Bear” Urso will be the most valuable player brought in. Cristian Higuita, Will Johnson, Carlos Ascues, and Sacha Kljestan are no longer Lions and Urso helps fill that void as both a tough midfielder and a leader on the team. He was named captain in the team’s final preseason game and his personality is infectious if you’ve seen him in interviews. The 30-year-old complements Nani and Mauricio Pereyra well in the midfield and should start most games for Orlando.
Alek: Gallese, though Urso could prove me wrong. I think having Pedro is going to help us forget about all of the issues this club has had in between the sticks in the last few seasons, and I can’t wait for him to show us what he’s made of.
My Take: The staff covered it pretty well here. Gallese and Urso look to be the most important additions to me (and, off the field, Pareja, as Guilherme pointed out). But don’t sleep on Rodrigo Schlegel. Having a dependable reserve center back is a luxury and I came away from his preseason minutes rather impressed.
Is this the year? Do the Lions reach the postseason in their sixth MLS season and first under Pareja?
Dave: With the information I have right now, I’ll be optimistic and say they make the playoffs. Barely. I still see challenges for this team, but the schedule is front-loaded, allowing the team to find an identity in the friendly confines of Exploria Stadium. It won’t all be pretty, but I believe they are heading in the right direction.
Ben: Oooof. Ultimately, I don’t think so no. This team is going to be losing a couple very important players in Mendez and Gallese to Copa America 2020, and, depending on his performances up to that point, Andres Perea has an outside shot at making the Colombia squad after a very strong showing at the U-20 World Cup last year. Those absences, combined with this roster not being the finished article yet, means that I think this team improves from last year but comes up around four to six points short.
Guilherme: Unfortunately, I don’t think so. But that’s not to say Orlando didn’t do a good off-season job, which I think it did. I just think that looking at last year’s standings, from the seven teams that finished ahead of Orlando only the New York Red Bulls and Atlanta United (to a smaller extent) have regressed. On the other hand, the Columbus Crew got better and I like Inter Miami too. I think there will be opportunities for the Lions to make it to the playoffs, but I wouldn’t bet on it. They are on the right path, though.
Jenn: Yes!
Scott: No. Same as question No. 4, I will continue to not believe it is possible until I see otherwise. I think the team has the potential to not only make the playoffs, but to host in the first round. I don’t believe they will actually do it though.
Sean: Unfortunately, I don’t think that the Lions will make the playoffs this year. I think they’ll struggle early in the season and pick it up as the year goes along. There’s a lot of promise in this team and the coaching staff should be trusted. But this is a multi-year process and the success won’t be seen quite yet.
Beard: Yes.
Elliot: No.
Joshua: Yes.
Marcus: I think Orlando finally pulls it off, although just barely. The entire league got better this year and I can see the Lions in a similar position late in the season as 2019. Except this time they won’t collapse and will do just enough to finally reach the postseason in either the sixth or seventh spot. It will be euphoria for Orlando fans until Atlanta United or Inter Miami eliminates them in the first round and spoil the party.
Alek: Yes. This is the year. I think the Lions scrape in and then lose in the early stages of the postseason, but progress is progress, and I foresee it happening this season.
My Take: First of all, Marcus’ last line has me salty. Don’t even put that out into the universe! This has been a typically optimistic group when it comes to playoffs in the past, but these answers speak volumes about the reality of Orlando City’s MLS existence to date. The team continues to reset and this is just the start of the Pareja era. To me, this team has a ceiling of sixth place, but I think it’s more likely that it will finish about eighth or ninth in the Eastern Conference. The only playoff team from last year that looks vulnerable to falling out is New England and there has been improvement from almost all the non-playoff teams from last year.
Hit me with your boldest prediction for Orlando City’s 2020 season. Make ‘em extra spicy!
Dave: Orlando City earns 57 points on the season for a whopping 20 points higher than in 2019. As such, the club easily makes the playoffs, has five players with 10+ goals, and +15 goal differential.
Ben: Dike scores double digit goals and bags at least seven assists. One of the things Dike was best at in college wasn’t just scoring, but providing assists and creating opportunities for his teammates. If this team exceeds expectations this year I think a big part of it will be because Dike forms a good partnership up top with Dom and helps spread some wealth in terms of chance creation. He’s obviously a big body that’s capable of holding up play well, but he also has good feet and is a very capable passer. My bold prediction is that he comes good very quickly for the Lions.
Guilherme: Center back Antonio Carlos will be one of the team’s top five goal scorers in 2020.
Jenn: My bold prediction is that for the first time in OCSC history the Lions will reach the postseason but will be eliminated in the first round. I also predict the Lions will play in the final match for the U.S. Open Cup.
Scott: Dike wins Rookie of the Year. He should get ample amount of opportunities this season and if he produces then Pareja will keep him in. There is plenty of competition at the striker position with Dwyer, Akindele, and Michel likely ahead of him on the depth chart but he should still get plenty of chances and I think his ability to assist and score will make him a valuable weapon this season.
Sean: My bold prediction is that Dwyer scores 18 goals and breaks the club’s MLS single-season mark. People are down on Dwyer but he’s getting a fresh start with Pareja and has something to prove. I think with Nani and Pereyra behind him, he’ll have more opportunities with bounces in front of goal — his specialty.
Beard: Gallese is up for MLS MVP by year end. He wrecks MLS as the saves leader and is absolute key to this club making a decent playoff run for the first time in its history. He also helps the new Lions win the U.S. Open Cup.
Elliot: Moutinho will lead team in assists.
Joshua: Orlando City will win the 2020 U.S. Open Cup and make the playoffs.
Marcus: Let’s talk about goals for my bold predictions. I think Orlando City scores a little under 50, but that four Lions reach double digits. Dwyer comes back with a vengeance. Nani converts some free kicks and penalties while leading the team in assists once again. Akindele’s reunion with Pareja will pay off and he will reach 10. Michel gets to 11, with five or six in the first few months and the rest late in the season. I don’t think Mueller, Patino, or Dike get more than five. Only Nani makes the All-Star Game, Dwyer doesn’t lead the team in scoring, and Pereyra ends up scoring more than Mueller, Patino, and Dike.
Alek: Tesho will lead the team in scoring. He’s back to his roots with Pareja at the helm, and while he isn’t Orlando’s most talented, fastest, or technically gifted striker, I see him making a difference this season. Again, I’m ready to move on from Dom, and I think Tesho can fill that void. Another bold prediction? Dike finds more minutes than anyone expects, and performs admirably in his rookie season.
My Take: Lots of bold flavors and spices in these bold takes and I’d love for all of them to happen. I have no reason on paper to think it will happen but I will predict the Lions finally get a win against Atlanta.
There it is in writing. Our preseason thoughts are out there for all to see — and to point and laugh at when some of this stuff looks completely out of whack at season’s end. I want to thank new TML copy editor Elliot Evans for weighing in with his brief responses despite the fact that his wife gave birth this week. Congratulations to Elliot and his better half.
Feel free to weigh in on these questions below in the comments section.
Uncategorized
State of The Mane Land 1/1/25
Our 10th season of covering the club and second as an independent enterprise was a great one, and a memorable one.
Happy New Year, TML family! As we head into 2025, I’d like to update you on how things are going. As always, I want to be transparent with you, because we owe you that for your support over more than a decade of covering Orlando City, the Orlando Pride, OCB, and “all things” soccer-related in the City Beautiful. (“All things” is in quotation marks because it’s admittedly hyperbolic. We’d love to bring you coverage on everything from the professional teams all the way down to rec league results, but that’s probably a pipe dream. We cover as much as our staff size allows us to cover.)
Let me start by apologizing if this is long (it is long, there’s no “if”). I hope you read it all, but I understand if you don’t. This is just the state of things here as of 1/1/25.
Our 2024 was awesome. We watched and covered the Orlando Pride’s incredible record-setting, two-trophy season. We watched and covered Orlando City reaching the playoffs for the fifth consecutive year as the team played deeper into the MLS playoffs and Concacaf Champions Cup than ever before. We watched and covered OCB making the MLS NEXT Pro playoffs for the second consecutive season. It was the first time all three of the club’s teams made the postseason in the same year.
We saw Facundo Torres become the all-time leading goal scorer in Orlando City history. We saw an unexpected second season of Duncan McGuire playing in a purple uniform after nearly losing him to Blackburn. Yes, 2024 was a pretty great year for Orlando soccer.
It’s hard to believe The Mane Land is quickly approaching two full years since VOX/SBNation informed me and many other soccer blog managers that they would cease support of our efforts. While that didn’t mean much to us in terms of compensation (almost nothing, in fact, despite many sites like ours operating like a 24/7 source of content and news on their behalf, allowing them to bring in advertising dollars), it was a significant hindrance to us doing this thing we love, because they did a lot of the back-end stuff for us — things like domain registration, technical support of the content management system (that they always seemed to be tinkering with and things often broke as a result), web hosting, etc.
Our readers and podcast listeners stepped up in a big way to help us transition to independence in spring of 2023. The money contributed by our many founders in our GoFundMe campaign and our few member subscribers in our Buy Me a Coffee program has sustained us for two years, establishing our business, paying for expenses like hosting fees, domain registrations/renewals, tax and paperwork filing, etc., and even allowing me to give most of our staff something for their efforts just before Christmas 2023. As the initial GoFundMe dollars continue to recede and are not being adequately replaced by our membership or advertisers, things begin to look a bit scary, but not necessarily dire (yet).
The Plan for Self-Sufficiency
My goal upon The Mane Land becoming independent was to make our site self-sufficient. What that means is that I wanted to be able to pay for the things we need out of a combination of membership subscriptions for additional reader and listener content/perks, merchandise sales, and advertising sales. That part isn’t too hard. The other thing I’d hoped to do to make this site successful was to be able to compensate its contributors regularly, even if it was a small amount. Not only is this important for retention and contributor morale and buy-in, but it would also make it easier to entice new contributors.
I’ve been blessed over the last decade to find other people who share my passion for telling the story of Orlando City, the Pride, and OCB as it unfolds. I consider these contributors friends, colleagues, and co-workers, and I appreciate every single contribution they make to the website, our podcasts, and our social media accounts. They give what they can and I am thankful for every word.
And it kills me that I am failing them and failing you, although I have not quite yet failed completely.
It’s no secret that this is not my “day job.” I work full-time in addition to managing this site. While I’m the kind of person who remains hopeful, I was never under the illusion that TML would grow to the point where I could quit my full-time job and do this for a living. The most optimistic side of me still insists it’s possible in a perfect world…we simply don’t live in a perfect world.
Because I work a 9-to-5 and spend pretty close to full-time hours on The Mane Land as well each week, I have found since our site went independent that I simply don’t have the time to manage and organize the site, write and podcast frequently, and do the things that will bring in the required income to sustain The Mane Land indefinitely without finding more help (which I also don’t have time to do). That’s where I’m failing you, failing our staff, and failing this site (and my business…or side hustle, if you like).
Time: The Enemy
Many hands make light work. Right now, The Mane Land lacks enough hands, and one of my biggest sources of frustration is not having enough time, energy, or success recruiting new contributors.
And this is by no means an issue with current staff. I can’t thank our contributors enough. Senior writer Sean Rollins and David Rohe, my podcast co-host and also a senior writer, have been incredible since their first days in 2014 and 2015, respectively (it blows my mind they’ve been here so long). Marcus Mitchell writes and helps with the editing and is invaluable. Ben Miller has been contributing and being a positive influence in our internal Slack channel since 2017. Dan MacDonald has been photographing games for us when available since 2018. Joshua Taylor kicks in a Lion Links piece every week as he has done since 2020. Nic Josey joined us in 2022 despite being a busy emergency physician by trade, contributing to our coverage. Ryan Smith has mostly stepped away as a staff writer, but even he helped out once or twice in 2024.
We added two fantastic writers in 2024, although Sam Denker, who augmented our Orlando Pride coverage with feature stories this year, has sadly already informed me he is moving on. Andrew DeSalvo has been a world-class addition with his in-depth statistical analysis, overwhelming enthusiasm, and unparalleled volunteerism. The staff has been amazing.
Our first several years, I hardly needed to do any recruiting. I put up a post on the site asking for help, and I’d receve a few dozen emails per year with people volunteering to contribute — soccer fans, aspiring sports journalists looking for experience, college-age writers seeking clips for their portfolio, photographers, graphic artists, etc. Some of those earliest respondents are still on our staff.
For about the last four to five years, the number of applicants has slowed to a trickle. I’m certainly at fault for that, as I don’t spend enough time promoting staff openings or looking for ways to get the word out that don’t eat into our bank account. What was once effortless now requires time and energy. But with a work week of 40+ hours, a daily round-trip commute of an hour, and my various writing and editing duties, I find time to be my biggest obstacle.
And my lack of time is why the financial side of the business isn’t where it needs to be either, because it needs to be in a place where I can not only give our current contributors something for their efforts, but I also need to find incentives for new people to come help us, making the work lighter for everyone, and freeing me up to spend more time running the business.
I have not had the time to properly manage our web shop. I haven’t found the time to design more items or find strategies to sell more of what we have on offer. Our merchandise clearly isn’t resonating, or people simply don’t know about it, and that is something I’d love to have time to fix.
When it comes to raising advertising dollars, I’ve barely had time to put together any pricing, let alone solicit potential advertisers.
And that’s honestly my biggest failing as the managing editor of The Mane Land and owner of the business — not having enough time to do this right. Over the years, we’ve lost a lot of great contributors. That’s nothing new, because blog life isn’t for everyone, and there’s an average shelf life on it. We’ve added some great staff members over the years as well.
One of our biggest challenges is that our current staff almost all live outside the Orlando area, which creates difficulty in staffing matches. Because I believe the best way to cover a team is to do it in person whenever possible, it falls on me to cover the Lions when they’re at home. I’m covering Orlando City matches in person at home and, due to so many of our contributors working nights and weekends, I’m also recapping the road games. In 2024, I covered just about all of the 34 Orlando City regular-season games, five playoff matches, four Concacaf Champions Cup games, and three Leagues Cup matches. That’s more than 45 OCSC games right there.
That’s not a complaint. I love doing it. I’d love it even more if I could scrap the day job and do it full-time, because it’s a huge time commitment on top of a full-time job. Add two to three podcasts per week, writing game previews, editing our contributors’ stories five of the seven nights per week, helping Sean with live coverage when the Pride and OCB play on the same day — and my eternal gratitude to him for dutifully covering the Pride and commuting an hour each way for home matches while also voluntarily providing coverage of OCB and being our primary breaking news writer on weekdays — maintaining our publication schedule, doing most of our social media posts, planning ahead, organizing tasks such as the Season in Review and Top Moments stories, and updating plug-ins and content on the website, and you quickly run out of time to reach out to advertisers, create a rate card for the podcast, design new merchandise, etc.
It also, unfortunately, saps any time I might have to find new contributors for the staff, so it’s a perpetual cycle.
This wasn’t a problem early in our existence, because we had a lot of staff members who lived in town and multiple writers who not only wanted to cover the matches live but actively lobbied to do it. So, it wasn’t necessary for me to cover every game. I wrote more feature stories back then (something I love to do) and had more time for managerial pursuits. Beyond the time commitment, the schedule I’ve been keeping during the soccer season the last few years requires an insane amount of mental energy, because down time comes so infrequently.
Again, this is not meant as a complaint, so my apologies if it sounds like one. If I didn’t love doing this so much, I’d have given it up years ago. It’s merely important to convey this information, so that this State of The Mane Land piece is as transparent as it can be (this is part of the setup, as it were). Summarizing this overly verbose post so far: I don’t have enough time to run this place properly while being responsible for so much of the content, especially the live content, and not having the time to run this place properly is preventing me from finding solutions.
So, what am I driving at, exactly? Bear with me for one more side excursion, and we’ll get there.
Our Financial Health
We began our independence in incredible shape. Our GoFundMe was successful beyond our wildest imaginations. We paid for all up-front costs, like setting up the LLC and some initial design and back-end technical work, as well as two years of everything we needed: web hosting, domain registration fees, our WordPress theme (the site layout, widgets, and font package, essentially), a few WordPress plug-ins we needed, and registered agent services to ensure the business did everything by the book. We also had money to get the business taxes done and make a few minor purchases to help with bookkeeping and day-to-day needs. Life was great because of our GoFundMe Founders.
We did the GoFundMe campaign after having an almost exactly 50/50 split on a couple hundred responses to our online poll, in which we asked our readers and listeners how they’d prefer to support our pivot to independence. About half expressed a preference for a one-time donation through a GoFundMe or Kickstarter type of campaign. The other half said they preferred a recurring monthly subscription service like Patreon (we ended up going with Buy Me a Coffee), in which they would get added content and/or perks for a monthly fee.
Because the split was so close to exactly 50/50, we opted to do both and give everyone a choice. We did not launch these at the same time, and I think that was a mistake on my part. We launched the GoFundMe first, because we needed start-up funds, and if we didn’t reach our goal, our plan was to refund everyone’s money and call it a day. But we surpassed our goal in a matter of hours! In the end, we exceeded our start-up goal by a lot. But I think many people either missed the message that we were planning to do both the GoFundMe and the monthly subscription service, or they were just so eager to provide immediately help that they donated up front. Either way, it ultimately undercut our subscription drive.
Given how successful our GoFundMe was, I figured if we were able to get even half the number of subscribers as we had initial Founders, we’d be in amazing shape — even if the subscribers came in mostly at the Homegrown Player level, rather than TAM Player or Designated Player levels. I vastly overestimated how many subscribers we could count on, basing my estimations on the initial poll, and not thinking about the delayed timing of the subscription launch.
While I wasn’t quite putting my faith in 50/50, I thought we would be able to pull in more subscribers than we did. We fell well short of that, so if people did understand we were doing both, it seems I’ve failed to provide the requisite incentive perks to entice subscribers. I’m certainly willing to take your suggestions for add-ons we can offer that might help increase our subscription base. It’s another thing I haven’t had time to think much about, along with more feature content that I had envisioned doing just for subscribers.
As mentioned above, I have not had the time to properly manage the web store. I haven’t found the time to design more items or find strategies to sell more of what we have on offer. Our merchandise clearly isn’t resonating, or people simply don’t know about it. I realize some people won’t want to wear our logo (although I think it’s cool), and I do have thoughts on other things we can offer that are more soccer-specific in nature, but I haven’t had the (say it with me) time to create them.
In terms of advertising dollars, I’ve barely had time to put together any pricing, let alone solicit potential advertisers. Our podcast got its first real sponsor in 2024 for a limited time, and we profoundly thank WJ Dog Treats for sponsoring a month’s worth of podcasts last year. They were great to work with and we enjoyed ad-libbing their podcast ads. Sorry if they ran a little long. We are verbose and we were having fun.
Why am I telling you all of this behind-the-scenes financial stuff? Because more successful finances would allow me to offer new writers a financial incentive to join the staff. It turns out that there are more people who are willing to write stories every week for $100 a month than people who would do it for free out of their love of the club.
Failures and Successes
It killed me not to be able to compensate our deserving staff writers in 2024 as I was able to do in 2023. It made me feel good that those who contributed regularly and provided the bulk of our content had a little something extra in their stockings before Christmas 2023. I didn’t mind the hit to the business savings account, because the staff earned it, and I had the ability to pay it, so it was paid.
It also killed me not to be able to send Sean to Kansas City to cover the NWSL final between the Pride and the Washington Spirit. He earned the right to do that with his excellent coverage of the Pride the last few seasons and for voluntarily providing our readers coverage of OCB. We looked into it, but the costs of travel and hotels the week of the NWSL final was just a bit too high for comfort. And you deserve the kind of coverage that comes from our writers being there, too.
We just couldn’t quite do it, because I wanted to avoid cutting things too closely when it comes time for renewing things this spring. I have kept enough in reserve to pay for those upcoming renewals — to have the business taxes done; complete our annual filing; renew the hosting, domain registration, and our theme license; and perhaps have a couple hundred dollars left over in case something unexpected comes up.
I have managed to successfully avoid some expenses since going independent by doing things like moving The Mane Land PawedCast last year to the Fans First Sports Network, which takes care of our podcast hosting costs and helps us promote the show. They’ve been great. They even trickle in a few advertising dollars for us, but we’re talking about a small sum that doesn’t always even make the necessary minimum to distribute it monthly (most months it’s like having one DP-level monthly subscriber).
We began SkoPurp Soccer: An Orlando Pride PawedCast to better serve Orlando Pride fans in 2023, and we enjoy doing it. We are hosting that for free on Spotify for Podcasters, which is a bit limiting as a platform, but it gets the job done at no cost. Our goal is to move that show to FFSN when the audience grows sufficiently to make it worth their while. That hasn’t yet happened, and probably won’t have much (if any) positive financial impact when/if it does, but it will be a step in the right direction for the show.
However, starting that show created another recurring time commitment for me. I wanted to find a permanent host for it who wasn’t me, but so far, we’ve had no one express interest in taking it over.
Our Future
If any or all of the above sounds at all ominous, or even complain-y, it’s not meant to be. Our situation is serious, but at the end of the day, this endeavor is just a blog and a couple of podcasts. My plan is for us to continue through 2025 and beyond, but we have some important milestone deadlines ahead, and the first of those comes up in the spring, when I must determine whether the business will/should continue. So, we’ll approach the season as if we’ll be here throughout 2025, but if i’m being honest, there’s a legit chance it stops before the MLS All-Star break. I can’t help that right now, as much as I wish I could.
Our future is not money-driven (not in a strict sense). We have the funds to pay for another year and probably two with what is in the bank and the small amount we have coming in from subscribers. I’ve even had staff members volunteer to pay some of our costs if need be. That is extremely humbling, and they have my undying love for offering, but that’s not the issue. We have the financial means to survive, even if we aren’t exactly thriving.
However, to make TML work as a business requires me to have more time to do the things that will sustain us — finding more volunteer contributors (who would possibly be compensated when income allows, but with no guarantees) or moving the business to a level of financial health that would allow us to attract paid contributors. The common theme here is the “more hands” thing. TML doesn’t need to make money, as nice as that would be. It needs to not lose money, to sustain itself, and (optimally) to give at least some small reward to those creative people putting in the work.
In short (LOL, I know), our continued existence is threatened not by a lack of revenue, but by a lack of time, and more specifically, my lack of time.
As much as I love every minute I spend on this site and our podcasts, it isn’t healthy to spend so many of those minutes doing it. Fatigue is real. Burnout is real. Anxiety about who will cover a game if I want to occasionally spend a weekend in the mountains with no Wi-Fi is real. Mentally, I’ve been running on fumes by midseason each of the last few years, and by the end of the year I’m a complete wreck. I have poured more than a decade of my life into this labor of love and have done so gladly, but my body and brain keep reminding me I’m not a kid anymore. I must have more down time, more days off during the season, and a chance to unplug and quiet my mind. The only way for me to get that time is by adding more staff writers (especially local ones) and editors. Not having the time to beat the bushes to find them is agonizingly ironic.
While our plan is to continue indefinitely as we have, I must honestly admit that “indefinitely” may not include the entirety of 2025. I need to have an answer on our continued existence in place by the first week of March. This is a self-imposed deadline, but there’s no sense in spending a few hundred dollars on recurring business expenses in the spring if nothing changes, and I don’t want to feel at the end of 2025 like I did at the end of 2024. I’d rather dissolve the company and split whatever remains in our bank account among the people who have helped me do this over the years.
If we can add staff writers/editors, we can and will continue for as long as you’ll have us. It seems so simple. It used to be. It has not been since about 2018 or so.
What Can You Do?
If you’re one of those souls who is prone to asking, “What can I do to help?”, first, bless you. The world needs more people like that. Secondly, there are a few things.
First, think hard about the people you know (or even yourself). Do you or someone you know follow soccer and have the ability and willingness to write? If so (and remember: if you can talk about soccer, you can probably write about it), you or that person can join our staff and help us build our numbers to lighten my load and the load of the staff, so that we have more time for recharging our batteries and growing the business side of things.
Do you or someone you know own a business? If so, perhaps we can partner up on something that would enable us to provide advertising inventory to you that would help your business, while the ad revenue would specifically endow a paid beat writer during the season.
Are you or someone you know creative? If so, you could suggest ways we can improve our Buy Me a Coffee subscription or web shop offerings. You might even donate a design for a t-shirt or other merchandise. Or you might be able to help us with some graphics to help our social media posts pop, drawing more attention to TML, which might translate into more subscribers.
Other free things you can do include chatting up your friends (real and virtual) about us on Facebook, Twitter (never X), BlueSky, Reddit, or elsewhere. You could repost or share our stories and include your personal thoughts on what you liked about them or why they made you happy/angry/sad/curious/etc. You could urge your Orlando City/Pride-loving friends to become readers or podcast listeners. All of these things might help us find people who may want to contribute to the site/podcasts or help build revenue to where we can add paid contributors.
All the above would cost you nothing, except the advertising, which is a business expense, and if you’re doing that with us, you’ll probably be doing that elsewhere anyway.
Finally, you can check out our Buy Me a Coffee page and consider whether our stories/podcasts enrich you enough to commit to a subscription. Do we provide you with $5 worth of entertainment per month? If so, please consider supporting us at the Homegrown Player Level. If you are in a position to help and like the perks we offer, you could consider subscribing at a higher level. Building finances and becoming capable of paying contributors would help with the whole time thing.
No one ever knows what the future holds in any aspect of life. We hope to be around for a long time. Whether that happens almost entirely depends on how successful we are in augmenting our staff with people who are as excited as we are about telling the story of the soccer club as it unfolds. As long as we’re here, we’ll continue to do our best to bring you worthwhile coverage of the club.
Thank you so much for your support. I am humbled and encouraged by it, and I am keeping the faith. We will keep doing our thing as usual for now. I will reassess in a couple of months and I will keep you informed.
We here at The Mane Land wish you a happy, healthy, successful 2025, and if the club wins more trophies, that would be nice too.
Uncategorized
A Note About Hurricane Milton and The Mane Land
First of all, be safe. Second of all, be safe. Third of all, here’s what’s up regarding our upcoming schedule.
Hello, Mane Landers! With another powerful storm bearing down on the Sunshine State, it’s good to know that Orlando City and OCB are off and the Pride are on the road this weekend. We hope that everyone remains safe as Hurricane Milton passes through and near the areas in which many of you (and us) live.
As always, I hate writing these pieces but it seems to be required at least once per year, so I wanted to let everyone know that we at The Mane Land are going to do our best to continue our normal coverage and publication schedule as best we can — understanding that we are not a priority for anyone in the area at the moment. Our schedule in the coming days is not really up to us, as there are always unknown aspects to every storm, and while Hurricane Milton may or may not disrupt some or all of us personally, there are cell, internet, and electricity services that could be affected — something far beyond our control — to the point where our normal service isn’t possible. So we ask that you be aware of that and to be patient if that happens.
Hopefully our cable/satellite/electricity/internet will stay on for all the normal reasons, as well as so we can continue our coverage of Orlando’s soccer teams.
As Hurricane Milton threatens our state, we want to wish all of you the best of luck. Mother Nature is not a force to be trifled with, so we hope that everyone takes the mindset to err on the side of caution rather than take unnecessary risks. The weather is undefeated and should never be challenged.
The weather is undefeated and should never be challenged.
For those who read us throughout the Central Florida area and beyond, please let this serve as a reminder that several of our writers will be within reach of the storm, and all or some of us could find ourselves without power, internet, and/or cell service soon. Some of our staff members live in the more vulnerable areas along the Gulf Coast and Space Coast, where flooding could be severe.
When The Weather Channel sends people to your area to broadcast about the storm, you definitely take notice.
The safety of the TML staff is obviously of paramount importance to me. I urge all of our staff to take appropriate precautions, including – should they deem it necessary – evacuation. I urge everyone to be wherever they’re going to be by 5 p.m. tonight and then to stay put. As a website, we will strive to continue to function as normally as possible over the coming days.
I will personally do everything in my power (provided I have power and either the internet or cell service, or both) to maintain the site’s schedule of features with whatever breaking news we can cover over the span of the storm’s passing and beyond. However, please be aware that the site could potentially go without updates for an indeterminate period if the storm is particularly destructive and leaves us without power/internet, or with more immediate problems that must be overcome before we can even think about sitting down to write a blog post or record a podcast. This may be unavoidable, but we will do everything we can to avoid it.
I will try to provide updates from The Mane Land Twitter account (@TheManeLand) periodically to let people know that we’re OK as I get reports from our staff, and what the status of stories will be over the days (and weeks, if need be) to come. We hope the storm isn’t too disruptive to our daily functions but…this is a blog and it is infinitely less important than real life. I guess what I’m trying to say is that we’ll do what we have to do and get back to normal as quickly as we can.
Hopefully I’ll be able to look back on this post in a few days and laugh about having written it.
But this is a two-way community, so enough about us. Where are you located in relation to the storm’s path? What are you doing to prepare for the hurricane? Are you getting out of harm’s way, or are you staying put? How are you planning to pass the time? What are your best hurricane hacks? Let us know what you’re up to in the comments section below and keep us updated on how the weather is affecting your area.
Stay safe, Lion Nation.
Uncategorized
Reflecting on Eight Years with The Mane Land
A look back over my time with The Mane Land (so far).
As of last week, I have been a contributor at The Mane Land for eight years. That’s longer than I’ve ever been at any of my actual jobs in my life. There are literally only a couple of people who have been with the site longer, but I’m still amazed at how long it’s been. This is not to say I’m going anywhere, but rather I wanted to take the opportunity to look back at the past eight years, and look ahead to the future.
Unlike some, I didn’t come to be a supporter of Orlando City until it was announced that the club was joining MLS. At the time, I was contemplating picking a club to follow in MLS, but being in Tallahassee, there were no nearby options at that time. I considered FC Dallas and D.C. United, given the two were geographically closer in proximity to me than any others. Fortunately, it was literally while I was considering my options that the announcement was made regarding Orlando City’s jump to MLS. It was an easy decision.
As I do in many aspects of my life, I immediately started researching my new club, which led me to the content being produced by The Mane Land. There was also an article on the site titled “Join The Mane Land Staff.” I had often over the years internally bemoaned that I rarely used my Bachelor’s degree in English, and the desire to write welled up in me so much that I emailed the staff.
In response, one of our former editors, Andrew Marcinko, contacted me and said “I think your voice would be a great fit on TML.” He asked me to submit a Fan Post (those went away with our presence on SBN), and then another piece for review. Following that, our founder and managing editor, Michael Citro, emailed me to welcome me to the staff. I had no idea at the time how big a part of my life this blog would become.
I started out writing Monday’s Lions Links — often one of the more difficult days to write — and a feature piece. It’s been many years gone by now, but there was a time when the feature piece was “Pride Pub,” an ongoing series that paired craft beer and good food based on Orlando City’s opponent. I can tell you that the research for that was very enjoyable, and I still use some of the recipes I found to this day.
Eventually, I started contributing more match coverage and analytical pieces. Staff came and went, but I never thought to leave since I was enjoying myself. Sometime after that, I was promoted to senior columnist, for which I’m grateful. I can without reservation say that I’m a better writer thanks to my time with the site, and from working with such excellent staff.
In November of 2016, Michael asked if I wanted to give co-hosting The Mane Land PawedCast a try. My first recording was for Episode 71. We just recorded Episode 354, and with the exception of maybe two or three episodes, I have been on every single one of 283 episodes over the last six plus years. Michael and I have spent a lot of time talking on and off the podcast over the years, and I’m proud of what we have produced and to call him my friend.
We recently added an Orlando Pride-specific podcast called Skopurp: An Orlando Pride PawedCast. For years we wanted to give the Pride the time and attention the club deserves. Now, it is a reality, but one that I ask you to listen to and share. I’ll even put out that although Michael and I are the current hosts, we merely consider ourselves stewards and are hoping to get others to come onboard and eventually take it to the next level.
When I started with The Mane Land, the site had just made the move from a free WordPress site to the SBNation network. It was a big deal, and for many years it was a good partnership. Of course that all came to an end not too long ago, and our blog went the independent route thanks to the incredibly generous support of our readers and listeners. In fact, if you want to be one of those supporting our efforts, please go to our Buy Me A Coffee site to become a member. The move has allowed a flexibility we didn’t have before, but I really want others to have the same sense of joy and accomplishment that I have as a member of our staff.
At one point we had nearly twice the staff that we do now, and as you know, many hands make light work. The opposite of that is also true. I genuinely believe that there must be others out there with the same passion for Orlando City as I have — with the same desire to have their voice heard, whether through the written word or on a podcast. I promise you there is an opportunity to contribute here with us. Our internal discussions are informative, engaging, and often funny. Please consider joining us, as I did eight years ago. I haven’t regretted it and I know you won’t either.
I want to thank all of those who contributed to The Mane Land over the years. There are many that I am still in touch with, though they are no longer a part of the staff. Of course, the current staff are a pleasure to work with, and I appreciate their dedication to what we are trying to do.
Finally, I want to thank the readers and listeners over the years. From those who regularly comment on our articles, to those that I’ve personally met at matches or even randomly on the street, you are a big reason that we do all of this. You are a big reason why I’ve been doing this for the better part of a decade. it is always a genuine pleasure hearing your thoughts or simply sharing a moment of joy together — U.S. Open Cup final, anyone?
So, thank you. I look forward to many more years of this journey together.
-
Orlando Pride1 week ago
Top 10 Moments of 2024: Marta’s Magical Goal Secures Pride’s Spot in NWSL Championship Match
-
Orlando City2 weeks ago
Orlando City Sells Facundo Torres to Palmeiras
-
Orlando City2 weeks ago
Orlando City Adds Four Players in 2025 MLS SuperDraft
-
Orlando City2 weeks ago
Orlando City Announces 2025 Major League Soccer Season Schedule
-
Orlando Pride1 week ago
Top 10 Moments of 2024: Orlando Pride sign Zambian Star Barbra Banda
-
Orlando Pride2 weeks ago
2024 Orlando Pride Season in Review: Marta
-
Orlando City2 weeks ago
2024 Orlando City Season in Review: Ramiro Enrique
-
Orlando Pride2 weeks ago
2024 Orlando Pride Season in Review: Barbra Banda