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Director of Scouting Ricardo Moreira Discusses Orlando City’s Season on Brazilian Podcast

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Orlando City SC is still rejoicing on the team’s best Major League Soccer campaign since the club’s inaugural season. Many of the reasons for the Lions’ success in 2020 have already been well-documented but there are always some behind-the-door situations that make sports teams grow and improve.

In an interview with Brazilian podcast The Pitch Invaders, Orlando City Director of Scouting Ricardo Moreira provided some insights on the historical season, the hiring process that selected Oscar Pareja to be the team’s head coach, how the scouting department operates, and what the next steps are for the Lions.

Here are some nuggets from his interview:

On the Change of Culture in 2020:

“When (Executive Vice President of Soccer Operations) Luiz Muzzi and I arrived, the club wasn’t used to succeeding on the field. There was always this feeling that Orlando would concede a goal in the end and lose matches or tie games it should have won and it was considered a normal thing. I remember that in my second game with the club, at the beginning of the 2019 season, we were beating the Chicago Fire on the road but conceded a goal near the end. The next day we heard from highly ranked people in the organization that they already expected that, that it was something normal with Orlando City. That was possibly the biggest change we had this past year — we basically hit the reset button. From a soccer standpoint, most of the first years of the club in MLS were wasted but we really got everyone on board with the new process and that belief took us where we are now. But there’s still a lot of growth we want to achieve and the bar was set higher. We’ll be judged by different standards.”

On the Head Coach Hiring Process:

“It was a fantastic learning experience for everyone involved in the process. We looked at how companies operate when they are hiring their CEOs and tried to mirror it in a certain way. The first step was to identify how the leadership thought the team should play and find coaches that had their teams playing that same way. We were also convinced that it made complete sense for us to have a Latino coach, which the club had never had. Considering Orlando City’s roots, I always felt that was a big disconnection. We were contacted by several agents and coaches. We went to Argentina, Brazil, Spain, and Italy, watched matches and spoke with coaches in these countries. Oscar checked both these boxes and was also a guy with a winning background in the league. We had him and two coaches who were at the Brazilian Serie A in 2020 as our finalists and asked them to make presentations for us. They had to present us their ideas on how the team should play and also evaluate our players and hopefully their ideas would be similar to ours. The process had a lot of human resources on it.”

On the Choice of Pareja:

“Oscar was always on our list, but when we started looking at names we didn’t know what his situation in Mexico would be. I think that the decision we made for the coaching staff couldn’t have been better. Our ideas aligned with Oscar’s and even if the season hadn’t been as successful as it was, I’d still consider him the right choice in light of everything we accomplished in the club’s daily operation. I’d never seen a coaching staff that works as hard as Pareja’s team. They are very meticulous with every single detail of what they do and I think that behavior inspired every other person in the club to do a little bit more in their own area too. It was a driving force in our process of changing the mentality of the club.”

On How the Players Adapted to the New Culture:

“They all had to adjust to the new system but the feedback we got from them couldn’t have been better. When he held the exit meetings after the 2019 season, I remember that several of our players requested to be traded because they didn’t want to stay with the club for a number of different reasons. We managed to convince some of them to stay and when they came back for the 2020 exit interviews they thanked us for having kept them here and said they’re willing to die for the club and the coaching staff. That tells a lot.”

On How the Scouting Department is Structured:

“What I love about our scouting team is that we complement each other really well. We’ll be working with five scouts entering 2021. Two of them are based in South America, one in Europe and two in the United States — one is focused on college and the professional leagues here while the other one will be working with our academy. The market gets more competitive every day and we always want to be one step ahead because that’s the only way to acquire top talent with the resources we have and the restrictions the league operates. And I’m proud that we’ve been getting some signs that we’re doing a good job on that. We were probably the first club to spot Facundo Pellistri, who’s now with Manchester United, when he was playing for the Under-16s, but for economic and even soccer reasons couldn’t bring him here. And also with the Discovery List. This past season we received allocation money from other teams for 11 players we had on our list. That shows someone else is seeing the value in the players we first identified.”

On Getting Value from College Players:

“We’re seeing more and more and more value in college players. If we look at this past season, three of our starters came from the MLS SuperDraft in Joao Moutinho, Chris Mueller and Daryl Dike. But it’s never a certain thing, you have to try and predict how those players will perform against higher-level competition. With Dike, we saw the talent he had during last year’s Final Four and were hoping we would be available for us with the fifth pick. He had a great season and several teams in Europe are already looking at him. He’s a player that has the potential to bring massive revenue to the club if he’s sold at some point. If you think that in January he was playing in college, that’s a huge leap.”

On Nani’s Impact within the Roster:

“We’ve all been learning a lot from him. He tells stories about his career every day and they’re all fascinating and help us understand how he became the player he is. There was some skepticism when we signed him because of his age, but he’s proving everyone wrong. He’s a great reference for our younger players because of his accomplishments but also for the hard work he puts in every day. Every day he shows us he wants the club to go further. On the field, he’s adapted from being the centerpiece of the teams he played [on] before to be one piece in our system pretty well and that shows how humble he is. We were fortunate to be able to get him from Sporting in very favorable conditions as they were going through a very complicated moment.”

On the 2021 Off-Season Moves:

“I spoke with the coach and the soccer executives and it was kind of weird that for the first time since I got here we all agreed we don’t need to do a lot on the transfer market. In past seasons, there was a massive need for change and the idea that [we] needed to sign 10 or 15 players and even that we had a lot of work to do with the academy and Orlando City B. Now we can look at what we have and identify the few areas we need to improve and focus on them. We believe the East is going to be stronger next year and we’ll need to keep up with that.”

On the Next Steps for the Club:

“I believe the next addition to our soccer department will be a sports psychologist. We think we can benefit tremendously from exploring our players’ emotions in a more efficient way. We were very lucky that this season we had 30 players coming from several places around the world, with different personalities and professional backgrounds and who are in distinct stages of their careers and they were all on the same page and heading in the right direction. But that’s not always the case. We want to take more control of that process in order to maximize the benefits of it and leave nothing to luck, so I think a professional could help us a lot with that.”

Podcasts

PawedCast Episode 515: Orlando City Transfers, Preseason Schedule, OCB Signings, and More

We’re back to discuss Orlando City’s transfer news and rumors, OCB roster additions, and the preseason schedule.

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Image courtesy of Orlando City SC / Mark Thor

Orlando City has gathered for preseason camp ahead of the 2026 season, and we’re still here to talk about it. How long that continues to be the case may unknown at this point, but we’re trending in the right direction, so if that continues, you’re stuck with us for a while longer.

The Lions have had various comings and goings since our last show, and we discuss the movement in and out of the roster. We thought Carlos Coronel was going to be the new Orlando City starter in goal, but he fled to Brazil, so we welcome Canadian international Maxime Crepeau to the City Beautiful. It’s not as splashy an addition, but it could be just as effective a roster move if he can regain his form from his Vancouver and LAFC days.

We also discussed the additions of Tiago, Luis Otavio, and Braian Ojeda. On the other hand, departures took place as well, such as Nico Rodriguez being loaned to Atletico Nacional and the reports that Luis Muriel may be finalizing a deal to move on. We chatted about what those moves mean in the grand scheme of things. Kyle Smith went home and we are glad he’s still playing but sad to see him in another team’s uniform.

The preseason schedule was a bit underwhelming, but we ran through it quickly.

Our mailbagbox was a little light, and it proved to us how little we know about the Polish national team. Remember, if there’s anything — and we do mean anything — you want us to address on the show, just ask us by tweeting it to us at @TheManeLand with the hashtag #AskTMLPC, or hitting us up on Bluesky Social with that same hashtag.

Finally, we talked a bit about the recent moves OCB has made, including the addition of a Brazilian striker. Former OCB forward Shak Mohammed is off to Nashville, while OCB/OCSC left wing Yutaro Tsukada showed up to preseason camp with a wedding ring. Congrats to Yutaro!

Note: we are now in our off-season podcast schedule, which is guaranteed to give you at least one episode per month but we will only be weekly if/when news warrants it. We’ll also return for at least one more show to say goodbye if things don’t work out for us to continue, but we are hoping it doesn’t come to that!

Be sure to rate and review our show wherever you get your podcasts. Remember, we’ll read any five-star reviews we get on Apple Podcasts on the next show.

If you’d like to support our independent writing and podcasting efforts, we’d love to have you as a subscriber or donor over at our Buy Me a Coffee site.


Here’s how No. 515 went down:

0:15 – An update on our staffing crisis is more hopeful than the last one, and we go through the various arrivals and departures.

30:16 – The mailbagbox seeks help for Orlando City from Poland and wants to know which position we’d least like to see the club make a Designated Player signing.

41:52 – OCB news, a new home for Shak, and Tsukada ties the knot.

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A Few Words About the Future of The Mane Land

TML needs help to continue bringing you coverage of Orlando City, the Orlando Pride, OCB, and all things soccer related in the City Beautiful.

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Stock image courtesy of GoDaddy.com Managed WordPress

For the last 11 years, The Mane Land has worked hard to provide daily content telling the story of Orlando City SC, the Orlando Pride, OCB, and any other soccer-related events we can get to in the Central Florida area. We love doing that, but we’re at a critical stage in being able to do so. Staff has been difficult to replace in recent years, and we’ve come to a point where some of us have not only been stretched to an unsustainable limit, but we’ve been going at that rate for multiple years without a break.

To that point, TML is now at a critical juncture where we must have more contributors who can cover live events in order to survive in our current format (and possibly at all). For the past few years, we have had only two primary game night writers covering three teams, and we are unable to continue at that pace, regardless of how much we enjoy doing it.

To continue as an entity, we’re going to need anywhere from two to four new contributors who can pitch in with game-night coverage of Orlando City/Orlando Pride matches. Additionally, another copy editor is essential, while two more would be preferred.

We’d like to continue into 2026, but if we can’t get the additional help we need, the current plan is to shut down at the end of the 2025 calendar year. The minimum we need to carry on would be two new live event writers and a copy editor.

What does this mean? Well, if you’ve ever thought it would be cool to cover soccer matches (it is) or thought about joining us, now is the time to volunteer. If you enjoy soccer and talking about this club with your friends, you might be perfect for our team, because if you can talk about soccer, you can probably write about it as well. Writing is just talking on a screen with your fingers, after all.

To get started, please write to us at themaneland@gmail.com and let us know how you’d like to contribute — writing, editing, etc.

It is important to note that we do this out of a love for the beautiful game and these positions are on a voluntary basis. However, if freed from the shackles of such an overwhelming schedule, my goal is to spend more time creating strategic partnerships and promoting our membership platform that could combine to bring in revenue that would go toward compensating staff writers. Additionally, some of our staff members have gone on to more financially rewarding opportunities as a result of their time with us. You never know what this experience will lead to. Like anything else in life, you’re likely to get out of it what you put in.

The good news is that we have already reached out to our Founders and our Buy Me a Coffee subscribers about this subject, and several have shown an interest in helping, so we are in the process of exploring those potential contributors at the moment.

We Are Currently Seeking:

  • Match writers – You don’t need a degree in journalism or English to write for us. If you like to talk about soccer, you can probably write about it as well. Staff writers contribute regularly to our game coverage, which could be in the form of recaps, player grades pieces, five takeaways posts, etc. We have a need for this on both the Orlando City and Pride sides, and you can do both if you want. If you’re not local to the Orlando area, you can cover road matches via the broadcast/stream.
  • Editors – Can you spot a subject/verb disagreement from a mile away? An editor position may be for you! How often do you get to correct people without anyone shaming you for it? This position will edit copy for submitted stories, make headlines punchier and more SEO-friendly, and ensure the story has a properly cropped/centered photo that helps tell the story. Typically you’ll only be on “desk duty” one or two evenings per week when it fits your schedule. You may also write stories if you wish!

About TML

Our little blog became an idea and then an independent WordPress site in late September of 2014, and went live on SBNation in December of that year. When SBNation stopped funding nearly all of its MLS blogs a few years ago, we went independent again, and we’ve long been the only outlet providing daily coverage of Orlando City’s teams. Even the club doesn’t post new content to its website every day!


FAQ

Why shutter the site at the end of December? Why do you need help now when the season doesn’t start for a couple of months?

Preparing to cover three teams requires advance planning. Each year, we put together a publication schedule to ensure all our bases are covered. This includes what will run (a placeholder or sometimes the specific piece) on every day of the year, which obviously doesn’t take into account breaking news or extra features that people want to do. Setting up this publication schedule also includes noting when major soccer events are coming, known USMNT/USWNT scheduled matches, MLS and NWSL deadlines, player birthdays, important milestones and anniversaries, and more. We also put together volunteer sign-up sheets for grades and takeaways posts. That setup work is all for naught if we don’t have the bodies to physically cover the team when the season starts. Also, it’s easier to pull the plug on our LLC at the end of a calendar year. None of us want to stop, but we have to be realistic about being able to continue covering the team as we have.

Why not just scale back and cover what you can? Do you have to cover every game?

I don’t have a good answer for this other than I would not feel right about putting my name on a product I don’t believe in. I don’t ever want our audience to have to guess whether or not they’re getting a game recap or any follow-up analysis from a given match. In my opinion, we have never had the personnel to fully provide what I envision. For example, I want to add more video content, player grades and recaps for the Pride games, and to bring back weekend Lion Links and OCB match previews. And we should have a lot more features and analysis pieces! In short, we’re already doing the bare minimum that I’m comfortable with. And, I have to be honest: if there was a game coming up with no one to cover it, knowing me, I’d probably just do it myself, and I already know I can’t continue the pace of the past few years. I have to save me from myself sometimes.

Could The Mane Land continue in a different form?

I have toyed with the idea of turning TML into a newsletter. This might be a daily that includes a Lion Links-type section and opinion/analysis of club news. It would not include match coverage or any kind of regular news. I almost pivoted to that when SBNation stopped funding us, but we decided to make a go of it as an independent outlet. The problem with the newsletter style is that I can’t do it daily every single day or it would be no different than the situation I’m in, so some help would still be needed. Some of that could come from the current TML staff, but I’m not sure all of it could, and the newsletter format is not for everyone, so we’d be leaving part of our audience behind. I’m not sure it’s the way to go.

Is new management or investment needed?

Possibly. I am willing to sell the name and logo and turn over all our passwords for someone else to take over the operations, which would free up a considerable amount of my time. I’m even willing to continue on as a writing and editing contributor, because I love covering the club. Some of the other staff might as well. But I would not be interested in covering every single match. I’m not a kid anymore, and I have a regular job, a family, and other side gigs that require my attention.

Will you still do the podcasts if the site shuts down?

No. I think if we decide to shut down, it will be across the board. I much prefer our written content, and that’s the reason I started our outlet to begin with. I feel the podcasts complement our coverage and give us more of an opinion platform and a way to discuss matches in a deeper, richer way, but I’m not interested in doing only the podcasts. That said, others on our staff might want to continue and I’m OK with that.


Contact us at themaneland@gmail.com today to get started as a new contributor!

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Podcasts

PawedCast Episode 506: Cincinnati Rewind, OCB-Carolina Core, Columbus Preview, and More

The Lions claimed a late draw at Cincy and now host Columbus while OCB’s playoff hopes hang by a thread.

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Image of Alex Freeman celebrating after scoring the tying goal at Cincinnati.
Image courtesy of Orlando City SC / Jeremy Reper

Orlando City left it late again. Tyrese Spicer reprised his role from the Nashville game by providing the assist for a goal late in stoppage time, but this time it was a different goal scorer and a road draw instead of a home win. Alex Freeman played great against FC Cincinnati, so it was fitting that he literally pulled a point out of thin air on a Sunday night that saw the Lions squander numerous good opportunities to score while allowing the hosts only one Kevin Denkey strike.

We look back at the key moments, players, and plays of a critical road match, check our score predictions, and make our selections for Man of the Match, splitting the vote

This week’s mailbagbox asked us a pair of trivia questions and added an individual question for each host. Remember, if there’s anything — and we do mean anything — you want us to address on the show, just ask us by tweeting it to us at @TheManeLand with the hashtag #AskTMLPC, or hitting us up on Bluesky Social with that same hashtag.

OCB got two points at Carolina Core FC when it needed three, but it did enough to stay alive in the postseason race but there is no margin for error. The Young Lions fell behind by two goals, battled back to get level, conceded again, and once again equalized on the road. Carlos Mercado then helped his team win the penalty shootout on his birthday to claim the extra point. OCB must beat FC Cincinnati 2 on Sunday at home and get help to reach the postseason.

Finally, Orlando City returns home with another game against a good team from the Buckeye State, as the Columbus Crew visits Inter&Co Stadium on Saturday. Whether Diego Rossi plays or not, the Crew are always a difficult opponent. We break down the series history, look at the battle ahead, provide our key matchups, and make our predictions for the final score.

Be sure to rate and review our show wherever you get your podcasts. Remember, we’ll read any five-star reviews we get on Apple Podcasts on the next show.

If you’d like to support our independent writing and podcasting efforts, we’d love to have you as a subscriber or donor over at our Buy Me a Coffee site.


Here’s how No. 506 went down:

0:15 – Orlando City didn’t seem to want to put the ball in the net, but maybe that’s because it wasn’t yet the death of stoppage time. Earlier goals are OK too, guys!

27:55 – The mailbagbox offers trivia, but no prizes if we get them right.

39:11 – OCB was listening to Meat Loaf and thinking two out of three ain’t bad, and the senior Lions prepare for Columbus.

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