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 (4-4-4, 16 points) take on the North Carolina Courage (5-4-2, 17 points). This will be the first game under interim head coach Becky Burleigh as the Pride look to turn the season back around.
Tonight’s game will be the third time the two teams have met during the 2021 NWSL regular season and the second in North Carolina. It’s also the last time the two teams will see each other during the regular season.
History
In the 12 previous meetings between the Courage and Pride dating back to 2017, the Courage lead the all-time series 8-2-3 (8-2-0 in NWSL play, 0-0-2 in the 2020 Fall Series, and 0-0-1 in the NWSL Challenge Cup). The Pride have been outscored 35-14 in those games, while North Carolina has won six of the last 10 meetings.
The most recent meeting between the two teams came on July 4 at Exploria Stadium, which saw the Pride lose 2-0. The Courage got off to a fast start as Debinha scored just three minutes in. Havana Solaun doubled the lead in the 66th minute. The loss was the Pride’s first against the Courage in the last five meetings (1-1-3).
The first time the two teams played this season came on May 22 — the Pride’s second game of the season. Sydney Leroux gave the Pride the first-half lead in the 36th minute at Sahlen’s Stadium. Alex Morgan scored a second for the visitors in the 79th minute, effectively putting the game away. Jessica McDonald scored a consolation goal for the Courage in the 88th minute, but it wasn’t enough as the Pride came away with the 2-1 win.
Prior to that May 22 matchup, the previous three games took place during tournament play. The most recent of those three games came during the 2021 NWSL Challenge Cup. The Pride recorded their first and only back-to-back clean sheets under former coach Marc Skinner. Spending most of the game looking for Morgan over the top, the Pride were unable to connect and the game ended in a 0-0 draw.
The two teams were also matched up during the 2020 Fall Series, facing each other twice. The Pride had 12 players out on loan, fielding a very inexperienced team. Despite the missing players, they held up well in Cary, NC, coming home with a 0-0 draw. The return game was a high-scoring affair at Exploria Stadium. The Pride went down 3-0 at the break, as the Courage scored twice in first half injury time. However, Marisa Viggiano and Kristen Edmonds pulled the Pride back into the game before a Marta free kick was put away by Ally Haran in injury time, allowing the Pride to claim a 3-3 draw.
The Courage dominated the Pride in three meetings in 2019. The Pride lost 5-0 in North Carolina on Apr. 17 and 3-0 at home on June 1. The only Pride goal against the Courage that season came on Sept. 14 in Cary, NC. Rachel Hill scored in the 81st minute, but the Courage were already up 3-0. The hosts responded with two more goals as they defeated the Pride 6-1.
The Courage took all three games from the Pride in 2018 as well. The first match-up was a wild 4-3 win for the Courage on May 23, 2018, in which McDonald scored the 90th-minute winner after Alanna Kennedy and Hill had erased a two-goal deficit. The next two meetings were 3-0 wins for North Carolina. The first occurred on June 30, 2018 in Orlando and the second on Aug. 19 in North Carolina.
The Pride’s best season against the Courage came in 2017, when the Pride finished with a 2-1-0 record against North Carolina. The first game came on Apr. 29, 2017 — a 3-1 win for the Courage. The Pride snapped a 12-game losing streak in the second meeting with a 3-1 win on May 14, 2017. Chioma Ubogagu, Camila, and Jasmyne Spencer all scored as all four goals came in the second half. The third game came on Sept. 30, the final game of the season. The Pride saw a two-goal lead slip away when Lynn Williams scored twice in five minutes in the second half. But Kennedy struck in second half injury time as the Pride won 3-2.
Overview
The Pride enter this game struggling and with adversity. Missing starters Morgan (United States), Marta (Brazil), and Ali Riley (New Zealand) to the Olympics, the Pride are winless in their last five (0-4-1), losing four of those games and only claiming one point over that period. That slump has dropped the team from first to seventh in the NWSL.
The Courage haven’t done much better since their 2-0 win over the Pride on July 4. That win was followed by a 2-0 loss to the Washington Spirit, a 2-1 loss to the Houston Dash, and a scoreless draw with Kansas City.
Similar to the Pride and almost every NWSL team, the Courage have been impacted by the Olympics. They remain without Debinha (Brazil), Sam Mewis (United States), and Lynn Williams (United States).
The Pride are also in the middle of a transitional period. Skinner resigned as head coach last week and the club hired Burleigh, former University of Florida head coach, to take over. She was announced last Sunday and tonight will be her first game in charge of the Pride.
“We’re going to rely a lot on (goalkeeper coach) Lloyd (Yaxley) and (assistant coach) Seb (Hines), who have been around this team the whole season,” Burleigh said about taking charge of her first game tonight. “They’re both very competent coaches. I’ve already leaned on them a good bit to tell us what a typical week looks like, game day looks like, tell us where you think the strengths and weaknesses are of this group. And I think the more (interim assistant coach) Alan (Kirkup) and I get integrated with this group, we’ll be able to offer our own opinions too. But with this short turnaround, that’s a challenge.”
In addition to the Olympians, the Pride will play without Carrie Lawrence (right ankle) and Jade Moore (left knee). Those are the only two players on the injured list this week.
The Courage are missing Lindsay Agnew (right foot), Hailey Harbison (left knee), and Peyton Perea (right foot).
Official Lineups
Orlando Pride (4-3-3)
Goalkeeper: Ashlyn Harris.
Defenders: Kylie Strom, Phoebe McClernon, Amy Turner, Ali Krieger.
Midfielders: Courtney Petersen, Marisa Viggiano, Gunny Jonsdottir.
Forwards: Taylor Kornieck, Sydney Leroux, Jodie Taylor.
Bench: Brittany Wilson, Ally Haran, Konya Plummer, Toni Pressley, Meggie Dougherty Howard, Erika Tymrak, Chelsee Washington, Abi Kim, Crystal Thomas.
North Carolina Courage (4-2-2-2)
Goalkeeper: Casey Murphy.
Defenders: Carson Pickett, Kaleigh Kurtz, Abby Erceg, Merritt Mathias.
Defensive Midfielders: Denise O’Sullivan, Angarad James.
Midfielders: Havan Solaun, Cari Roccaro.
Forwards: Brittany Ratcliffe, Amy Rodriguez.
Bench: Sam Murphy, Lindsay Agnew, Diane Caldwell, Schuyler Debree, Kendall Fletcher, Taylor Smith, Caeley Lordemann, Meredith Speck, Rylee Baisden,
Referees
Ref: Karen Callado.
AR1: Laura Waliski.
AR2: Nicholas Seymour.
4th: Emma Richards.
How to Watch
Match Time: 7 p.m.
Venue: Sahlen’s Stadium — Cary, NC.
TV: None.
Streaming: Paramount+ (USA), Twitch (International).
Twitter: For live updates, follow along at the Orlando Pride’s official Twitter feed (@ORLPride) and on The Mane Land’s Twitter feed (@TheManeLand).
Enjoy the match. Go Pride!
Orlando Pride
2024 Orlando Pride Season in Review: Adriana
The Brazilian attacker was a key player in the Pride’s magical 2024 season.
The Orlando Pride signed Brazilian international Adriana on Jan. 19, 2023 to a three-year contract through the 2025 NWSL season. One of the brighter spots of the Pride during the 2023 season, it seemed Adriana was on the verge of becoming a dominating NWSL player. Seb Hines again deployed her mainly as an attacking player, particularly on the wing, but sometimes as a second forward. While she was still a key player for the Pride in 2024, there were some bumps in the road when she would disappear from games and consistency was sometimes an issue.
Let’s take a look at Adriana’s second NWSL season.
Statistical Breakdown
Adriana appeared in 23 regular-season games, starting 19 and playing a total of 1,688 minutes. She scored six goals, which was third most on the team, and added one assist. It is notable that two of her six goals came from the penalty spot, where she went two-for-two in the regular season. She completed 71% of her 557 passes, which was a slight dip from a year ago, with 31 key passes, seven completed crosses, and 14 successful long balls. Defensively, Adriana chipped in nine tackles, 13 interceptions, and 18 headed duels won. She committed just 10 fouls while drawing 30 on the opposition, and she did not receive a card.
In the playoffs, Adriana appeared in all three of the Pride’s games, starting two and logging 197 minutes. She did not make a goal contribution, attempting six shots with only one of those hitting the target. Her passing wasn’t up to its usual level in the postseason, as she connected on just 63.9% of her 36 passes, including only two of nine in the NWSL Championship. She tallied five key passes and one successful long ball, but no accurate crosses. On defense, she finished the postseason with three tackles and an interception. The Brazilian international committed five fouls, suffered two, and was not booked.
Adriana was away at the Olympics during the NWSL x Liga MX Femenil Summer Cup, so she did not play in the competition.
Best Game
Adriana had several big games in 2024, but perhaps her best was Orlando’s 2-0 home win over Gotham FC. She scored both Orlando goals in the match, lifting the Pride to their 19th straight game without a loss, tying the club’s single-season record for home wins (7), and pushing Hines past Tom Sermanni and into sole possession of the most coaching wins in club history (26). It didn’t take long for her to get involved, scoring just five and a half minutes after the opening kickoff. Angelina’s ball into the box was knocked into the air, and Adriana ran onto it and volleyed a blast into the net to make it 1-0 with one of the most impressive Pride goals of the season.
Not content with just one goal, Adriana struck again in the 19th minute. Summer Yates switched the play to send Adriana down the right side, where she took on USWNT defender Jenna Nighswonger, then used Barbra Banda’s presence in the box to create space for her shot, which she placed perfectly inside the left post to make it 2-0.
Adriana played the full 90 minutes in the match and fired six shots in all against Gotham that night, putting all six of them on target and giving her a season high in the latter statistic. She led all players in the match in both categories. She completed 87% of her 23 passes on 48 total touches, with one key pass, one accurate cross, and two successful long balls. Defensively, she made three recoveries, and she committed one foul while drawing two and did not pick up a booking. It was a great performance by the attacking midfielder against one of the NWSL’s elite defensive clubs.
2024 Final Grade
The Mane Land staff gives Adriana a composite score of 7 out of 10 for her 2024 campaign. This is a slight dip from the 7.5 we gave her last season, but there were times when she struggled to find her game in 2024. When she was on her game, she was outstanding, but there were games and even stretches of matches when she didn’t provide her usual quality. Her form isn’t the only reason she was dropped at times from the starting XI, because some of her teammates elevated their own, but it was a factor. While she increased her goal total by one, it came in more appearances and minutes, and her assist total fell, despite having a better cast around her. The Brazilian is capable of more, but the staff still felt it was a solid season.
2025 Outlook
Like her Brazilian teammate Rafaelle, Adriana’s contract runs through the 2025 season, so she’ll be working hard to earn a new deal beyond the upcoming season. If she starts the season well, the Pride will no doubt offer a new contract midseason if there’s not already a new deal in place before opening day. At 28 years old, Adriana is in the prime of her career and can still be an effective player. With the Pride improving, she’ll need to play more consistently or at a higher level to keep starting with this club, but she’s capable, and I expect her to fight to hold onto her starting spot in Hines’ XI.
Previous Season in Review Articles (Date Posted)
- Amanda Allen (11/28/24)
- McKinley Crone (11/29/24)
- Sofia Manner (11/30/24)
- Mariana Larroquette (12/1/24)
- Viviana Villacorta (12/2/24)
- Luana (12/3/24)
- Evelina Duljan (12/4/24)
- Cori Dyke (12/5/24)
- Carson Pickett (12/6/24)
- Brianna Martinez (12/7/24)
- Ally Watt (12/8/24)
- Summer Yates (12/9/24)
- Ally Lemos (12/10/24)
- Haley McCutcheon (12/11/24)
- Julie Doyle (12/12/24)
- Morgan Gautrat (12/13/24)
- Anna Moorhouse (12/14/24)
- Kerry Abello (12/15/24)
- Angelina (12/16/24)
- Emily Sams (12/17/24)
- Rafaelle (12/18/24)
- Marta (12/19/24)
Orlando Pride
2024 Orlando Pride Season in Review: Marta
Marta showed why she’s the GOAT in her eighth season with the Pride.
In case you forgot, Marta first signed with the Orlando Pride way back in 2017. She has been the constant for the club through ups and mostly downs. That all changed this season as she captained her club to two trophies. Back in 2022, she signed a new two-year contract, taking her through 2024.
Marta may not be as young as she once was, but she definitely made you forget it often enough this season. It was undoubtedly the best she’s performed in a few years, and it made a difference in the standings. Let’s take a look at the GOAT’s latest season in Orlando.
Statistical Breakdown
Marta was the leader and the heart of this year’s Orlando Pride team. Her teammates wanted to win, but they also wanted to win for Marta. She played most of the regular-season games, but missed the NWSL x Liga MX Femenil Summer Cup because she was with Brazil at the Olympics.
Marta made 23 appearances in the NWSL regular season, starting 19 games and recording 1,739 minutes. Marta was second on the team with nine goals on 40 shots, 18 of which were on target. Additionally, she completed 648 of her 878 passes (74%), including one assist, 52 key passes, nine successful crosses, and 75 completed long balls. Defensively, Marta posted 16 tackles, 27 headed duels won, and 12 interceptions on the year. She committed 12 fouls, suffered 45, and was booked four times (all yellow cards).
In the playoffs, Marta started all three games, recording 267 minutes. She scored two goals on 12 shots with five on target, and she completed 86 of her 108 passes (80%) without an assist, although she recorded six key passes, three accurate crosses, and 14 completed long balls. She was also active defensively in the postseason, with six tackles and two interceptions. She committed three fouls in the playoffs, suffered four, and was not booked.
Best Game
You might think that the one match in which Marta scored a brace would be her best match, but that isn’t the case. That match was the 6-0 beatdown of the Utah Royals, who were bottom of the table. I’m going with her performance in the 3-2 playoff semifinal victory over the Kansas City Current.
That goal summed up Marta’s season for me. She was not going to let this team lose when the Pride were so close to the championship. When needed, she could find the speed — even late in a match — and put two defenders on the ground in unison. It was a goal she willed to happen against one of the best teams in the NWSL.
In this match, Marta took four shots, with two on target, scoring the aforementioned goal. She completed 29 of her 38 passes (77%) on a total of 74 touches, and took all three Pride corner kicks. Defensively, she contributed four tackles and two interceptions. She committed one foul, did not suffer any fouls, and was not booked. She simply displayed the full range of her skill and leadership qualities, helping her team reach the final.
2024 Final Grade
The Mane Land staff gave Marta a composite grade of 8 out of 10 for her eighth season with the club. Her passion, drive, and leadership were a major reason why the club won the NWSL Shield and the NWSL Championship. This was the best Marta we’ve seen for several seasons, and she wanted to win more than almost anyone else in any given match. To illustrate how much better she was, we gave Marta a grade of 6 out of 10 last season. That came on the heels of an incomplete grade in her injury-shortened 2022 season. She also received a 6 in 2021 and a 6.5 in 2019. This year is the closest Marta has come to the 9 out of 10 we gave her back in 2017, when she had 19 total goal contributions and finished second in the league in both goals and assists. She turned back the clock and gave us much more of the vintage Marta in 2024 than we’d seen in a long time, which is why we considered her one of the best players on the team.
(Note: If you’re wondering why 2020 wasn’t mentioned, its’ because we did not give out grades because the Pride only participated in the Fall Series during that lost season because of the pandemic.)
2025 Outlook
Marta’s contract expired after the 2024 season, but she has stated that she wants to keep playing one or two more years. She will be 39 years old at the start of the 2025 season but had a very good 2024 season. I think that she wants to retire with the Pride, and I feel that the club will offer her a one-year contract. The Pride indicated in their postseason roster status update that the club was in negotiations with her about returning. If a new deal happens, and if she can keep up her current form, she will find a way to contribute as the Pride look to defend their titles. She will have to hang up the boots at some point, but I don’t think it will be this coming season.
Previous Season in Review Articles (Date Posted)
- Amanda Allen (11/28/24)
- McKinley Crone (11/29/24)
- Sofia Manner (11/30/24)
- Mariana Larroquette (12/1/24)
- Viviana Villacorta (12/2/24)
- Luana (12/3/24)
- Evelina Duljan (12/4/24)
- Cori Dyke (12/5/24)
- Carson Pickett (12/6/24)
- Brianna Martinez (12/7/24)
- Ally Watt (12/8/24)
- Summer Yates (12/9/24)
- Ally Lemos (12/10/24)
- Haley McCutcheon (12/11/24)
- Julie Doyle (12/12/24)
- Morgan Gautrat (12/13/24)
- Anna Moorhouse (12/14/24)
- Kerry Abello (12/15/24)
- Angelina (12/16/24)
- Emily Sams (12/17/24)
- Rafaelle (12/18/24)
Orlando Pride
2024 Orlando Pride Season in Review: Rafaelle
The Brazilian’s season was plagued by injury problems but she played well when healthy.
The Orlando Pride signed Rafaelle on July 3, 2023 to a contract running through the 2025 NWSL season. The Brazilian international joined the Pride after the 2023 FIFA Women’s World Cup, partnering with Emily Sams (then still known as Emily Madril) at center back and becoming a key member of the starting lineup, as the Pride fell just short of the NWSL playoffs on the goal differential tiebreaker.
Rafaelle’s second season was marred by injuries, including one she sustained while helping Brazil reach the Gold Medal game at the Summer Olympics that kept her out the rest of the 2024 NWSL season. She also missed the first four matches of the season and a couple of games in the early summer due to injury.
It’s time to look back at her injury-marred second season with the Pride.
Statistical Breakdown
Injuries limited Rafaelle to just nine appearances (six starts) for the Pride in 2024 — all in the regular season, in which she played a total of just 618 minutes. The Brazilian defender did not record a goal contribution in 2024, attempting three shots and putting one on target. She completed 86% of her 324 passes without a key pass or successful cross, however, she managed to connect on 30 long balls in her short season, which is impressive. Defensively, she contributed nine tackles, nine interceptions, and 23 headed duel wins. She committed four fouls, suffered one, and was booked once.
Due to injury, Rafaelle did not appear in Orlando’s playoff run, and because she was away at the Olympics, Rafaelle also did not participate in the NWSL x Liga MX Femenina Summer Cup.
Best Game
Rafaelle’s best match came in a 1-0 home win over Racing Louisville on May 5. The Brazilian started and went the full 90 minutes with an excellent two-way performance. She didn’t contribute directly to a goal, but she registered a shot, which was her only shot on target of the season, forcing Katie Lund into a save off a free kick about 40 minutes in. She also had a season-high 76 touches and passed at an impressive 93.75% rate on a season-high 63 attempts. Her passing accuracy in the match was her season high for any game in which she played more than 16 minutes. On the defensive end, Rafaelle helped her team keep a clean sheet and chipped in a tackle. She did not commit a foul or get booked in the match. Her strong tackle in the box in the 82nd minute on Reilyn Turner prevented a dangerous shot attempt, helping Anna Moorhouse preserve the shutout and keeping the Pride on top.
2024 Final Grade
The Mane Land staff gives Rafaelle a composite score of 7 out of 10 for her 2024 season. This is a slight improvement over the 6.5 we gave her last year. As well as the back line played in her absence, it’s easy to forget just how formidable she was while she was on the pitch. The strong partnership between her and Kylie Strom allowed Seb Hines to move Sams to fullback for a time, and that’s a considerable compliment, given the fact that Sams won the 2024 NWSL Defender of the Year Award. The back line continuing to excel in Rafaelle’s absence speaks highly of the group’s performance and the coaching staff’s ability to get the most out of the players.
2025 Outlook
It’s easy to say, “If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it,” in terms of the Pride’s defense. However, I expect Rafaelle to regain her starting center back spot when healthy. Rafaelle was considered the team’s best center back entering the season and early in 2024, although it’s fair to say Sams and Strom weren’t far behind. Rafaelle is under contract through the 2025 season, so she’ll want to perform well to earn her next deal. At 33 (she’ll turn 34 in June), it’s uncertain how much longer she’ll be able to play at such a high level, but prior to her injury in the Olympics, she was playing excellent soccer (it’s notable that the play she was injured on was a vital challenge for her national team). She is nearly impossible to leave out of the starting XI when fit.
What remains to be seen is how the team accommodates the Brazilian’s return. The most natural center back pairing would be Sams and Rafaelle. That would mean Strom would have to return to left back unless the team adopts a three-player back line. The ripple effect of staying in a traditional four-player back line would potentially mean displacing Kerry Abello, who “only” made the NWSL Best XI Second Team in 2024, or Cori Dyke, who handled some of the league’s best players in the stretch run to Orlando’s NWSL Championship drive. Having to reinsert Rafaelle into the lineup is a good problem for Hines to have, as it may allow him to rotate and rest his center backs more in 2025.
Previous Season in Review Articles (Date Posted)
- Amanda Allen (11/28/24)
- McKinley Crone (11/29/24)
- Sofia Manner (11/30/24)
- Mariana Larroquette (12/1/24)
- Viviana Villacorta (12/2/24)
- Luana (12/3/24)
- Evelina Duljan (12/4/24)
- Cori Dyke (12/5/24)
- Carson Pickett (12/6/24)
- Brianna Martinez (12/7/24)
- Ally Watt (12/8/24)
- Summer Yates (12/9/24)
- Ally Lemos (12/10/24)
- Haley McCutcheon (12/11/24)
- Julie Doyle (12/12/24)
- Morgan Gautrat (12/13/24)
- Anna Moorhouse (12/14/24)
- Kerry Abello (12/15/24)
- Angelina (12/16/24)
- Emily Sams (12/17/24)
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