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Orlando Pride

2021 Season the Most Disappointing in Orlando Pride History

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The Orlando Pride’s 3-1 loss to Racing Louisville FC on Saturday night eliminated the team from playoff contention with one game remaining. It effectively puts an end to the most disappointing season in the team’s six-year history.

To say the Pride’s existence in the NWSL has been a disappointment would be an understatement. The team has had multiple international stars in the lineup since its inaugural season in 2016, including Alex Morgan, Marta, and Ashlyn Harris. Despite the talent, the Pride have only qualified for the NWSL playoffs once.

After a 2020 year that saw the Pride only play four games, it looked as though the 2021 season would be the team’s best to date. The Pride started the year on a club record seven-game undefeated streak that included four wins and had the Pride at the top of the standings heading into the Olympics.

The team’s struggles started when the Olympians (Morgan, Marta, Erin McLeod, and Ali Riley) started departing. The Pride lost three of the first four games after Morgan departed following a 2-1 loss to the Houston Dash on June 26.

It seemed to get worse for the Pride when head coach Marc Skinner resigned to join Manchester United’s women’s team. But the Pride hired former University of Florida head coach Becky Burleigh on an interim basis and things started to change.

Her second game on Aug. 8 ended a six-game winless streak, beating the Chicago Red Stars 2-0 at SeatGeek Stadium. That game included the first Pride goal for English striker Jodie Taylor, who scored again the following week against the Portland Thorns. Between Burleigh’s arrival on July 25 and the team’s 3-1 win over Racing Louisville on Sept. 11, the Pride went 3-1-3 and were climbing the NWSL standings.

The Pride were in high spirits following the win over Louisville, which included goals by the team’s three offensive stars — Morgan, Marta, and Sydney Leroux.

“It’s just really positive in the locker room right now,” Morgan said after that game. “It’s just such a great squad. We have a lot of new faces this year, but they’ve been integrated really quickly.

“We know that we have the potential to have our best finish ever in the club’s history. So we want to take every game like it’s the last game of the season, and we need to get points.”

“I think we saw that in the beginning of the year,” Leroux said about the team playing like it did earlier in the season. “I think we were firing on all cylinders and now we brought different people in and I think they’ve only added to our team. So I’m really excited to see what happens after the international break.”

Since that game, the Pride have lost four straight. It started with a 3-0 drubbing by OL Reign and continued with a 3-2 loss to NJ/NY Gotham FC, a 1-0 loss to the Red Stars, and Saturday night’s loss in Louisville. The four-game losing streak was the team’s longest this year, with the team getting outscored 10-3 over that span.

This current streak has been even worse than 2019. That season was the first with Skinner as head coach and the roster was largely built around international talent. The 2019 FIFA Women’s World Cup saw eight regular starters depart, a list that increased with Leroux pregnant and Toni Pressley diagnosed with breast cancer. Those absences meant that the majority of the lineup had players with little or no experience in the professional game.

Heading into the 2021 season, Skinner, General Manager Ian Fleming, and Executive Vice President Amanda Duffy had built the team with sufficient depth that it could withstand missing some star players during extended international breaks. Younger players like Courtney Petersen, Taylor Kornieck, and Phoebe McClernon joined veterans like Gunny Jonsdottir and Erika Tymrak to fill out the squad. They were later joined by English additions Taylor and Amy Turner, ensuring that the majority of the squad would be intact during the Olympics.

The team did struggle without its Olympians, but seemed to be as strong as ever heading into the final games. A good run and the health of the team down the stretch adds to the disappointment of the season.

With the start they had and the strength of the roster, the Pride should be competing for one of the top spots in the league. Instead, they currently sit in eighth place of the 10-team league — a low spot that’s become too common with this team.

Looking at the Pride’s roster over the years, it might be surprising that they’ve only qualified for the playoffs once in six years. However, from being a new team to losing most of the starting lineup during international tournaments, there’s always been a solid excuse for poor performances.

There’s no excuse for the fall of the Pride during the 2021 NWSL season. They got off to the best start in team history, had the best lineup to withstand international absences, and remained relatively healthy throughout the season. And yet, the team has been eliminated before the end of the regular season again.

Duffy and Fleming will have a tall task ahead of them this off-season. The search will soon begin for a permanent head coach and they’ll be looking to solidify parts of the team. Changes will likely come following the most disappointing season in the Pride’s history.

Opinion

In Praise of the Unity Kit

The Orlando Pride hit it out of the park on their newest secondary kit.

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Image courtesy of Orlando Pride

When it comes to soccer jerseys, I can perhaps be unfairly critical. I like what I like, and in a time when new jerseys cost at least $100 if not closer to $150, I have to be seriously impressed by something in order to shell out that much money. While I’ve liked most of the jerseys that Orlando City and the Orlando Pride have put out over the years, I’ve never liked one enough to spend my own money to buy one, although I did receive a Heart and Sol jersey as a birthday present several years ago. The one exception has been the Sea Cow prematch top that the club put out in 2023, which I bought instantly and would have happily forked over one of my kidneys to acquire (as any sane person would).

I might very well be adding a new jersey to the closet soon though, because the Orlando Pride absolutely knocked it out of the park with the Unity Kit that they released on Thursday. I’m now going to shut up for a second and let you feast your eyes on this beauty.

That is just fantastic, and let’s talk about why. First of all, the base color is light purple, and while that isn’t traditionally in the Pride’s color palette as they favor a more royal purple shared by Orlando City, it is still purple. It’s also a light enough base color for the team to be able to use it as an away jersey without simply making the background color white. While I wouldn’t necessarily have an issue with a white base, that’s pretty common with away jerseys and the light purple is a good way to do something different while still providing a good contrast between it and an opponent’s dark home jersey.

If you were missing the Pride’s more traditional color of purple, fear not! The decision to use it on the collar and sleeves is a great one, as it gives the jersey a really nice splash of contrast in a shirt that could otherwise risk being washed out by all of the pastel tones that are present. The same color is also present in the badge, name, numbers, sponsors, and jock tag, and pops very well because its used so sparingly.

When viewed from a distance, the collars and sleeves provide a good outline for the kit, while the eye gets a general sense of intermingled pastel tones as the ribbons blend into each other well, and while no one color is definable, it isn’t an assault on the eyes either.

Closer up though, the ribbons are far more vibrant and detailed, and you notice that rather than simply being uniform colors for each one, they’re actually made up of several different colors that blend together and intertwine, and the effect is pulled off really well. For me, its a shirt that be appreciated both further away, and right in front of your face, and that isn’t always the easiest thing to do.

Suffice it to say, I’m a huge fan of how this thing looks. A lot of thought was clearly put into the design, and it was executed well. I want to talk about more than just the way it looks though.

We’re 10 years on from the mass shooting at Pulse nightclub that took the lives of 49 people, and the Pride and overarching ownership have a new way of honoring the victims and remembering a period of time that was so difficult for the city. The rainbow seats at Inter&Co Stadium have served the same purpose since the ground was opened back in 2017, but the Pride will be using the new jersey to honor both the victims and the way in which the city came together after the tragedy, while also putting their money where their mouth is.

The team’s decision to donate $20,000 from sales of the jersey to The Center Orlando and its Orlando United Resiliency Services (OURS) program is a very good touch on what was already a well-thought out kit. The program’s purpose is to provide advocacy, education, and support for the Orlando area’s LGBTQ+ community, and as someone who believes sports teams should be active and positive pillars in the community where they play, I couldn’t be happier to see this. It’s a decision that the team was under no obligation to make, but in choosing to go the extra mile, it proved that the club is more than just empty words and gestures when it comes to issues that hit close to home.


In short, the Unity Kit checks all the boxes for me, including ones I didn’t even know I had. It looks great from a distance, has thoughtful and well-executed details when seen up close, and represents something important while also actively honoring and helping to provide resources for a marginalized community. To everyone who was involved with the concept and execution of this jersey, I salute you. Consider it a job very well done.

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Orlando Pride

Orlando Pride Unveil New ‘Unity Kit’ Ahead of 2026 Season

The Pride dropped their new secondary kits ahead of the 2026 season, paying tribute to the strength of the community shown after the Pulse nightclub tragedy.

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Image of Marta showing off the Pride's new Unity Kit.
Image courtesy of Orlando Pride

With their new secondary kits, the Orlando Pride paid tribute to the strength and spirit of the Orlando community in the wake of the horrific 2016 mass shooting at the Pulse nightclub. That senseless tragedy still resonates in the team’s home stadium with the 49 rainbow-colored seats that honor the victims. The ‘Unity Kit,’ which will serve as the secondary kit for the Pride through the 2027 NWSL season, features multicolored interlocking ribbons to symbolize the way Central Florida came together at that time, now 10 years past.

The Pride not only unveiled the new kits today, with a special launch event planned for tonight at The Final Whistle at Thornton Park Pub at 6 p.m., but the club also announced it will donate $20,000 from jersey sales to The Center Orlando, whose Orlando United Resiliency Services (OURS) program continues to provide crucial education, advocacy and support for the LGBT+ community and its allies.

“Orlando’s strength has always come from its people, and the Unity Kit reflects the love, resilience, and courage that define this city,” Orlando Pride/Orlando City Vice President of Community Impact & DEI and Orlando Soccer Foundation Executive Director Kaia Hyde said in a club press release. “In the days after the Pulse tragedy, our community adopted a simple but powerful message: ‘keep dancing.’ It became a reminder that even in the face of unimaginable loss, Orlando would choose optimism, unity and love. This jersey honors that spirit, and we’re proud that its launch will directly support The Center Orlando and the vital work they do for our community.”

The multicolored ribbons weave their way across the front of the new kit in pastels. The jersey’s jock tag features the universal symbol of peace: a dove, carrying an olive branch. The collar, sleeves, name and number on the back, and the front jersey sponsor logo and back bottom jersey sponsor logo feature the club’s standard purple, which pops on the light kits. Orlando Health continues as the kit sponsor, with Publix as the lower-back sponsor and the Heart of United Way returning as the sleeve sponsor.

The shorts and socks are a more subdued purple that makes the jersey stand out even more.

Fans can purchase the new kit online now at ShopOrlandoPride.com or in person at the jersey launch tonight. The launch party will include appearances by Pride players Julie Doyle, Oihane, and Hannah Anderson, Orlando Pride Head Coach Seb Hines, and new Vice President of Soccer Operations and General Manager Caitlin Carducci. Those who pick up their Unity jersey tonight in person can get a an Orlando United patch while supplies last. Fans can also participate in a silent disco dance party, and there will be prize giveaways. The new kit will be available at The Den starting on Friday.

You can check out the kit in all its glory in the gallery of images below:

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Orlando City

Orlando City, Orlando Pride Remain Hidden During Preseason

Orlando City and the Orlando Pride continue the odd policy of hiding information from fans as they prepare for the upcoming seasons.

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Image courtesy of Orlando City SC

As preseason continues for Orlando City and the Orlando Pride, little is known about the progress the team is making in their preparations for the upcoming seasons. But it wasn’t always that way. The club used to be quite open about their preseason scrimmages. The social media accounts would provide lineups, substitutions, goals, and other game updates, allowing fans to follow along.

But there was more.

When the Wilf family took over ownership, they opened the doors to the club during preseason. In 2022, two games were open to season ticket members and both teams had a preseason game open to all fans and media.

The club continued providing an open preseason game for both teams in 2023, giving a chance to see the teams in action before the regular season started. However, less and less access has been provided to the outside world since then.

The 2024 season saw the open preseason games removed for both City and the Pride. The Lions had an FC Series game against Flamengo before camp began and a late game for Society XXI members. Last year, the Lions started with an FC Series game again, this time against Atletico Mineiro. They ended with a season ticket member game.

The club released very little information other than the FC Series contest. That leads us to this preseason, in which the club has been as tight-lipped as it has been since the Wilf family took charge of the club.

There has been even less information about the Pride. Since Seb Hines became the permanent head coach leading into the 2023 season, the club doesn’t even provide an official preseason schedule anymore.

While the club at one time provided updates on games and opened one to media and at least season ticket members, you’re lucky to even get a reference that the team still exists. The occasional photo is the only way fans know the team has even begun preseason.

The lack of availability during preseason is quite unique to American soccer. Other major American sports — the NFL, MLB, NBA, and NHL — allow fans and media to attend their preseason games. Soccer teams from other countries also sell tickets to preseason games and local fans often travel abroad, following the team.

Also, not all MLS teams are this quiet as they prepare for the season. On Sunday, for example, the LA Galaxy live streamed a scrimmage against the Chicago Fire.

Orlando City played Nashville SC in a scrimmage Saturday afternoon. The opposition provided lineups, substitutions, goals, and other updates throughout the contest. The only thing they didn’t offer was Orlando CIty goal scorers, something likely requested by the Lions.

But what advantage does Orlando City gain from this?

It could be argued that the club is working on tactics and doesn’t want to give anything away. But it hasn’t been like that in the past, and that argument doesn’t hold water when you see teams that routinely are more open about their preseasons making deep playoff runs.

Oscar Pareja made the most significant tactical change since arriving in Orlando during the 2024 preseason. He moved attacking midfielder Dagur Dan Thorhallsson to right back and put either David Brekalo or Wilder Cartagena at left back. The team played five in the back defensively and three in the back while in the attack. It was a significant change, but the club still provided information to fans.

In today’s sports world, fans have more access than ever before. Television networks and streaming services regularly give fans a behind-the-scenes look at some of the most popular sports teams in the world. These programs aren’t the teams or leagues showing gratitude to fans. They’ve realized that giving fans this glimpse makes them feel more connected to the teams they follow and builds a buzz heading into the season. As a result, they’re more likely to watch games on television or attend games in person.

Unfortunately, Orlando fans aren’t getting that connection anymore. The excitement for the start of preseason is nearly gone, because City and Pride fans know they’ll receive little, if any, information until the season begins.

The club will argue that it provides several experiences for all fans leading up to the regular season opener — from public jersey unveilings to drinks with coaches and players. But what would help build fan excitement about the upcoming season would be the ability to see the team in action and catch glimpses of new signings. Or at least to know how they’re progressing.

Whether the club’s habits revert to how they were just a couple of years ago remains to be seen. There’s definitely an appetite as The Mane Land and other outlets regularly field requests from fans looking for any possible information. But even those that cover the club regularly are kept at a distance.

For the time being, fans will have to be content with the occasional player signing, community event, and photo from a scrimmage the club may or may not admit is happening. And they’ll continue to count down until Orlando City’s first MLS game on Feb. 21 and the Orlando Pride’s first NWSL game on March 15.

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