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2021 Orlando Pride Season in Review: Ashlyn Harris

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Ashlyn Harris was the captain of the Orlando Pride for the fifth consecutive year. The Cocoa Beach-born goalkeeper is an original member of the club, coming to Orlando from Washington with the No. 2 pick in the 2015 NWSL Expansion Draft. The 2021 season was her sixth with the Pride.

Harris kept the Pride in many games through excellent saves, both in open play and on penalties. Let’s take a closer look at the 2021 NWSL season of one of the league’s best goalkeepers.

Statistical Breakdown

Harris played every minute of the 2021 NWSL Challenge Cup, starting all four games and logging 360 minutes, as Orlando finished 1-1-2 in the competition with Harris in goal. She saved 16 of her 19 shots faced (84.2%) in the tournament, with two of the three goals coming in the opening game against Racing Louisville FC. The final two games resulted in clean sheets in a 1-0 win over the Washington Spirit and a scoreless draw against the North Carolina Courage.

Additionally, Harris made two penalty saves in the tournament. The first came in the second game against NJ/NY Gotham FC’s Nahomi Kawasumi. The second was in the following game against the Washington Spirit’s Ashley Hatch.

In terms of her distribution in the tournament, Harris successfully completed 71 of her 99 passes (71.7%) and 25 of her 49 long passes (51%). Most of her goal kicks were long, with 63.6% of her passes going forward.

Harris started 19 games in the 2021 NWSL regular season, being substituted once, on Sept. 5 against the Houston Dash when she was injured during a scramble in the box. Fortunately, she only missed one game because of the collision. She recorded a total of 1,687 minutes during the regular season.

The goalkeeper conceded 25 goals in those 19 starts, saving 71 of 96 shots faced (74%). She recorded three clean sheets on the season, 12 catches, five punches, and eight clearances. Her only drop was in that Houston game, which resulted in her injury.

Most notably, Harris saved three penalties in the regular season and five on the year. Remarkably, she didn’t concede a single goal on a penalty kick. This was partly because of good goalkeeping, but partly because of very poor penalty taking by the opposition.

Her three regular-season saves were on July 4 against North Carolina’s Lynn Williams, July 18 against the Portland Thorns’ Rocky Rodriguez, and July 24 against the OL Reign’s Jess Fishlock. Interestingly, four of her five penalty saves occurred at Exploria Stadium, with the only penalty away from home coming at Portland’s Providence Park.

Harris completed 362 of her 478 passes (75.7%) during the regular season. She completed 122 of her 230 long balls (53%) and most of her clearances were up field (54.8%). While she didn’t win or concede any fouls in the Challenge Cup, she was fouled twice and was called for a foul once during the regular season. However, similar to the Challenge Cup, she was booked once for time wasting.

The Pride went 4-8-7 in Harris’ 19 starts and she won the NWSL Save of the Week Award 10 times during the regular season.

Best Game

Harris had some stellar performances this season. However, her best overall game came on Apr. 21 in a 1-0 win over the Washington Spirit at home in the Challenge Cup. The goalkeeper saved all nine shots she faced in the 90 minutes, a season high. Her decision-making was also solid, punching away three clearances. 

Harris made some spectacular saves in the game, with her best being a diving save in the 10th minute. A long-range effort by Tegan McGrady forced Harris to stretch out for a diving save, keeping the game scoreless. It proved to be crucial as Sydney Leroux scored the game’s lone goal less than a minute later.

The Pride captain had another other big save in the 61st minute and the block of a close-range shot in second-half injury time. The Spirit did beat Harris once when Kelley O’Hara converted a long-range effort off a quick restart. However, the referee determined that the free kick was taken too quickly and made the Spirit retake the kick.

The biggest moment of the game for the goalkeeper came in the 65th minute. Phoebe McClernon took down Hatch in the box and the referee pointed to the spot. Similar to other attempts during the season, it wasn’t a well taken penalty by Hatch. However, Harris chose the right direction and was able to block it away with her legs. The block also went away from goal instead of right back at the shooter, allowing her defenders to clear.

The performance earned Harris both Player of the Week and Save of the Week honors. While it was her lone Player of the Week nod of the season, it was the second Save of the Week of the Challenge Cup — giving her the honor a total of 12 times on the year.

2021 Final Grade

The Mane Land staff gave Harris a composite grade of 7.5 for the 2021 NWSL season. She was great for most of the season and kept the Pride in games that they should’ve lost by multiple goals. Credit also has to be given for going an astounding five for five in penalties.

Harris had several saves in some big games that would have resulted in the Pride being well down the table. However, she came up big time after time and kept the Pride in the playoff race, even when they weren’t playing well. This helped the Pride stay in playoff contention until the final games.

2022 Outlook

Harris has been a federation player for the past few years, but that could change soon. Once a regular in the U.S. National Team, Harris has fallen behind multiple goalkeepers, including Alyssa Naeher, Jane Campbell, and Adrianna Franch. She hasn’t been called up since Jan. 22 of this year for a friendly against Colombia. Losing federation status would force the Pride to sign the 36-year-old to a deal.

Growing up in Brevard County, Harris made it well-known her desire to play for the Pride. She was the team’s first signing and has been captain since 2017. Harris likely would prefer to stay with the team, and the Pride will do everything they can to keep her. She’s been one of the best goalkeepers in the league the past several years and was again this season.

Regardless of any other moves, Harris is expected to be the team’s number one and likely the captain in 2022. There will be changes in the team when the Pride hire their new head coach, but the starting goalkeeper position should remain unchanged, barring an unexpected retirement decision.


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Orlando Pride Sign Finnish Goalkeeper Sofia Manner

The Pride have added a fourth goalkeeper and the second one from abroad ahead of the 2024 NWSL season.

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Image courtesy of the Orlando Pride and FC Honka

The Orlando Pride announced today the signing of goalkeeper Sofia Manner, who was acquired for an undisclosed transfer fee from FC Honka of Finland’s top flight, the Kansallinen Liiga. Manner has signed a two-year contract through the 2025 season with a club option for 2026. The signing is a bit curious as it comes less than two months after the Pride extended English goalkeeper Anna Moorhouse through the 2025 season, giving Orlando two international goalkeepers and four total netminders under contract.

“I am immensely grateful for this opportunity to join Orlando Pride, a team I have admired since my youth,” Manner said in a club press release. “It has been a lifelong dream of mine to contribute to such a renowned organization in women’s soccer. The prospect of starting this journey fills me with great enthusiasm, and I am eagerly looking forward to bringing my passion and dedication to the team. I’m ready to put in hard work and help write a new chapter for the Orlando Pride.” 

Manner, who turned 26 on Nov. 9, conceded the fewest goals in the Kansallinen Liiga this season and is a nominee for the league’s Best Player and Goalkeeper of the Year awards. She appeared in 23 matches and earned 10 clean sheets across all competitions, was twice named the league’s Goalkeeper of the Month this season, and was Player of the Month in April.

“Sofia is a tremendous addition to our goalkeeping corps and one we expect to challenge for the starting position,” Orlando Pride Vice President of Soccer Operations and General Manager Haley Carter said. “She brings an underdog mentality and gritty work ethic and fits every aspect of the profile we have built for our goalkeepers. Her size, aerial ability, shot-stopping prowess, and distribution are world class. She brings international experience and has led the Kansallinen Liiga in nearly every goalkeeping metric. Her nominations for Goalkeeper of the Year and Best Player are indicative of her winning mentality and drive to be the best. We are excited to bring her to Orlando and to give her an opportunity to prove herself in our environment and in the NWSL.” 

The shot stopper has experience playing in the United States, having played collegiately with Stony Brook University. She compiled a 1.14 career goals-against average across three seasons, which is fourth-best in Seawolves’ history. Her 20 shutouts ranks third in program history, and she compiled a .796 save percentage, which is ninth best all time.

While at Stony Brook, Manner was named America East Freshman of the Year in 2017, was a first-team all-conference selection in 2019, and was the conference’s Goalkeeper of the Year in 2018 and 2019. She started in every match in her final two seasons at Stony Brook, backstopping the Seawolves to an America East conference championship in 2019 and a regular-season title in 2018.

What It Means for Orlando

The Pride currently have four goalkeepers under contract: 2023 starter Anna Moorhouse (through 2025), backup Carly Nelson (through 2024), third keeper Kaylie Collins (through 2024), and now Manner (through 2025). Collins is on loan with Western Sydney Wanderers FC of the A-League Women in Australia. Four goalkeepers will provide spirited competition in preseason camp, to be sure, but it’s likely that one of these players will be on the move at some point.

If Manner wins the starting goalkeeper spot from Moorhouse, it may be for reasons other than stopping shots. Moorhouse did a good enough job of that, but often struggled with balls in from the wings, which was illustrated in the Pride’s penultimate game of the year — a must-win match at Racing Louisville — when a routine-looking corner kick cross appeared to be easily catchable, but Moorhouse went for a punch instead and knocked the winning goal for Louisville into her own net. That dropped point in the standings put Orlando in jeopardy on Decision Day and indeed the Pride beat Houston but missed the postseason on goal differential. It was a crucial point dropped.

That wasn’t Moorhouse’s only major error on the season, as she set an NWSL record with the earliest sending off in league history with her third-minute red card at OL Reign on Sept. 3 — a match the Pride lost 1-0 while playing one player short for 87 minutes plus stoppage. She has also frequently spilled crosses and shots from distance.

Orlando needed to upgrade the position. Whether Manner is an upgrade remains to be seen, but as Carter said, she is expected to compete for the starting spot. If nothing else, the competition should be good for the Pride. If Manner does take the starting position, it seems logical that the club will look to move either Moorhouse or Nelson.

The goalkeeper position will provide one of the Pride’s most intriging camp battles.

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2023 Orlando Pride Season in Review: Kylie Strom

The veteran defender was a consistent starter for the Pride in 2023.

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Image courtesy of Orlando Pride / Mark Thor

The Orlando Pride signed Kylie Strom from Atletico Madrid on July 5, 2021 to a two-year contract with an option for 2023. Previously, Strom spent time with the Boston Breakers, FFC Frankfurt II in Germany, and Sparta in the Czech Women’s League. The Pride exercised her option prior to the 2023 season. Strom played a much bigger role for the Pride in 2023. 

Let’s take a look at the defender’s 2023 season with the Orlando Pride.

Statistical Breakdown

Strom appeared in 22 regular-season matches, starting all 22, for a total of 1,967 minutes. She scored one goal on six shots, putting one on target. She provided one assist and made 17 key passes. Strom completed 590 of her 880 total passes (67%). She was accurate on 58.7% of her passes in the opponent’s half, and went 73.8% in her own half. She was 29 of 106 on her long passes (27.4%). She also completed seven of her 36 crosses. Defensively, she logged 34 interceptions and 10 blocks, won 43 of her 81 tackles (53.1%), won 181 of her 291 duels (62.2%), and won 39 of her 64 aerial duels (60.9%). She also committed 18 fouls, suffered 42 fouls, and was not booked.

The 31-year-old made four appearances in NWSL Challenge Cup play, starting four games and playing 314 total minutes. Strom did not score any goals but took two shots with one on target. She attempted three crosses (one successful), and registered no assists. Strom completed 93 of her 134 total passes (69.4%). She was accurate on 61.8% of her passes in the opponent’s half, and 75.8% in her own half.  Strom was 11 of 19 on her long passes (57.9%), and made two key passes. Defensively, she made three blocks and eight interceptions, and won eight of her 10 tackles (80%), 29 of her 46 duels (63%), and eight of her 10 aerial duels (80%). She also committed five fouls, suffered five fouls, and was not booked.

Best Game

Strom’s best match was the 2-1 win over the Washington Spirit on May 20. She scored her only goal of the season on a header at the back post in the 77th minute to give the Pride the win. It was the type of goal that you want from defenders and it came at just the right time.

Strom played the full 90 minutes and she was active in both the defensive and offensive aspects of the match. She nearly put Messiah Bright in on goal but it was knocked out for a corner. Her goal came on three shots with one on target. She also completed 15 of her 30 passes (50%) on 52 touches, committed no fouls, suffered three fouls, and was not booked.

2023 Final Grade

The Mane Land staff gave Strom a composite rating of 6 for the 2023 season. Strom received a grade of 4.5 in 2022 due to being a part of a defense that gave up 45 goals with a -23 goal differential. That is a big year-over-year improvement for the defender and part of that is the defense as a whole was better. Strom also did well individually though she had a bad habit of cheaply giving the ball away in her own half. She previously received an incomplete during what was a rough stretch run in 2021 after joining the club midseason.

2024 Outlook

Strom is out of contract and will be 32 years old prior to the 2024 season starting. She’s also a free agent. Despite that, it’s very possible she is back with the Pride next season unless additional defensive signings are made. It would mean a new contract, but given she started every regular season match in 2023 and finished second only to Emily Madril in minutes played, Seb Hines evidently has faith in her ability to contribute.


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2023 Orlando Pride Season in Review: Haley McCutcheon

The veteran fullback logged a lot of minutes for the Pride in 2023.

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Image courtesy of Orlando Pride / Jeremy Reper

Haley McCutcheon was still known as Haley Hanson when she joined the Orlando Pride on Aug. 18, 2022 in a midseason trade with the Houston Dash. The Pride gave up $75,000 in Allocation Money and a second-round draft selection. She joined Orlando for the stretch run, making her debut with the Pride on Aug. 20 in a 2-1 win over Gotham FC. Following the 2022 season, the Nebraska product signed a new contract through 2024 on Oct. 26 of last year.

Let’s look back at McCutcheon’s second year with the Pride.

Statistical Breakdown

The 27-year-old appeared in every one of the Pride’s 22 regular-season games, starting each of them, and was only subbed out twice all year. She logged 1,955 minutes this season, which was third most on the Pride behind only almost-an-iron-woman Emily Madril (1,977) and Kylie Strom (1,967). In other words, McCutcheon played 98.7% of all possible minutes for Orlando during the NWSL regular season. She scored one goal but did not assist on one, despite providing 15 key passes on the year. The defender attempted 17 shots, five of which were blocked and four were on target. She completed 504 of her 716 pass attempts (70.4%), but just 20.8% of her long passes, and nine of her 40 crosses were successful. In her own end, McCutcheon completed 77.6% of her passes but only 59.8% in the attacking half. Defensively, McCutcheon contributed 10 blocks and 18 interceptions while winning tackles at a 56.9% rate, duels at a 58.3% rate, and aerial duels at a 62.7% clip. Surprisingly, she did not tally a single clearance all season. McCutcheon conceded 18 fouls while winning only eight, and she was not booked.

In NWSL Challenge Cup play, McCutcheon appeared in four of the team’s six matches, starting two, and logging 233 minutes. She did not score or assist on a goal, attempting two shots and getting one on frame. Her passing rate in the competition was just 67.6%, and she was successful on 40% of her long passes while logging three key passes and going 1-for-4 on cross attempts. She completed 70.4% of her pass attempts in the defensive half and 62.7% in the attacking half. On defense, McCutcheon contributed two blocks and two interceptions while winning her tackles at a 75% rate, 77.3% of her duels, and 75% of her aerial duels. She conceded two fouls while winning one and was not booked.

Best Game

McCutcheon’s best match came back on April 29 in the Pride’s 3-1 win over the San Diego Wave at Snapdragon Stadium. She tied season highs in shots (2) and shots on target (1), passed at a 90.5% rate, and made three tackles. Those are all good things, but it gets better. In this match, McCutcheon scored her first goal with the Pride and her only goal of the season, and it proved to be the game-winning strike. And what a strike it was! With the ball on the other side of the field, McCutcheon made a smart run on the back side. Midfielder Viviana Villacorta spotted the run and delivered an excellent, long, diagonal ball into the area for her. But McCutcheon still had a lot to do. She put her head on it and powered it over the goalkeeper and inside the far post to give the Pride their first lead of the season.

The Pride added another goal and went on to grab their first win of the 2023 season. That sparked a 3-0-1 run in league play and got Orlando going in a season that came down to Decision Day.

2023 Final Grade

The Mane Land staff gave McCutcheon a composite rating of 6 out of 10 for her 2023 season, which is a slight improvement over her score of 5 last season. She was a good facilitator down the right side of the pitch and could fill in at times in the midfield with her versatility. Where she continued to struggle at times was with her 1-v-1 defending down the Pride’s right side and with her crossing accuracy at times.

2024 Outlook

As mentioned above, McCutcheon is on a deal through the 2024 season and since the Pride are safe from the NWSL Expansion Draft, the only way she wouldn’t be back is via trade or transfer. I expect her back in purple next year as she’s a versatile player who can fill in at multiple spots and she is obviously valued by the club, playing a lot of minutes and even wearing the captain’s armband five times during the 2023 NWSL campaign and twice in the Challenge Cup.

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