Orlando City
Orlando City vs. New England Revolution: Final Score 3-1 as Orlando City Falls Again in Foxborough
The shorthanded Lions were never really in this one and lacked sharpness throughout.
Someday Orlando City will win at New England and it will be glorious, but that will have to wait. The shorthanded Lions were dominated and rarely threatened former Orlando City backup goalkeeper Earl Edwards Jr. in a 3-1 loss at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, MA. The Lions (7-5-5, 26 points) fell to 0-6-2 in away games against the Revs (9-3-6, 33 points) as Emmanuel Boateng, Gustavo Bou, and Carles Gil did the damage. Duncan McGuire pulled one back late for Orlando.
“Obviously frustrated not getting the result,” Orlando City Head Coach Oscar Pareja said after the match. “But the analysis of the game is clear. In the second half when we reacted, the goals were plays isolated where we could have defended better and that’s probably the frustration that we carry right now. But we had the chances to score. We had the chances to equalize the game.”
Pareja was missing several regulars due to international duty and suspension, so Mason Stajduhar started in net behind a back line of Rafael Santos, Robin Jansson, Rodrigo Schlegel, and Michael Halliday. Cesar Araujo’s central midfield partner was Felipe, behind an attacking line of Ivan Angulo, Mauricio Pereyra, and Martin Ojeda, with Ercan Kara up top.
The opening half was a sloppy, rain-soaked affair and Orlando City never seemed to settle into the match. Orlando only managed to hang onto the ball for 33% of the time and passed dreadfully, completing less than 70% of attempted passes.
Araujo was booked just three minutes in when Gil felt a hand on his shoulder and went to ground easily. Referee Fotis Bazakos bought it and showed the Uruguayan an early yellow. Gil sent the free kick wide, although Stajduhar had his post covered.
Pereyra drew a free kick on a foul from behind by Noel Buck and the Lions were going to try something different with the set piece but Bazakos blew his whistle after Pereyra had tapped the ball to his left. That ruined the surprise and Ojeda instead sent a shot just wide of Earl Edwards Jr.’s post.
Stajduhar made the only save of the first half in the 21st minute when Bou fired from the top of the box and it appeared to take a slight deflection, which took some of the pace off the attempt.
A minute later, Halliday was booked for an even softer foul on Emmanuel Boateng, putting two defenders on notice in the game’s first half hour.
Bou fired over the bar in the 23rd minute and Buck missed just wide of the right post in the 28th as the Revolution did most of the possessing and attacking in the opening period. Whether it was the rain, the artificial turf, a lack of sharpness, or a combination of those things, the Lions struggled to find each other with passes or to bring those passes under control.
Bobby Wood put the ball in the net in the 32nd minute but the flag came up immediately as Brandon Bye was offside in the buildup.
The most dangerous Orlando City chance should have come in the 34th minute when Pereyra slipped the ball in for Ojeda but his touch was poor, he lost control, and it dribbled out for a goal kick. Two minutes later, Santos found space on the left but sent his cross right at Edwards. Seconds later, Angulo cut left to right and fired a shot into the stands.
An overhit corner kick cross and a doubly overhit cross by Halliday later pretty much summed up the first half and the teams went into the break scoreless.
The Revs dominated the stat sheet, leading at the break in possession (66.8%-33.2%), shots (6-3), shots on target (1-0), corners (2-1), and passing accuracy (85.7%-69.7%).
Pareja sent McGuire on for Kara to start the second half, hoping to bother New England’s back line with a little more pace.
“Second half the intention with Duncan was to be maybe faster and deeper on our movements, and he provided those diagonals,” Pareja said. “He held the ball for us. Both of them (Kara and McGuire) helped us today and obviously just happy with Duncan scoring another goal.”
The lions started the second half somewhat brightly with Pereyra nearly sending Ojeda in behind in the 47th minute but defender Dave Romney got their a fraction earlier to get a toe on it. Seconds later, Felipe tried a shot but hit it right at Edwards.
New England broke the deadlock just six minutes into the second period anyway. The Revs created an overload on the right and Bou fizzed a cross into the box that Stajduhar parried away. Unfortunately, it went straight out from goal, allowing Boateng to hit a blast just inside the right post to make it 1-0 in the 51st minute.
Ojeda either sent a shot just wide or a back-post cross to nobody in the 54th minute, looking to pull that goal right back. A minute later, a ball in from Halliday took a deflection that allowed Edwards to collect.
Angulo teed up a shot in the 58th minute but again couldn’t keep his shot down on what was a forgettable night for him. The next two decent-looking Orlando attacks ended with a thud with both Santos and Halliday sending crosses right at the goalkeeper, wasting more opportunities.
Ojeda’s best look of the night came in the 63rd minutes. With the ball pinging around near the top of the area, Ojeda spun his body and sent a shot toward the right post. He wasn’t able to get a lot of pace on it, but the shot through traffic was headed in but Edwards made a huge save to preserve the lead. The ball unfortunately bounced to maybe the only height that would have permitted the save.
Bou appeared to put the game away in the 69th minute, racing from right to left and unleashing a shot inside the far post past Stajduhar to make it 2-0.
The difference in quality on the night between the teams’ attackers was never more apparent than on Bou’s screamer and the eventual insurance goal from Gil.
Thankfully, Wood did not have that same quality in the 73rd minute when his shot found outside netting on the break.
Orlando’s sloppy night in front of goal continued for the next few minutes, with Araujo badly slicing a shot that ended up bouncing to Ojeda, who then missed the target.
Second-half sub Giacomo Vrioni fired a shot wide in transition after that, keeping the scoreline from getting worse.
Pareja then sent Dagur Dan Thorhallsson and Luca Petrasso on for Araujo and Pereyra. The Lions scored a minute after those changes. Halliday sent his best cross of the night over the defense and McGuire met it in the air, heading it back to the right and in for his fifth goal of the season in the 80th minute, making it 2-1.
“I saw a teammate get his head up and I have a good connection with him,” McGuire said about the play. “He served a beautiful ball up and I’ve just worked on that header a million times in training, so it worked out perfectly.”
The Lions threw numbers forward but got caught looking for the equalizer. Just five minutes after McGuire’s goal, Orlando wasted opportunities to get the ball in the box off a set piece and after New England gained possession, the Revs attacked with numbers and both City center backs forward. Gil finished the play with a goal that beat Stajduhar in almost exactly the same way Bou had. The 85th-minute goal made it 3-1 and effectively killed the game.
Despite four goals and multiple subs on both sides, Bazakos determined three minutes of stoppage time were sufficient. Pareja sent OCB captain Juninho on for his MLS debut, along with Ramiro Enrique. The Juninho substitution nearly paid off immediately.
With one of his first touches on the night, Juninho freed himself up for a shot from outside the box but fizzed it just wide of the left post in the 92nd minute.
After Edwards was booked for time wasting, a final ball fell for Halliday with an open look at goal. The young fullback decided instead to square a ball into traffic and it was easily cut out as the game came to an end.
The Lions ate into the lopsided stats a bit, but New England controlled possession (59.4%-40.6%) and passed more accurately (85.4%-77.2%). Orlando City finished with more shot attempts (16-14). Both teams got four of their shots on target and each side earned two corners.
“The game got more open in the second half and they threw a lot more numbers forward, which allowed us to get some counters going, but we’ve got to put our chances away, and I think we’ve got to do a better job with that,” McGuire said.
Orlando City has a short turnaround with the Philadelphia Union visiting Exploria Stadium on Wednesday night. Game time is 7:30 p.m.