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Orlando Pride vs. Chicago Red Stars: Preview, How to Watch, TV Info, Live Stream, Lineups, Match Thread, and More

The Pride return to regular-season action tonight as they welcome the Chicago Red Stars to Exploria Stadium.

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Image courtesy of Orlando Pride

Welcome to your match preview as the Orlando Pride (6-8-1, 19 points) return to regular-season action against the Chicago Red Stars (5-9-1, 16 points) at Exploria Stadium. This is the second and final time the Pride and Red Stars are scheduled to meet this season.

Here’s everything you need to know about tonight’s game.

History

The Pride and Red Stars have played every season since the former’s entrance into the NWSL except 2020. The teams have played 17 games, with the Pride going 4-12-1. The Pride have yet to beat Chicago at home, going 0-7-1, all in regular-season games.

The Pride and Red Stars first met this season on May 27 in Illinois. Orlando dominated the entire 90 minutes, with Chicago only getting two chances on their home field. But the Pride struggled to hit the target, and Yuki Nagasato’s goal was the difference as the Pride fell 1-0.

The second meeting last season was on June 12, 2022 in Illinois. Mallory Swanson capitalized on an early Pride turnover and the Red Stars held on for the 1-0 win. The first meeting of 2022 took place on May 22 in Orlando. Sarah Griffin gave the visitors the lead, and Bianca St. Georges and Swanson made it 3-0 Chicago. It appeared as though the Red Stars would run away with the game, but the final 10 minutes saw three goals and two penalties for an exciting finish. Sydney Leroux missed a penalty, but Amy Turner scored the Pride’s first goal late. Pugh converted her penalty in the moments later, and Leah Pruitt scored her first goal for the Pride a minute after that in a 4-2 Red Stars win.

The teams met three times during the 2021 season, but didn’t play until Aug. 8 in Illinois. Jodie Taylor and Leroux scored for the Pride before the half. The 2-0 win ended a six-game winless streak and was the first NWSL win for interim head coach Becky Burleigh.

The second meeting was Oct. 13 in Bridgeview, a rescheduled game that was originally supposed to take place Oct. 2. Kealia Watt scored early and the Red Stars defended that lead for 84 minutes on their way to a 1-0 result. The teams met again Oct. 29 in Orlando in the final game of the regular season. The Red Stars controlled the game but the Pride held off the Chicago attack for 65 minutes, at which point Watt scored the lone goal in a 1-0 game.

The Pride and Red Stars didn’t play in the 2020 Fall Series, so the last meeting prior to 2021 came in 2019. The first game was June 30 at Exploria Stadium. Goals by Chioma Ubogagu and Marta were topped by a Sam Kerr hat trick as the Red Stars won 3-2. The second game was on Aug. 21 in Bridgeview. The Pride took a 2-0 lead with goals by Rachel Hill and Ubogagu. Tierna Davidson cut the lead in half for Chicago, but it wasn’t enough as the Pride won 2-1. The third meeting in 2021 came on Sept. 11 in Orlando. Casey Short stole the game for Chicago with the game’s lone goal five minutes into second-half injury time as the Red Stars won, 1-0.

The 2018 NWSL season saw the Pride and Red Stars meet three times. On May 2 in Bridgeview, Hill and Ubogagu scored in a 2-0 Pride win. They met in the same location May 26 in a high-scoring affair. A Leroux brace was added to goals by Hill, Alex Morgan, and Dani Weatherholt, as the Pride won 5-2. They met a third time in 2018 on Aug. 25 in Orlando. The Red Stars were led by a Kerr brace, resulting in a 3-1 victory over the Pride.

The Pride and Red Stars met three times in 2017 — the first year that they played that many games against each other. Christen Press scored the lone goal on July 1 in Orlando as Chicago won 1-0. On July 22 in Bridgeview, Press led her team with a brace in a 2-1 Chicago win. The final meeting came a week later in Orlando. Morgan put the Pride ahead, but Sofia Huerta equalized as the teams drew 1-1.

The two teams met for the first time during the Pride’s inaugural season in 2016 on May 1 in Bridgeview. Press’ second-half goal led the Red Stars to a 1-0 win. On July 16 in Orlando, Taylor Comeau scored the lone goal as Chicago again won 1-0.

Overview

The Pride went into the 2023 FIFA Women’s World Cup break on a two-game winning streak, beating the Washington Spirit, 3-0 at Audi Field and OL Reign, 1-0 at home. Two postponements earlier in the year meant that the Pride had to play four Challenge Cup games during the break, going 0-3-1 and finishing last in the East Division.

Tonight, the team returns to the regular season, entering this weekend’s slate just two points behind San Diego Wave FC for the sixth and final playoff spot. It’s been a week and a half since the Pride last took the field, so they’ve been able to remain healthy leading into the final six-game playoff push.

Fortunately for the Pride, Brazil experienced an early exit from the World Cup, so Marta and Adriana are back with the team. The pair have been the biggest attacking threats this season and the Pride offense struggled mightily without them, scoring three goals in five games. Their return will provide experience and relief for the younger attackers, as defenders will have to keep an eye on the two returning players.

Other World Cup participants include Brazilian defender Rafaelle and Argentine striker Mariana Larroquette. Larroquette might not take the spot of Messiah Bright or Julie Doyle, but Rafaelle will likely slide into the back line alongside rookie Emily Madril. The experienced center back, who signed from Arsenal FC in England just before the World Cup, can be a leader for the defense and guide the young Madril.

Tonight, the Pride will welcome the team at the bottom of the NWSL standings. Much was made of the Red Stars losing their star attacker Swanson, who tore her patella tendon in a USWNT friendly against the Republic of Ireland in April. However, while Chicago’s in the middle of the league in goals scored, its 33 goals conceded is the most of the 12 teams in the league.

The Red Stars have had some tough games defensively, giving up five goals to OL Reign on April 22, four goals to the Portland Thorns on May 21, and five goals to the North Carolina Courage on June 10. But, similar to the Pride, they went into the World Cup break on a roll, with 1-0 wins over San Diego and the Houston Dash. They built on those wins by beating the Dash again, 3-0 on Aug. 5 in the Challenge Cup.

The Red Stars have made up for Swanson’s absence in the aggregate. Ella Stevens, Penelope Hocking, Ana Cook, Nagasato, and Allison Schlegel all have multiple goals this season. Julia Bianchi has been the playmaker with a team-leading three assists.

Stopping Stevens and Cook will be the main task in tonight’s game. Chicago’s pair of clean sheets heading into the break are impressive, but the Pride have a strong attack now that everyone is back. However, similar to the Red Stars, they’ve had their struggles defensively. Their 21 goals conceded this season is tied for fourth most in the league, so it’s possible this game could become a shootout.

“Chicago is a good team. They’ve hit some form in recent games and they like to possess the ball,” Pride Head Coach Seb Hines said about tonight’s opponent. “They’ve started to finish with a lot of possession, but the emphasis is on us. We’re at home in front of our fans and we need to put a performance together and we want nothing less than three points. We are going in the right direction to hit that playoff spot. It starts again on Sunday against Chicago and if we stick to our principles, work ethic, and execution in our finishing then I’m sure we’ll be in a good position moving forward.”

While the Pride entered the weekend only two points from sixth and five points from fifth, they were also only three points from last in the NWSL. The final six games are critical, because they could secure the second playoff appearance in team history or finish dead last for the second time. All six games are important, but the three homes games are especially essential. That run starts tonight with a team they should beat.

The Pride are as healthy as they could hope for heading into this game. The only player out is Carrie Lawrence (knee), who’s been missing all year with a season-ending injury. In addition to Swanson (knee), Chicago will be without starting center back Tierna Davidson (ankle) and Samantha Fisher (hip).


Official Lineups

Orlando Pride (4-2-3-1)

Goalkeeper: Anna Moorhouse.

Defenders: Kylie Strom, Emily Madril, Rafaelle, Haley McCutcheon.

Defensive Midfielders: Kerry Abello, Viviana Villacorta.

Midfielders: Adriana, Marta, Julie Doyle.

Forward: Messiah Bright.

Bench: Carly Nelson, Erika Tymrak, Celia, Ally Watt, Mariana Larroquette, Jordyn Listro, Megan Montefusco, Mikayla Cluff, Summer Yates.

Chicago Red Stars (4-4-2)

Goalkeeper: Alyssa Naeher.

Defenders: Casey Krueger, Arin Wright, Kayla Sharples, Taylor Malham.

Midfielders: Yuki Nagasato, Julia Bianchi, Cari Roccaro, Bianca St-Georges.

Forwards: Ava Cook, Penelope Hocking.

Bench: Jill Aguilera, Jenna Bike, Emily Boyd, Samantha Fisher, Sarah Griffith, Amanda Kowalski, Tatumn Milazzo, Ally Schlegel, Ella Stevens.

Referees

REF: Anya Voigt.
AR1: Katarzyna Wasiak.
AR2: Seth Barton.
4TH: Daniel Gutierrez.
VAR: Katherine McCormick.
AVAR: Tony Obas.


How to Watch

Match Time: 7 p.m.

Venue: Exploria Stadium — Orlando.

TV: None.

Streaming: Paramount+ (U.S.), NWSLsoccer.com (International).

Twitter: For live updates and rapid reaction, follow @ManeLandSean and the Orlando Pride’s official Twitter feed (@ORLPride).


Enjoy the Match. Go Pride!

Orlando Pride

Orlando Pride vs. Kansas City Current: Final Score 3-0 as Pride Bounce Back with Win

The Pride take all three points at home against the red-hot Current.

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Image of Barbra Banda celebrating a goal against Kansas City.
Image courtesy of Orlando Pride / Mark Thor

A strong defensive effort and some moments of attacking quality earned the Orlando Pride all three points in a 3-0 win over the Kansas City Current at Inter&Co Stadium tonight. It was especially fitting that the Pride earned a clean sheet on goalkeeper Anna Moorhouse’s 100th appearance with the club.

The Orlando Pride (6-6-2, 20 points) bounced back from a difficult result in LA in convincing fashion against a tough Kansas City Current (8-6-0, 24 points) team. The match started off fairly even, but Orlando was organized and disciplined in this match and ultimately prevailed with goals from Marta, Barbra Banda and Hannah Anderson.

Orlando Pride Head Coach Seb Hines deployed his typical 4-2-3-1 formation in the team’s return home. The back line in front of Moorhouse was made up of Kerry Abello, Anderson, Zara Chavoshi, and Cori Dyke. Haley McCutcheon and Ally Lemos served as the defensive midfielders, with Angelina, Marta, and Jacquie Ovalle taking up the attacking midfield roles. Solai Washington serving as striker.

“Zara’s been out for majority of the season, and we know her qualities,” Hines said said of his defensive players after the match. “With young players, you have to find out what they’re made of as well, and so she really stepped up into the challenge —Hannah and Zara — because they’ve been patient and been waiting for this opportunity since the start of the year. Hannah is such a threat off set pieces. Talk about Cori. She’s she’s been brilliant as well. Wherever we’ve put her in that back line, she’s been so consistent. We have to consistently have those desired behaviors to not concede, and that gives you the platform to go on and win the game.”

Kansas City came out quickly, testing Moorhouse in the first minute with a cross from Amelia White that Moorhouse got to just ahead of Haley Hopkins.

At the other end, Dyke took Orlando’s first shot from the top of the box in the sixth that looked more like a cross than a shot, and Marisa Jordan saved it with ease.

In the seventh minute, Angelina got the ball wide to the right side to Ovalle, who sent it back to Angelina, who then fired high.

Orlando put together a decent buildup down the left in the ninth minute by Abello and Washington, who centered it for Marta. Marta passed back to Angelina, who fired well wide to the left. Orlando went forward again in the 11th minute, with Marta out wide sending a ball over the 18-yard box that Dyke collected and then worked back out to Angelina. The Brazilian crossed it in to Abello, who headed it off target at the back post.

Izzy Rodriguez stripped Mart of the ball in the 13th just outside the Orlando 18-yard box, allowing Debinha to find Hopkins with a centering pass, but the Current attacker fired wide right. Croix Bethune tried her luck from long distance in the 16th minute, but the effort went straight at Moorhouse.

Orlando had a well-worked buildup through the middle in the 17th minute, with Dyke advancing up the right and sending a ball to Lemos, who found Dyke again for a cross in to Washington — but her shot sailed over the crossbar. Washington and Marta traded passes in the 19th before Washington attempted a right-footed cross into the box that Jordan intercepted easily.

As the teams continued battling back and forth, White worked her way around Abello in the 22nd minute and picked out Debinha with a cross, but her effort went straight at a well-positioned Moorhouse. Bethune found Hopkins in the 23rd, but Lemos cut off her ball through the box, sending it behind for a corner. McCutcheon headed away the ensuing corner, earning Kansas City another corner. Hopkins headed the the entry cross over the bar, handing Orlando a goal kick.

Kansas City nearly broke through three minutes later, on a mistake by the Pride defense on a ball over the top to Debinha. Chavoshi attempted to shepherd the ball out for a goal kick, but she was too far from the end line. Debinha got past her to the ball and sent it in front to Hopkins for the tap-in. But the goal was chalked off for offside on the initial ball. It was a close play.

Rocky Rodriguez’s cross found Bethune in the 30th minute, and the midfielder outjumped Abello, got her head on it, and placed the effort well, but the shot had little pace to it and Moorhouse collected it.

Lemos made a nice driving run in the 33rd minute and fed Washington, whose cross was cut out by Laney Rouse. The loose ball found Angelina before it was eventually cleared following some back-and-forth changes of possession just outside the Current’s box.

Some gritty midfield work from Abello — who picked up a knock to her wrist on the play — saw her strip the ball from the Current in the 38th minute and advance it to Washington, who worked her way to the end line and passed back to Ovalle. The Mexican international’s shot was right at Jordan. Abello received treatment, left the field briefly, and returned to the match in the 41st minute after the mandatory one-minute wait for receiving attention.

Orlando won a throw-in in the 42nd minute, and Washington worked her way down the left before delivering a cross that Jordan stopped, colliding with Kayla Sharples in the process. Neither was injured in the tangle.

Orlando was able to maintain sustained possession for several minutes and spent that time trying to fashion a shot but never created anything threatening. Kanasas City pounced on a McCutcheon attempted pass, and broke down the pitch through a Bethune ball over the top to Debinha, who had to wait for reinforcements. Lo’Eau Labonta arrived and Debinha fed a ball she popped up which was defended away by McCutcheon but back out to the Current. Kansas City worked it back to Labonta, who then sent the ball over the crossbar. It was the last action of the first half.

Orlando held the lead in possession (51%-49%) and both teams managed six shots. Kansas City led in shots on target (3-1), corner kicks (2-0), and passing accuracy (88%-86%).

Kansas City subbed on the dangerous Temwa Chawinga for Debinha after the break, and the Current started off the second half aggressively. Marta had other plans though and, in the 49th minute, she scored her 50th goal for the Pride from about 30 yards out. Ovalle took the ball down Orlando’s left side, worked her way central, and passed back to Marta. Kansas City applied absolutely no pressure on her, so she blasted a long-range shot past a diving Jordan.

Hines made his first substitution of the game in the 53rd minute, bringing on Hailie Mace for Abello. Orlando earned a corner moments later through Marta, and the Pride doubled their lead on the ensuing set piece. Lemos sent a good cross to the back post and Anderson met it with a header, placing it perfectly past Jordan to make it 2-0.

The Current won a corner of their own in the 59th minute, but Orlando defended it away. It only as far as Chawinga, whose follow-up shot was blocked by Anderson.

Hines turned to his bench again in the 65th minute, sending on Luana for Angelina and Julie Doyle for Ovalle. Bethune worked her way into Orlando’s box in the 67th and fired from close range, but at a tight angle, and sent her effort straight at Moorhouse, who parried it behind for a corner. Moorhouse punched the corner clear, and the danger was eventually cleared over the crossbar for an Orlando goal kick.

Orlando was content to sit back and defend from that point. Bayley Feist made a slow-rolling effort in the 72nd that was easily gathered by Moorhouse, and Mace had a shot of her own in the 73rd that didn’t overly test Jordan. The Current responded in the 74th through Gianna Paul, but Moorhouse collected her effort without much trouble.

Hines made his final change in the 76th minute, bringing on Banda for Marta and Oihane for Washington. Banda’s first involvement came in the 77th, when she fired over the bar, and she got in behind again in the 78th and tried to chip Jordan — but the ball drifted past the far post with no one on hand to finish it off.

The Current had back-to-back chances in the 80th minute. Chawinga’s tepid effort was saved comfortably by Moorhouse, and moments later, Bethune pounced on an ill-advised pass from Anderson, only for Moorhouse to deny her as well. Paul’s cross into the box in the 83rd was collected just as easily.

Banda put the result beyond doubt in the 85th. Mace sent a ball over the top and into acres of space behind the Current’s back line. Jordan came rushing out to beat Banda to it, but she made only glancing contact with the ball on her volley attempt to clear it. The ball squirted behind Jordan. Banda easily beat Jordan to the loose ball and slotted it into an empty net for her 12th goal of the season, making it 3-0.

“We felt our structure and our engagement line was probably better to be a little bit lower to kind of take away the space that she could exploit and not let just one ball beat us.” Hines said of his strategy to deal with Chawinga’s threat. “A little adjustment that we made going into this game was just dropping Haley McCutcheon into the back line and covering those distances and the shifting across, but also trying to be aggressive to still press in the right position.”

The Current continued to press in the 90th minute, with Chawinga carving out her best look of the night, cutting left to right and smashing a hard shot just wide of the right post, handing possession back to Orlando. Moments later, Chawinga headed over the bar on the match’s final scoring chance.

Orlando’s defensive posture for much of the second half flipped the stats firmly in the visitors’ favor. Kansas City led in possession (55%-45%), shots (20-11), shots on target (9-5), corner kicks (4-1), and passing accuracy (88%-83%).

“Really good result. You know, especially after we come from a loss in LA,” Marta said. “It’s been like a tough season this year, ups and down[s], and we need to take a chance, especially when we play home. So, I’m really happy with the result tonight. Some days you wake up and then you just say to yourself, ‘It’s today, you know. Today you’re gonna play your best game.'”


The Pride next face the Boston Legacy at home on Wednesday.

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Orlando Pride vs. Kansas City Current: Preview, How to Watch, TV Info, Live Stream, Lineups, Match Thread, and More

The Pride return home tonight as they welcome the Kansas City Current to Orlando.

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Image courtesy of Orlando Pride

Welcome to your preview and match thread as the Orlando Pride (5-6-2, 17 points) return home to face the Kansas City Current (8-5-0, 24 points). This is the first of two meetings between the two teams with the return game in Missouri scheduled for Sept. 11.

Here’s everything you need to know about tonight’s game.

History

The Current joined the NWSL in 2021 after the team’s ownership group bought the Utah Royals and relocated the club to Kansas City. It’s the second NWSL team in the city — FC Kansas City played there from 2013 to 2017 before moving to Utah — and the team was known as NWSL Kansas City for its inaugural season.

The Pride and Current have played 10 games against each other in the regular season and once in the playoffs. Orlando has a 3-3-4 record in the regular-season series (1-2-2 at home) and 4-3-4 in all competitions (2-2-2 in Orlando).

The two teams last met on Aug. 16, 2025, in Kansas City. While the Current outshot the Pride 16-5, each team only put one on target in a scoreless draw. On May 16 at Inter&Co Stadium, Temwa Chawinga was the difference, scoring the game’s lone goal in a 1-0 win by the Current.

The first game in 2024 was on July 6 in Kansas City, Barbra Banda gave the Pride the lead, but the hosts responded two minutes later through Chawinga. Despite a second yellow card for Carrie Lawrence dropping the Pride to 10 players just before halftime, Marta converted a second-half penalty, lifting her team to a 2-1 win.

On Sept. 13 in Orlando, the teams combined for 27 shots, but neither converted as the game ended in a scoreless draw. The final meeting of the season came on Nov. 17, 2024, in the NWSL semifinals in Orlando. Debinha gave the Current the lead and Haley McCutcheon equalized just before halftime. Banda made it 2-1 in the second half and Marta doubled the advantage late in normal time. Vanessa DiBernardo got one back deep in stoppage time from the penalty spot, but it wasn’t enough as the Pride won 3-2 to advance to the NWSL Championship in the Current’s home stadium.

The first time the teams met in 2023 was on April 23 at Children’s Mercy Park in Kansas City. It was scoreless after an hour before the Current got a quick flurry of goals by Debinha and CeCe Kizer, lifting Kansas City to a 2-0 win. On June 23, 2023 in Orlando, the visitors took the lead through Debinha, and Kizer doubled the advantage just before halftime. Marta converted a penalty to pull one back, but the Pride fell 2-1.

The first meeting in 2022 took place May 14 at Exploria Stadium. The Pride took the lead early in the second half on a Gunny Jonsdottir goal. Elyse Bennett scored late in the second half, and the visitors appeared to win the game a minute into injury time through Kristen Hamilton. However, Kylie Strom was pulled down in the box five minutes later, resulting in a penalty. With Marta injured, the only player willing to step up to take the penalty was center back Toni Pressley, who drilled the ball into the roof of the net, pulling out a 2-2 draw.

Their second meeting in 2022 came on July 31 in Kansas City while the Pride were in the middle of their seven-game unbeaten run. The Pride opened the scoring when Erika Tymrak found Celia, whose header made it 1-0, and doubled the lead just after halftime through Julie Doyle. The Current stormed back with goals by Bennett and Kizer, pulling out a 2-2 draw.

The teams played twice during the 2021 NWSL season, with the first game occurring May 30 at Exploria Stadium. Courtney Petersen found Alex Morgan just outside the six-yard box and the striker headed in the game’s lone goal as the Pride won 1-0.

The Pride and Current met again on June 23 at Legends Field in Kansas City. The Pride had a weakened squad as then-coach Marc Skinner left some key players at home, preparing to lose them to the Olympics. It looked to be costly when Mariana Larroquette gave the hosts the lead late in first-half injury time. But the Pride responded well. Two minutes after Larroquette’s goal, Sydney Leroux’s shot took a deflection off a defender and went in to make it 1-1. Shortly after halftime, Leroux scored on a great individual effort from just outside the box. Marta then scored the goal of the game, beating Kansas City goalkeeper Abby Smith from the top of the center circle, lifting the Pride to a 3-1 win.

Overview

It’s been an up-and-down season for the Pride this year. The lowest point occurred in mid-May when they lost back-to-back games to expansion sides Boston Legacy FC and Denver Summit FC away from home. It appeared as though they had righted the ship just before the World Cup break, winning back-to-back games against San Diego Wave FC and Bay FC.

Unfortunately, the return to action went about as poorly as you’d fear. Despite being on the road, they were facing an Angel City team that fired its coach prior to the break. However, the Pride spent nearly the whole game on their heels, falling 2-0.

The back line of Kerry Abello, Rafaelle, Cori Dyke, and Hailie Mace played well in the two victories, but they struggled to get the ball out of their own end in LA. It was a significant reason why they conceded twice.

The attack has been led yet again by Banda, who leads the league with 11 goals in 12 games. But the Zambian international missed the last game with a thigh injury.

On the postiive side, Jacquie Ovalle returned to the team in LA after missing the previous seven games. While she didn’t have the attacking impact she had early in the season, the midfielder’s presence will likely be felt when Banda returns as the two have made a dangerous pair.

The Current were the class of the league last season, winning the NWSL Shield by an astounding 21 points. They struggled out of the gate this year but have been on fire since the beginning of May. They’ve won six of their last seven games, with the only loss coming on May 20 to Angel City in LA. Most recently, they dominated the Summit in Denver 3-0.

The slow start can be attributed to a change of coach. Vlatko Andonovski stepped down from his coaching duties to become the club’s full-time sporting director. Chris Armas took over after being fired by the Colorado Rapids and it seemed early on like it might’ve been a mistake. But it now appears as though they could be the team to beat in the second half of the season.

The recent surge in victories has lifted the Current to fifth in the NWSL standings. That’s mostly due to their offensive prowess. The team has scored 21 goals in its first 13 games, tied with the Wave for second and three goals behind the Portland Thorns. Meanwhile, they’re 10th in goals conceded, having given up 17 goals.

Unsurprisingly, the Current are led by Chawinga, who has eight goals in nine games this year. Michelle Cooper has four goals, followed by Haley Hopkins and Croix Bethune with two goals each. Bethune leads Kansas City with five assists, followed by Cooper with three and Izzy Rodriguez and Chawinga with two each.

While the Current will have most of their attack, Cooper is out tonight with a thigh injury. Given her goals and assists, it’s something that could have an impact on tonight’s game. Especially with veteran center back Rafaelle missing.

“It’s always a good match against KC, whether it’s home or away. Two teams that have consistently been at the top of the table. The last two shield winners as well,” Pride Head Coach Seb Hines said about tonight’s game. “So we expect a competitive game, both teams going after it. Obviously they’ve got new management, a couple of new players as well. But within their style of play and principles, it’s very similar to what they’ve shown in the last couple of years.”

The Pride will play tonight without Kylie Nadaner (maternity leave), Rafaelle (hip), and Viviana Villacorta (knee). The Current will be without Ellie Bravo-Young (thigh), Alana Cook (knee), Cooper (thigh), Clare Gagne (head), Mary Long, and Lorena (hip). Additionally, Katie Scott is away with the U.S. U-20 National Team.


Official Lineups

Orlando Pride (4-2-3-1)

Goalkeeper: Anna Moorhouse.

Defenders: Kerry Abello, Hannah Anderson, Zara Chavoshi, Cori Dyke.

Defensive Midfielders: Haley McCutcheon, Ally Lemos.

Attacking Midfielders: Angelina, Marta, Jacquie Ovalle.

Forward: Solai Washington.

Bench: Cosette Morche, Hailie Mace, Oihane, Nicole Payne, Luana, Julie Doyle, Seven Castain, Summer Yates, Barbra Banda.

Kansas City Current (4-2-3-1)

Goalkeeper: Marisa Jordan.

Defenders: Izzy Rodriguez, Kayla Sharples, Gabrielle Robinson, Laney Rouse.

Defensive Midfielders: Rocky Rodriguez, Lo’eau LaBonta.

Attacking Midfielders: Debinha, Croix Bethune, Amelia White.

Forward: Haley Hopkins.

Bench: Kaylin Williams-Mosier, Meila Brewer, Elizabeth Ball, Kolo Suliafu, Vanessa DiBernardo, Bayley Feist, Gianna Paul, Penelope Hocking, Temwa Chawinga.

Referees

REF: Nabil Bensalah.
AR1: Jake Brochu.
AR2: Ben Rigel.
4TH: Elvis Osmanovic.
VAR: Anya Voigt.
AVAR: Katarzyna Wasiak.


How to Watch

Match Time: 8 p.m.

Venue: Inter&Co Stadium — Orlando.

TV: None.

Streaming: Prime Video.

Social Media: For live updates and rapid reaction, follow @themaneland.bsky.social on Bluesky and the Orlando Pride’s official Twitter (@ORLPride) or Bluesky (@orlpride.com) feed.


Enjoy the game. Go Pride!

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Orlando Pride vs. Angel City FC: Final Score 2-0 As Pride Are Dominated In California

The Pride returned to action from the summer break, falling 2-0 to Angel City.

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Image courtesy of Orlando Pride

The Orlando Pride (5-6-2, 17 points) returned from their month-long World Cup break, falling 2-0 to Angel City FC (5-6-1, 16 points) at BMO Field in Los Angeles, CA. A first-half goal by Maiara Niehues and a second-half strike by Sveindis Jonsdottir was the difference, although the game was thoroughly dominated by the hosts.

Pride Head Coach Seb Hines deployed his typical 4-2-3-1 formation in the team’s return to action. However, they were without Barbra Banda, who was out with a thigh injury. The back line in front of goalkeeper Anna Moorhouse was made up of Kerry Abello, Rafaelle, Cori Dyke, and Hailie Mace. Angelina and Ally Lemos were the defensive midfielders behind Jacquie Ovalle, Haley McCutcheon, and Luana with Julie Doyle up top.

This was one of the worst performances by the Pride this year. With Banda missing, the team was unable to get anything going offensively, alhough that might not have mattered as Orlando couldn’t get the ball out of its own end. The 2-0 scoreline is a generous one for the Pride, who could’ve easily lost by more.

Ally Sentnor, who joined Angel City during the break, tried to make something happen early during her debut. Inside the first minute, the U.S. international made a run to the top of the box before dribbling inside. The attacker struggled to find space before finally shooting, but Dyke was there to block the attempt.

The Pride had their first chance in the seventh minute when Rafaelle played a ball forward to Luana over the midfield stripe. The Brazilian took the space the defense gave her, dribbling near the top of the box before unleashing a shot. It initially appeared to be on target, but began curving, hitting the outside of the post and going out of play. That was about as close to scoring as Orlando came all night.

The hosts threatened to take the lead in the 14th minute when Jun Endo sent a dangerous ball into the six-yard box. Sentnor got on the end of it, but Dyke, Mace, and Moorhouse were all in front of the goal to keep it out.

Evelyn Shores received a pass on the left in the 17th minute before playing it to Endo, who was making an overlapping run. The Japanese international took a hard shot from a tight angle, but Moorhouse had her near post covered, catching the attempt.

In the 25th minute, Luana slid to keep possession from an Abello clearance, trying to play it back to McCutcheon. Unfortunately, it went straight to Jonsdottir instead. Jonsdottir immediately played the ball to Sentnor, who dribbled into the Pride box before sending a low shot wide of the far post.

Shores fought through a pair of defenders in the 31st minute to get the ball to Niehues. The Brazilian attempted a low cross that McCutcheon cleared but only to Shores at the top corner of the box. The left back took a touch around Mace to create space for a shot, sending her attempt over the target.

The Pride struggled to clear in the 35th minute when Sentnor played a ball to Endo, who was making an underlapping run. Angelina chested down Endo’s cross in an attempt to clear, but it didn’t go far. Gisele Thompson was able to tap it to Jonsdottir, whose shot went wide.

A minute later, the Pride were unable to clear again, resulting in the game’s opening goal. Dyke got in front of Thompson’s ball into the box, but she knocked it to Ary Borges, who took a shot that Dyke blocked again, but she failed to get it out of the box. The rebound fell straight to Niehues, who curled a shot out of Moorhouse’s reach and into the corner to give Angel City the 1-0 lead.

“You’ve got to defend the cross, so stop the cross. And then you’ve got to defend the cross, and we don’t quite clear our lines,” Hines said. “We talk about clearing it out of dangerous areas. It lands at Ary Borges. She has a shot, it deflects, and then we don’t close the next shot from Niehues. We speak about that a lot. The closer you are, the less chance they are of scoring, and we stood off them. They took that opportunity really well, but we feel that with our standard and our level, we should be doing better.”

The Pride continued to play on the back foot, defending desperately as Angel City created chances. In the 38th minute, Borges picked out Niehues near the top of the Pride box. The attacker shot as McCutcheon closed her down, sending her attempt wide of the near post.

Angel City continued on the attack, keeping the ball in the Pride half as they struggled to clear. In the 42nd minute, Jonsdottir tried to chip Moorhouse from outside the Pride box, but the Pride goalkeeper made the easy catch.

Angelina took the ball away from Borges in the first minute of first-half stoppage time 30 yards from goal. The midfielder lifted an overly ambitious attempt toward Angel City goalkeeper Angelina Anderson for her team’s second shot of the game. However, it didn’t cause any trouble.

It was a dominant 45 minutes for Angel City. While the Pride had more possession (54%-46%), most of it was in their own half. The hosts had more shots (10-2), shots on target (3-0), crosses (10-3), and corner kicks (2-0). Both teams completed 77% of their passes in the first half.

Hines made a pair of changes during the break as his team looked to get back into the game. Marta and Nicole Payne entered the contest for Luana and Mace. Despite the changes, it was Angel City that continued to be the more threatening team.

A poor Orlando clearance in the 47th minute allowed Shores to keep the ball in the Pride third. She found Carina Lageyre near the top of the box, but the shot was right at Moorhouse.

The Pride won a throw-in in the 55th minute that quickly turned into a disaster. McCutcheon played the ball back for Rafaelle, who was immediately put under pressure from Jonsdottir. The Icelandic international blocked the defender’s pass and sprinted to the end line before beating Moorhouse from a tight angle to give the hosts a 2-0 lead.

“It starts with a throw-in. So the ability to keep possession from a throw-in is really important,” Hines said. “You know, we have a couple of objectives from that, and it’s just details, right? Weighted pass, make your choice to the correct forward. If you’re going to go long, you’ll sort of take away the deflection from the forward. So yeah, another moment where we felt we’re in control, and we give them an opportunity to counter and go straight to goal from that.”

Hines made two more changes in the 62nd minute, replacing Abello and Ovalle with Zara Chavoshi and Solai Washington.

As the game entered the final 20 minutes, the Pride started to gain more possession and create more chances in the final third. However, they still were unable to create any clear-cut opportunities or cause Anderson any trouble.

In the 77th minute, a pass to Lemos hit the referee, causing a stoppage in play. Hines took the opportunity to make his final change, replacing Rafaelle with Hannah Anderson.

Neither team had taken a shot since the 55th-minute goal, when Angel City created a chance in the 78th minute. A long goal kick by Anderson bounced over Chavoshi’s head, allowing Endo to get into the Pride third. She shot from outside the box, forcing Moorhouse to dive to her right and make the stop.

The Pride finally got their first shot on target in the 80th minute when Washington flicked a long ball forward and fought through a pair of defenders. She dribbled into the box from the left and fired for the near post, where Anderson was waiting to block the ball out of play.

Anderson came out to punch away the ensuing corner kick, running over Chavoshi. The ball went toward her own goal, forcing Sarah Gorden to head it off the line. McCutcheon tapped the ball back to Angelina at the top of the box and the midfielder sent it back in. It fell for Anderson behind the back line at the top of the six-yard box, but Shores was able to stick a foot in and clear it over the end line. Angel City cleared the second corner kick and ended the threat.

As the game entered two minutes of stoppage time, Chavoshi sent a low cross to the top of the six, where Washington was making a run. The second-half substitute tried to backheel the ball on goal, not getting much on it and allowing Anderson to make the easy stop. That was the final chance for either team as Angel City saw out the victory.

The Pride ended the game with more possession (57%-43%) and better passing accuracy (79%-75%), but Angel City led in every other statistical category. The hosts had more shots (15-4), shots on target (6-1), crosses (18-11), and corner kicks (5-3).

“Never good enough to lose a game 2-0,” Hines said. “Two things in this league that you have to deal with, one is direct play. You have to deal with teams who are going to be really aggressive and try to get back to front really quickly. And you have to be prepared for transition. We can’t allow gifts in this league, and we gave Angel City two gifts. And they capitalized on those moments. We had some good possession, but didn’t create anything up until probably the last 10 minutes of the game.”

“Definitely frustrated, disappointed,” Dyke added. “We know that was nowhere near our best night, but we’ve just got to learn from it and then turn the page, because we know we have (another) big game coming up as well.”

The loss keeps the Pride in eighth, one point ahead of Angel City. To make matters worse, they’ve played a game or two more than all the teams around them, so they could fall down the standings in the near future.


The Pride will have to put this game behind them quickly as they return home to face the Kansas City Current on July 10.

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