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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. Seattle Reign FC: Preview, How to Watch, TV Info, Live Stream, Lineups, Match Thread, and More

The Orlando Pride open their 2026 NWSL season at home against the Reign.

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Dan MacDonald, The Mane Land

Welcome to your match thread and preview as the Orlando Pride begin their 2026 NWSL campaign against the Seattle Reign. The two teams bookend the season, with the second meeting scheduled for Nov. 1 in Seattle. For the Reign, it is their third consecutive league game against Orlando after finishing the regular season in Orlando in 2025 and then getting knocked out of the playoffs at Inter&Co Stadium by the Pride the following week.

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

History

The Pride and Reign have met 21 times since Orlando joined the NWSL in 2016. The Pride hold a 6-7-8 record in those meetings, with an all-time record of 4-2-5 in Orlando. All but one of the contests have been in the regular season with the only non-regular-season game in the 2025 playoffs.

The most recent meeting took place on Nov. 7, 2025, when the Pride hosted the Reign in the NWSL quarterfinals. Haley McCutcheon gave the hosts the lead early, a lead the Pride held until Marta made a magnificent run in stoppage time, drawing a foul in the Seattle box. Despite being the primary penalty taker, Marta handed the ball to her Brazilian teammate Luana. The midfielder converted her first Pride goal in an emotional moment after her return from Hodgkin’s Lymphoma treatment, sending the Pride to the semifinals for the second consecutive season with a 2-0 win.

It was back-to-back meetings for the teams as they ended the season against each other on Nov. 2. They were playing to host a quarterfinal game and the Pride were the better team in the first 45 minutes. Substitute Carson Pickett gave the Pride the lead just eight minutes after coming on, but Jordyn Bugg equalized three minutes later. The 1-1 draw was enough for the Pride to finish fourth, pushing Seattle down to fifth and setting up a rematch five days later.

The first meeting last year took place April 12 in Seattle. Barbra Banda was the hero of that game, netting the game’s only goal in a 1-0 Orlando win just before halftime. It extended the team’s season-opening winning streak to four games.

The first meeting of 2024 occurred on May 19 at Lumen Field in Seattle. Emily Sams opened the scoring early and Banda doubled the advantage minutes later. However, the Reign scored on either side of halftime through Angharad James-Turner and Bethany Balcer before Banda netted the deciding goal, lifting her team to a 3-2 win.

On Nov. 2, 2024 in Orlando, Ally Watt gave the Pride the lead early, but Jordyn Huitema equalized a minute later. Kerry Abello gave the Pride the lead before halftime, and Marta made it 3-1 in the second half. Maddie Mercado got one back late, but it wasn’t enough as the Pride came away with a 3-2 win. The win capped off a historic regular season.

The first game between the teams in 2023 occurred on July 7 at Exploria Stadium and featured one of the best performances of the year for the Pride. Julie Doyle beat her defenders and found Messiah Bright, who scored the game’s lone goal early in the match as the Pride won 1-0 for their second all-time win over the Reign. On Sept. 3 in Seattle, the Pride got off to a terrible start when goalkeeper Anna Moorhouse was sent off in the third minute. Carly Nelson came in and did well in relief, but Huitema scored early in the second half as the Reign won 1-0

The teams played for the first time in 2022 on Aug. 26 in Orlando. Meggie Dougherty Howard gave the hosts the lead, and the Pride tried to hold onto that one-goal advantage, but Megan Rapinoe found Balcer for an equalizing header. The visitors pushed for a win and Rapinoe got a goal for herself two minutes into second-half injury time, lifting the Reign to a 2-1 win, snapping Orlando’s seven-match unbeaten run.

The return game took place Oct. 1, 2022 at Lumen Field in Seattle. The Pride had already been eliminated from playoff contention and it looked like it, as the team then known as OL Reign dominated the game. Rapinoe opened the scoring early, Huitema doubled the hosts’ lead soon after, and Balcer made it 3-0 just past the half-hour mark. The Pride held the Reign scoreless in the second half but fell 3-0.

The teams played twice during the 2021 season and the first game was July 24 in Orlando. The Reign scored a goal in each half, with Jess Fishlock scoring early and Tziarra King doubling the lead just after the break in a 2-0 win. On Sept. 26 in Tacoma, WA, Balcer opened the scoring early and Eugenie Le Sommer scored a brace, giving the Reign a 3-0 lead at halftime, ultimately beating the Pride by that score.

COVID canceled the teams’ meetings in 2020, but they played three times in 2019. On April 21 in Tacoma, Alanna Kennedy gave the Pride an early lead. But Balcer equalized and the teams drew 1-1. They met again on Sept. 7 in the same location. This time, the Reign took the early lead as Darian Jenkins scored twice inside the first 12 minutes. Beverly Yanez made it 3-0 soon after, effectively putting the game away early. Camila converted a late penalty, but the Reign won 3-1. The final meeting that year came on Oct. 12 in Orlando. The Pride scored first through Rachel Hill, but Jenkins and Jodie Taylor gave the visitors a 2-1 lead going into halftime. Marta equalized late and the teams drew 2-2.

The first meeting in 2018 came on April 28 in Orlando. Allie Long gave the Reign a first-half lead, but Marta equalized, resulting in a 1-1 draw. On June 3, the teams met in Seattle but neither team could find the back of the net as the game ended in a scoreless draw. The final meeting that year took place July 21 in Orlando. Toni Pressley gave the Pride a first-half lead but Taylor equalized late and the teams drew for the third time that year.

The 2017 season saw the Pride and Reign play to a pair of 1-1 draws — first in Seattle on May 21 and later in Orlando on Sept. 7. The teams split their two games in 2016, with the Pride winning 2-0 in Orlando May 8 and Seattle winning 5-2 at home on July 23.

Overview

The Pride had an eventful off-season to say the least. Haley Carter left the club and joined the Washington Spirit and was replaced by former Kansas City Current General Manager Caitlin Carducci. Sams also left the club after requesting a move to Angel City FC. Additionally, the Pride are without club vice captain Kylie Nadaner, who’s out on maternity leave.

On the positive side, the club rebuilt its defense after losing Sams and Nadaner. Rafaelle will likely start at center back alongside new signing Hannah Anderson. The Pride also acquired free agent Hailie Mace, who can play across the back line but will probably take over as the starting right back. While Anderson might not be an upgrade from Sams, it’s a good signing considering the situation the Pride were in with the U.S. international requesting a trade.

Even more important, starting striker Banda is back from a season-ending injury suffered on Aug. 16 in Kansas City. She’ll join Mexican international Jacquie Ovalle, who arrived after Banda’s injury. The two should make a formidable combination this coming year, solving the goal-scoring problem that plagued Orlando the majority of last season.

The Reign are happy with their roster from the 2025 season, making few changes and returning everyone. The most notable changes for today’s visitors are gone via retirement. Lauren Barnes, Hanna Glas, and Veronica Latsko all called it a career, departing the club in the process. The biggest departure for the Reign that wasn’t a retirement was Huitema, who was traded to the Chicago Stars. She’s replaced by Brittany Ratcliffe, who was signed as a free agent.

Given the lack of turnover this season, we know what to expect from Seattle. However, it’s much more difficult for the Pride. Questions include how will the new center back pairing gel, can Rafaelle stay healthy, and how will Banda return from a major injury.

“It’s been a luxury having so long of a preseason. It’s allowed us to integrate a lot of the new players on how we want to play, our principles, our style of play, our intensity of everything that we do here,” Pride Head Coach Seb Hines said ahead of the match. “And so, with that, it’s all preparation for this home opener. We have our fans here supporting us. It’s going to be a great opportunity for us to put everything in place for us to go out there and perform. So, we’re really excited, we’re ready to get going, and hopefully we have a really good season.”

The Pride will take the field without Abello (hip), Zara Chavoshi (lower leg), Marta (excused absence), Cosette Morche (ankle), Kylie Nadaner (maternity leave), Nicole Payne (knee), and Viviana Villacorta (knee). Additionally, Angelina (thigh) is listed as questionable.

The Reign will be without Lynn Biyendolo (maternity leave), Bugg (leg), Shae Holmes (lower leg), Sally Menti (knee), and Cassie Miller (leg).


Official Lineups

Orlando Pride (4-2-3-1)

Goalkeeper: Anna Moorhouse.

Defenders: Cori Dyke, Rafaelle, Hailie Mace, Oihane.

Defensive Midfielders: Haley McCutcheon, Ally Lemos.

Attacking Midfielders: Jacquie Ovalle, Summer Yates, Seven Castain.

Forward: Barbra Banda.

Bench: Cara Martin, McKinley Crone, Hannah Anderson, Luana, Julie Doyle, Reagan Raabe, Simone Jackson, Solai Washington.

Seattle Reign FC (4-2-3-1)

Goalkeeper: Claudia Dickey.

Defenders: Madison Curry, Phoebe McClernon, Emily Mason, Sofia Huerta. 

Defensive Midfielders: Sam Meza, Ainsley McCammon.

Attacking Midfielders: Maddie Dahlen Jess Fishlock, Nerilia Mondesir.

Forwards: Mia Fishel.

Bench: Evan O’Steen, Neeko Purcell, Ryanne Brown, Sofia Cedeno, Maddie Mercado, Angharad James-Turner, Emeri Adames, Brittany Ratcliffe.

Referees

REF: Alexandra Billeter.
AR1: Zach McWhorter.
AR2: Matthew Rodman.
4TH: Benjamin Meyer.
VAR: Jaclyn Metz.
AVAR: Melissa Beck.


How to Watch

Match Time: 4 p.m.

Venue: Inter&Co Stadium — Orlando.

TV: None.

Streaming: Victory+.

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


Enjoy the game. Go Pride!

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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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