Orlando Pride
Orlando Pride Must Overcome Club History to Make Playoff Push
There can be no postseason for the Pride unless they completely rewrite the club’s late-season history.
The Orlando Pride missed a golden opportunity to jump above the playoff line on Friday. The Pride entered the match two points behind San Diego Wave FC in the standings and a win would have lifted Orlando above the California side and into a playoff position with five matches to play in the 2023 NWSL season.
Orlando played well overall against the Wave, keeping former Pride and USWNT striker Alex Morgan quiet and limiting San Diego’s chances. However, two coverage errors on corner kicks and the Pride’s lack of finishing quality in the attacking end allowed the visitors to escape Orlando with all three points.
Despite the loss, nothing much has changed for the Pride. Orlando sits just behind the sixth playoff spot, but now is chasing OL Reign — the team it will visit on Sunday. The scenario hasn’t changed, just the opponent. A Pride win will lift Orlando above the playoff line with just a few games left in the team’s 2023 campaign.
However, the Pride will not just be fighting a difficult opponent — Orlando has never won a road game against the Reign, going 0-4-3 in seven previous trips — but also their own history. The Pride’s tendency to fade badly at the end of the season has been well established. The team has cratered at the end of every season of its existence except for the lone playoff year of 2017. In fact, that season, Orlando went 6-0-3 to close the regular season before falling 4-1 away to Portland in the club’s only previous playoff appearance. That 2017 season was the only season in which Orlando won its final game of the regular season.
Here’s how Orlando’s seasons have finished since the team’s inception in the non-playoff years:
2016: 0-7-1
2018: 0-4-2
2019: 0-5-2
2020: 0-2-2 (No NWSL season; Fall Series only)
2021: 0-5-0
2022: 0-5-1
2023: ???
As you can see, the Pride have finished all but one full season on prolonged winless streaks. If you toss the lone playoff year aside as an outlier and discount the lost 2020 season in which the Pride only participated in the four-game Fall Series, with a lot of younger players seeing action, you get an average winless streak of six games to conclude each NWSL season and there are very few draws in there.
The final five Pride matches will all take place after the month of August. This has historically been the worst time of the season for Orlando in terms of results. The Pride have an all-time record of 3-20-9 in all competitions from Sept. 1 through the end of the season. Two of those three wins came in the team’s only previous playoff season of 2017, when the Pride went 2-1-2 after August concluded. The only other Pride win after August came on Sept. 11, 2021 against Racing Louisville at home.
Here is the Pride’s record each season after Aug. 31:
2016: 0-3-1
2017: 2-1-2 (the loss was in the playoffs)
2018: 0-1-0
2019: 0-4-2
2020: 0-2-2 (No NWSL season; Fall Series only)
2021: 1-5-1
2022: 0-4-1
2023: ???
An all-time record of 3-20-9 after August is beyond awful, and only having one single win from Sept. 1 through the end of the season since 2017 is dire indeed.
It won’t be easy for the Pride to turn these dubious trends around. As previously mentioned, they’ve never won a road game against the Reign.
After visiting OL Reign, Orlando will face a North Carolina Courage team that has toyed with the Pride in the last two meetings. The Courage have won the last two matchups — one regular-season game and one in the Challenge Cup — by a combined 8-0 scoreline. Those games were both on the road. The Pride managed to draw the first Challenge Cup meeting at home, 1-1 against North Carolina, but dropped points from a winning position late by allowing a 99th-minute strike by Denise O’Sullivan.
Orlando is just 4-10-1 in league play against the Courage in the all-time series, and just 1-5-0 at home against North Carolina in league play. If you include all competitions, the Pride are 4-13-5 vs. the Courage.
After the Courage match, the Pride will travel back across the continent to face Angel City on the road. The Pride are 0-1-0 in the season series after allowing Katie Johnson to score a 100th-minute game winner back on April 2. Angel City is one of the hottest teams in the league right now, going unbeaten in six (3-0-3), and the California team is just one point behind Orlando in the standings.
After Angel City, the Pride are on the road again to face Racing Louisville, which is also just one point behind Orlando. Like Angel City, Louisville is getting better at the right time, having lost just once in its last six games (2-1-3). The Pride have yet to win a road game at Louisville, going 0-2-0 in the regular season and 0-2-1 in all competitions.
Orlando closes the season against the Houston Dash. The Dash won the only previous meeting this season, 2-0 in Houston. The Pride have won only once in their last 10 meetings with Houston across all competitions, although if you want a bright side, that was at home last year. The 2023 season finale will also be in Orlando. But the Pride have only won their final game of the regular season once, and that was a much better Orlando team.
If these numbers seem to spell certain doom, it’s important to remember that this is all historical data, and past performance doesn’t always serve as a predictive tool. This year’s Orlando Pride team has a chance to rewrite club history by finishing strong and bucking the trend of collapsing down the stretch.
With the NWSL’s teams so closely locked together this season, there’s no telling what the next five games will hold in store for the Pride. They could finish the season anywhere from about second to 12th in the league. History suggests the team will finish closer to the bottom than the top, but the law of averages almost certainly has to find some equilibrium at some point.
Orlando Pride
2024 Orlando Pride Season in Review: Evelina Duljan
The young Swede signed early in 2024 but didn’t make a mark on the pitch until the midsummer cup competition.
The Orlando Pride signed Swedish youth international Evelina Juljan from Juventus on a one-year deal on Jan. 2. A professional player since the age of 14, Duljan was a tantalizing prospect at attacking midfielder with her technical ability and skills in tight spaces. Bringing in a player so young — she was just 20 at the time of her signing but has since turned 21 — on just a one-year contract was an interesting move by the Pride at the time. It seemed to be a compromise of sorts, with Orlando not locking down the player in hopes of developing her over time, while not making a longterm investment from the club’s side if she things didn’t work out.
Duljan didn’t crack Head Coach Seb Hines’ regular rotation in 2024, but she did show flashes of a potential emerging talent during her Summer Cup appearances and sparing use in league play. Let’s look back at her first (only?) season in Orlando.
Statistical Breakdown
The Kristianstad, Sweden native appeared in eight matches in the regular season, starting one, and played 174 minutes. Duljan didn’t have a goal contribution in NWSL play, attempting just one shot that wasn’t on target. She passed at a 75% success rate on 84 attempts, with no key passes and one successful long ball. A strong challenger on the ball, Duljan won nine of 12 tackles (75%), tallied two interceptions, and won four headed duels. She committed eight fouls, suffering six, and was not booked.
The Summer Cup is when Duljan really got an opportunity to shine. She played in all three of the Pride’s matches, starting two, and played a total of 191 minutes She scored her first goal with the Pride on Aug. 1 against Racing Louisville for her lone goal contribution of the season. In the tournament, Duljan attempted four shots, putting three on target and completed 81.25% of her 64 passes. Defensively, Duljan contributed six tackles and an interception. She did not commit or suffer a foul and was not booked in the competition.
Duljan did not appear in the NWSL playoffs.
Best Game
The Swedish-Nigerian attacker’s best match came in the NWSL x Liga MX Femenil Summer Cup on Aug. 1 in Orlando’s 1-1 draw against Racing Louisville at Inter&Co Stadium. Duljan started the match and played 85 minutes, attempting two shots — tied for her season high — with one on target. She made that shot count in the 38th minute, getting across her defender and putting her head to a cross from Kerry Abello, putting it in the net to give the Pride the lead.
In addition to her goal, Duljan passed at a 71% rate and played with some bite to her game, winning five tackles to tie a season high, recording an interception, and committing three fouls (also tying a season high).
Unfortunately, the Pride couldn’t hold the lead, conceding an equalizer in the second half. Duljan had been subbed off, so she did not participate in the postgame penalty shootout, which the Pride lost, 4-3.
That game, and her performance overall in the Summer Cup, must have caught Hines’ eye, as all of her regular-season minutes came after the competition, including 30 in the second half against the Kansas City Current and a start at Portland.
2024 Final Grade
As with the previous Season in Review subjects we’ve done so far this postseason, The Mane Land staff cannot give Duljan an official grade due to not meeting the minimum number of minutes played (400), so she will receive an incomplete for the 2024 season.
2025 Outlook
Duljan’s deal was through 2024, so if she is to be part of the Pride’s future, she would have to sign a new contract. Whether she did enough to earn a new deal is up to Hines and Vice President of Soccer Operations and Sporting Director Haley Carter. She still has a lot of upside and her skill set isn’t something that a lot of players in NWSL have. She simply needs to develop those skills a bit and add more control to her game.
Her return is a two-way street. Orlando has to want her back and Duljan must have a willingness to stay in North America with the Pride, knowing she will have to battle for minutes. The Pride typically lock down players they like early, avoiding situations where they have to negotiate new deals in the off-season. That didn’t happen with Duljan, so I would question whether she’s back in purple in 2025.
Previous Season in Review Articles (Date Posted)
Orlando Pride
2024 Orlando Pride Season in Review: Luana
Her season was over almost before it began, but Luana was still a key part of the group with the 2024 Orlando Pride.
The Orlando Pride signed Brazilian international central midfielder Luana on Dec. 13, 2023, looking to bolster that area of the club after spending resources beefing up the back line and the attack. She agreed to a deal that runs through 2025 with a mutual option year in 2026. The Pride’s central midfield was a strength throughout the team’s 2024 championship run, but the former Corinthians star sadly wasn’t part of it after the first few games.
After appearing in the Pride’s first three matches of the season, Luana was listed on the availability report as an excused absence for three games before a shocking announcement came from the club on April 29— she had been diagnosed with Hodgkin’s lymphoma. Luana missed the rest of the season to undergo treatment. Thankfully, the treatment looks to have worked, with reports in mid-November that her recent scans had shown no sign of the disease.
Luana’s true impact on the team goes beyond what took place in the season’s first three matches. We will never forget players holding up their hands in an ‘L’ shape to honor her when celebrating goals or the pictures of her with her teammates following her treatment. Clearly, she was an inspiration to the team and it’s not difficult to imagine how her illness may have strengthened a group as close as the 2024 Pride. Clearly, she was never far from the other players’ thoughts.
Although she missed almost the entire season, Luana is a member of the Pride who played and is still with the team. As such, we will honor her and look back at her 2024 season.
Statistical Breakdown
Luana made her Pride debut on opening day, March 16, in Orlando’s 2-2 road draw at Racing Louisville FC. She started that match and appeared in the team’s first three games (two starts), playing 192 of the available 270 minutes. Luana did not have a goal contribution, but depending on where you look, she did record a shot attempt (off target). Her stats page on the NWSL website does not show her having a shot, but her game log on the site does. The Pride’s game notes and statistics page have a shot, so we’ll say one shot. She was effective in helping control the middle of the pitch, winning two of four tackle attempts (50%), tallying three interceptions, and winning four headed duels. She completed 80% of her 75 pass attempts across the three games, including a successful long ball and a cross. Her bite in the midfield shows in her five fouls conceded, six fouls drawn, and two yellow cards. In the two games after her debut in Louisville — in which Orlando rallied from two goals down inside of 19 minutes and got a road result, despite Kylie Strom being sent off in the 62nd minute — the Pride conceded only once in the run of play.
Best Game
The Sao Paulo, Brazil native’s best match came in her second start of the season, a 1-1 home draw against the Chicago Red Stars. The Pride allowed only a Mallory Swanson goal in the match, with Luana starting and playing 71 minutes, completing 77.3% of her passes, committing two fouls (including a yellow card), and drawing three free kicks from the opposition. The Pride were dominant in the match, out-shooting the visitors 21-9, with Luana helping the team keep 59.2% of the possession in the match. Although the Pride drew their third consecutive match to start the season, it was a promising performance that the Pride built on, winning their next eight games — an NWSL record.
2024 Final Grade
The Mane Land staff cannot give Luana an official grade due to not meeting the minimum number of minutes played (400), so she will receive an incomplete for the 2024 season. However, we can (and do) give her a 10 out of 10 for her courage and grace during an extremely difficult time.
2025 Outlook
It’s difficult to say what Luana’s outlook will be for next season, as there are obviously some unknown variables. If her scans remain clean, as we all hope, she would presumably work to recover her fitness and could compete for a starting spot in central midfield in 2025. The Pride had the best defense in the league in 2024 and that was after losing someone who started two of the first three matches and played 45 minutes off the bench in the second game. Conceivably, the Pride could be an even better team with a healthy Luana on the pitch. Whether she even plays another minute for the club, however, our main concern is that she remains healthy. It would be understandable, for example, if she decided to rethink her career entirely in light of what she’s been through. Thankfully, she has a good support system with the Pride.
Previous Season in Review Articles (Date Posted)
Orlando Pride
2024 Orlando Pride Season in Review: Viviana Villacorta
Viviana Villacorta returned to the field late in the 2024 season. Let’s see how she performed this year.
The Orlando Pride selected Viviana Villacorta with the ninth overall pick of the 2021 NWSL Draft out of UCLA. The defensive midfielder opted to remain in school for her senior season, but tore her ACL shortly after, which kept her out of action for the 2021 NWSL campaign. She suffered an ankle injury in the 2022 season that required surgery and tore her ACL for the second time late in the 2023 season.
Villacorta didn’t re-enter the team until late in the year in 2024, making some league appearances and a playoff appearance as the season wound down. While she didn’t have a significant impact on the championship run, the fact that she got back onto the field was an accomplishment.
Let’s take a look at how Villacorta did in the few minutes she received in 2024.
Statistical Breakdown
Villacorta was in the team for the first time this season on Sept. 28, coming on as a substitute at home against the Houston Dash. She made three regular-season appearances in 2024, starting one — the last game of the season against Seattle Reign FC. She played 69 minutes in the regular season without a goal or an assist, completing 31 of 35 passes (91.2%). Villacorta attempted one shot but it was not on frame. Defensively, she recorded one tackle and two interceptions, commited three fouls, and was not booked.
She also came on as a substitute in the first playoff game against the Chicago Red Stars, making her professional playoff debut. The midfielder played three minutes in the match without a goal contribution, helping to see out the game. She completed four of her five passes (80%).
Best Game
The 25-year-old’s best game has to be her lone start against Seattle on Nov. 2. She had a season-high 26 touches, completed 95% of her 18 passes, and recorded one of her two interceptions in 45 minutes of action. She also took her only shot of the season in that game, though it was off target. She was replaced by regular starter Angelina at halftime.
2024 Final Grade
The Mane Land staff gave Villacorta a 5.5 for the 2022 and 2023 seasons, but she didn’t play enough minutes (400 across all competitions) this year to get a grade. As a result, she receives an incomplete grade for the 2024 NWSL season.
2025 Outlook
Despite suffering multiple season-ending injuries, the Pride continue to believe in Villacorta, signing her to a new contract on July 16 that runs through the 2025 season with a mutual option for 2026. The defensive midfielder has shown her quality when healthy, but she’s been unable to remain on the field for long periods of time. The Pride have also strengthened that position, adding Angelina and Morgan Gautrat to the roster, as well as Luana, who is attempting to work her way back from cancer treatment. As a result, it will be hard for Villacorta to get significant minutes, even if she is able to remain healthy. With her experience, however, she can be a key depth player at the position.
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