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Dissecting Orlando City’s 2024 Schedule

Let’s take a closer look at Orlando City’s schedule for the upcoming season.

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Image courtesy of Orlando City SC

Strange though it might seem, we’re a little under five weeks until Orlando City kicks off its 2024 campaign with a Concacaf Champions Cup match up in Canada against Cavalry FC. With that being the case, I wanted to take a deeper dive into the Lions’ schedule for 2024 and go over some things I like, things I don’t like, and highlight a few games that I’m looking forward to.

What I Like

Once again, weekend games rule the roost as 26 out of the team’s 34 regular-season games are played on Saturday or Sunday. That’s a push that has happened league-wide for the last couple of seasons, and it was one that I really appreciated. Given that I live an hour and 15 minutes away from the stadium if there’s no traffic (there always is), it’s very difficult for me to make it to weeknight games, particularly given my work schedule. Last year, I got the most bang for my buck out of my season tickets that I ever have because almost all of the team’s home games were on weekends, so it was easy for me to attend.

It’s also nice to catch a break in that of the team’s eight weeknight games, only three of them are at home. The reasons I stated above also apply here. More people get to the stadium for weekend games, which means a better atmosphere and a better environment for the team to play in. Major League Soccer doesn’t seem to do this team favors too often, but it may just have done so in this case.

What I Don’t Like

My first gripe with the schedule is something I actively despise. Namely, the league scheduling the home match with Inter Miami at 7:30 pm E.T. on a Wednesday. On the one hand, the club isn’t going to have any problems whatsoever selling tickets for that game, so the aforementioned point about attendance probably doesn’t apply here. With that being said, keeping the kickoff time at 7:30 means fans coming to the stadium will have to contend with the notoriously difficult Orlando traffic, so there’s no guarantee that the place will be full by kickoff. While I understand the league’s desire to standardize kickoff times, a little common sense would have gone a long way here.

I also think it’s annoying that the Lions’ home game against Miami falls on a Wednesday while the reverse fixture is nice and tidy on a Saturday. Some people might call that nitpicky, but it feels far less so when you check the fixture list and see that the previous Saturday has Orlando City playing on the road in Philadelphia, and the following Saturday sees the Lions take a cross country trip to play the San Jose Earthquakes. This might by a little tin-hat-conspiracy-theorist of me, but it feels like that home Miami match was made about as difficult for Orlando as it possibly could have been.

Another brutal stretch hits in June. Orlando plays LAFC at home on the 15th, travels to Charlotte on the 19th, has Chicago at home on the 22nd, then has NYCFC on the road on the 28th, Toronto on the road on July 3, and D.C. United at home on the 6th. That fun little stretch has the club playing six games in the space of 21 games, and since it falls smack in the middle of the group stage for Copa America, the Lions could be without Pedro Gallese, Wilder Cartagena, Facundo Torres, and Cesar Araujo. Ouch.

Each team is naturally going to have tough parts of its schedule, as fixture congestion is simply part of the wallpaper these days, but damn, that’s a truly uninviting three weeks.

Games I’m Looking Forward To

  • Sat., Feb. 24 vs. CF Montreal: It’s the home opener, what more do I really need to say about it?
  • Tues., Feb. 27 vs. Cavalry FC: The second leg of the Concacaf Champions Cup tie against Cavalry, which will hopefully see the Lions well positioned to advance past the opening round of the competition. If the atmosphere is anything like last year’s home game against Tigres, it’ll be a night to remember.
  • Wed., May 15 vs. Inter Miami: Annoying Wednesday date and 7:30 start time aside, a home match against Inter Miami is always something to look forward to.
  • Sat., July 6 vs. D.C. United: This might seem like a very random game to choose, but D.C. has been one of the very worst teams in the league for the last two seasons, but I can’t remember the last time Orlando actually won in this series. I’d like for nothing more than OCSC to get a tidy 3-0 win at home and put one of its bogey teams to bed.
  • Sat., Oct. 19 vs. Atlanta United: Not only is it Atlanta United at home, but it’s also Decision Day. Given the expectations for these two teams during the 2024 season, this is a clash that could have huge implications on the final day of the season. If that doesn’t get you excited, then I don’t know what does.

What are your thoughts on this season’s schedule? Are there any games that you have circled on your calendar? Be sure to have your say down in the comments. Vamos Orlando!

Opinion

Predicting Orlando City’s April Results

Let’s peek into the crystal ball and take a crack at predicting Orlando City’s games during the month of April.

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Image courtesy of Orlando City SC / Mark Thor

Every Major League Soccer schedule has its peaks and valleys, and Orlando City is currently traversing one of the valleys. After a fast and furious start to the year that saw the Lions competing in both the Concacaf Champions Cup and MLS play, OCSC won’t play another game until next Saturday, April 13. Since we’ve got a bit of time on our hands, I wanted to take a crack at predicting the outcomes of the three games that Orlando will play during the month of April. Away we go.

Saturday, April 13 — at D.C. United

The first game back following a two-week break sees the Lions travel to the nation’s capital to take on D.C. United. D.C. has been quite the bogey team for Orlando the last two seasons, frequently getting the better of the Lions despite being one of the league’s worst teams during that time. At the time of this writing, D.C. is eighth in the East with a record of 2-1-3 (9 points). The two wins came against Montreal, which has been decent so far, and New England, which has been absolutely woeful. Christian Benteke has four goals in four games, with three of them coming in the 3-1 victory over the Revs. The Lions will be coming off two weeks to work out some of the offensive kinks we’ve seen up to this point in the season, and they should have everyone available for selection after injuries and international call-ups thinned the ranks. Now seems like as good a time as any for OCSC to turn around its recent form against DCU, and I’ll pick the Lions in this one.

Prediction: Orlando City 2-1 D.C. United.


Saturday, April 20 — at CF Montreal

After D.C., the Lions will stay on the road and take on CF Montreal north of the border in a rematch of the season opener. As previously mentioned, Montreal has had a decent start to 2024 and is currently 2-2-1 (7 points) and in 10th place. In early March the Canadian club posted back-to-back wins against FC Dallas, which has been very poor so far, and Inter Miami, which has been pretty good. Matias Coccaro leads them with three goals in five games, with an assist thrown in as well. This is Orlando nemesis Josef Martinez’s first year on the team, and he’s got a goal and two assists in 249 minutes of play. The first time the two teams played this season it was a sloppy, scoreless affair, and one in which both teams may have felt they should have been victorious. I think it’ll be a pretty evenly matched affair once again, albeit one that’s higher scoring.

Prediction: Orlando City 2-2 CF Montreal.


Saturday, April 27 — vs. Toronto FC

OCSC rounds off the month of April with a visit from Toronto FC. Thus far, Toronto has been much improved from a woeful 2023 season, and is currently an aesthetically pleasing 3-2-1, (10 points) and sitting in fifth. The three wins have come against Atlanta United, which has been good, Charlotte FC which has been decent, and New England, which — as previously mentioned — has been quite bad. The Reds dropped games to New York City FC and Sporting Kansas City, and the prevailing theme in their matches this year has been struggling to put the ball in the back of the net. TFC has only scored multiple goals once, in its 2-0 win over Atlanta, and its six goals on the year is just one better than Orlando City’s tally of five. The team also has a lengthy injury list, and Lorenzo Insigne may not be available due to a hamstring injury. I think playing at home helps see the Lions through in this one, as the boys find their shooting boots.

Prediction: Orlando City 3-1 Toronto FC.


If things go as I predicted, Orlando will take seven points from an available nine, which would be a welcome sight after a sputtering start to 2024. Much of my predictions are based on the belief that this is a good team with good players, which simply needs a bit of time to integrate new faces and new ideas, and will start playing more in line with preseason expectations once it’s had time to do so. If chemistry is still slow to form after the two-week layoff, then the month of April could be a very different story, but for now I’m choosing the path of optimism. Vamos Orlando!

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Opinion

International Duty Provides Facundo Torres an Opportunity for Reset

Orlando City needs its Uruguayan star to find his best form.

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Image courtesy of Orlando City SC / Mark Thor

Orlando City closes out the month of March against Eastern Conference foes the New York Red Bulls tonight in Central Florida. For one of the first times this season, the Lions will look to take the pitch with a seemingly healthy and rested lineup. Orlando demonstrated what it was capable of last time out with a full week of training under its belt with a complete 2-0 victory against Austin FC.

The victory could be considered even more impressive due to the fact that it was achieved without six regular starters, five of whom were away representing their home nations and Cesar Araujo, who missed the match due to injury. Araujo’s availability at this time still is unknown but it is reasonable to expect that the remaining players who were away over the last week and a half will return to their usual slots in the starting 11.

March results came in like a lamb and are hopefully going to finish like a lion in terms of victories for Orlando City. The same can be said for Designated Player Facundo Torres. Now in his third season with Orlando, I feel like right about this time every year I have written an article about the team needing more from Torres. And then, every year Torres has responded in a big way throughout the late spring and early summer.

Zero goals and zero assists over three MLS matches is certainly not the start that Torres expected to begin the year, nor is it the type of start that Orlando could afford to bury behind other players’ efforts as the entire offensive unit has struggled to find its footing out of the gate. On the season thus far, Torres is completing 80.5% of his passes and has registered only a lone shot attempt on target on two total scoring attempts. He did manage three goals and an assist in Concacaf Champions Cup play, so the offense is there, it just hasn’t found its way into MLS matches yet.

For Orlando to climb its way back up the table, Torres has to reach the gear that everyone knows he is capable of now. Not the middle of June, or early July, but right now.

Torres is no stranger to slow starts in MLS play, but even by his standards 2024 has been sluggish so far. In 2022, his first year in the league, Torres managed one assist and five shot attempts (none on target) through his first three MLS matches. A year ago, El Cuervo scored one goal on five shots, putting just the one on target. So he’s a few shots and a goal contribution behind his usual pace, despite contributing offensively in Concacaf play.

After a short stint with the Uruguay Men’s National Team, Torres’ time to be the catalyst that Orlando City needs has arrived. The good news for Facu and Orlando City fans is that the Red Bulls are a squad against which Torres has historically preformed very strongly. The attacking winger scored three goals against the Red Bulls in 2023 alone.

I believe that Torres benefited from a short break away from the squad and will start to turn the corner soon. I will excitedly and expectantly be on the lookout for Torres to regain his form tonight and hopefully that will help elevate all of his teammates.


Is there anyone else who you think benefited from the early season international period? Let us know in the comments below and as always, vamos Orlando!

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Opinion

Strong Early Season Competition an Opportunity for Growth

Schedule congestion and tough opponents present opportunities for growth.

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Image courtesy of Orlando City SC / Mark Thor

It is hard to imagine a more intense start to the season than the Lions have faced competing in both the regular season and the Concacaf Champions Cup at the same time, yet that is exactly the task that the boys in purple find themselves dealing with only days into the season. With both away and home matches already in the books, let’s examine how strong early season competition can be a key factor in the growth of the squad as the season progresses.

For comparison we can look back to one year ago, as thanks to winning the U.S. Open Cup, the Lions found themselves in the Concacaf Champions League for the first time in club history. During their short foray in the 2023 version of the competition, they were matched up against Mexican powerhouse Tigres UANL in a two-leg competition. Orlando did something that many MLS sides can not boast by coming out of the first leg in Mexico without conceding a goal and only failed to advance because of the competition’s away goals rule.

At the time, and even looking back through rose-colored glasses, those two performances demonstrated the quality that Orlando City was ultimately capable of, and it was a form which Orlando showcased in the later stretches of the 2023 season.

This year, once again Orlando is faced with stiff competition throughout its early season matches, which present a grand opportunity to build team chemistry and fortitude that will only truly manifest itself as the season progresses. While Cavalry FC may have not presented much a challenge on the pitch, the logistics of starting a season off thousands of miles away in the Pacific Northwest were challenges that the Lions had to face before a 48-hour turnaround to open the regular season against a CF Montreal side which some are projecting to be a surprise force in the Eastern Conference. Sandwich in the close-out leg against Cavalry in the CCC at home some 72 hours later, and you once again have a recipe for tired legs but early season growth through adversity.

Up next was Saturday’s forgettable trip to square off against archrival Inter Miami. A year ago, Orlando City was one of the only MLS sides to truly frustrate one of the world’s best and unfortunately for players, coaches and fans alike, the first meeting between the rival sides in 2024 ended with a landslide victory for Messi and friends. Still, despite the frustrating loss, there are lessons to be learned and mistakes to correct which can only help the squad grow as the season progresses.

As if all of the schedule congestion was not enough, Orlando learned that its prize for dispatching Cavalry in the CCC was a rematch against Tigres, once again in a two-match, survive-and-advance format. The first game will be played two and a half days after having been beaten down by Miami and the second will come a week later, with yet another MLS regular-season match crammed in between.

All in all, once Orlando City is done facing off against Tigres, the team will have traveled roughly 9,700 miles for matches in the first 21 days of the season and played a match roughly every 60 hours. These matches and the quality of the opponents present Orlando and its players with numerous chances for individual and squad growth, and the experience, especially for still a somewhat young team, is something OCSC can draw upon once the late season and playoff push portion of the calendar arrive. I truly believe this early in the season the importance of the results of the matches come secondary to the opportunities for growth when faced with so many challenges so quickly.


Let us know in the comments below if you think that the early season match ups against quality opponents will ultimately hurt or benefit Orlando City and, as always, vamos Orlando!

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