Orlando Pride
Orlando Pride vs. San Diego Wave FC: Preview, How to Watch, TV Info, Live Stream, Lineups, Match Thread, and More
The Pride return from the international break and take to the road as they face San Diego Wave FC.
Welcome to your match thread as the Orlando Pride (8-0-3, 27 points) look to extend their 11-game unbeaten run and eight-game winning streak as they face San Diego Wave FC (3-4-3, 12 points) in Southern California. This is the second and final scheduled meeting between the two teams this season, having already played in Orlando on April 19.
Here’s everything you need to know about tonight’s game.
History
The San Diego Wave joined the NWSL in 2022 and have only faced the Pride five times in their existence. The Pride have only lost once in those four games, posting a record of 3-1-1 (2-0-0 away). The most recent meeting was on April 19 in Orlando. Summer Yates scored the game’s lone goal in the first half, lifting the Pride to a 1-0 win. It was the fifth consecutive result and second consecutive win on the year.
The first meeting last year was at Snapdragon Stadium on April 29 after the Pride’s 0-4-0 start to the season. It looked like it would be a fifth straight loss when Jaedyn Shaw gave the hosts the early lead. But Adriana assisted Mikayla Cluff on the equalizer and Haley McCutcheon scored just before halftime to give the Pride the lead. Adriana got her first goal of the season in the 69th minute to put the game away as the Pride won 3-1.
On Aug. 25 in Orlando, the Pride got off to a horrible start when San Diego center back Abby Dahlkemper scored in the seventh minute for her first goal since 2016. Marta set up Adriana just before halftime for an equalizer, but Kyra Carusa netted the late winner in a 2-1 San Diego win.
The first-ever meeting was on Aug. 13, 2022 in San Diego. The lone goal in the game came from the penalty spot after a Julie Doyle cross hit the arm of Kaleigh Riehl in the first half. Meggie Dougherty Howard stepped up and buried the penalty. The Pride held on for 67 minutes to beat one of the top teams in the league, 1-0 away.
The second meeting was on Sept. 25 in Orlando and the Pride got off to a great start. Doughety Howard opened the scoring in the first half and Gunny Jonsdottir doubled the advantage in the second. It looked like the Pride were headed for six points out of six against the expansion side, but San Diego came storming back. Makenzy Doniak cut the lead in half and former Pride attacker Taylor Kornieck equalized late, resulting in a disappointing 2-2 draw.
Overview
The Pride are the hottest team in the NWSL this season. They’re one of two teams to begin the year undefeated — the other being the Kansas City Current — but the Pride have the longest winning streak in league history with eight. The string of results has the Pride at the top of the NWSL standings as they near the schedule’s halfway point.
Just as impressive as their winning and unbeaten streaks is how they’ve managed to get results. The team has won high-scoring and low-scoring games, something Pride Head Coach Seb Hines says makes them unpredictable. The four most recent games are a great example of this as they’ve won 3-2, 2-1, and 1-0 twice.
While the Pride got the season off to an excellent start, they became arguably the league’s best team with the arrival of Barbra Banda. In just seven games and six starts, the Zambian international has scored a league-high eight goals, including three braces.
The back line has also been a positive this year, conceding 10 goals, which places them third in the league. It’s an impressive stat considering several players are playing different positions than last year. Kylie Strom moved from left back to center back, Emily Sams moved from center back to right back, and Kerry Abello moved from the attacking midfield to left back.
Tonight’s opponent has been one of the best teams in the NWSL since joining the league two years ago. The Wave finished third in 2022 and won the 2023 NWSL Shield with the league’s best record. However, they’ve gotten off to a tough start this season with 12 points from 10 games, placing them ninth in the league.
With players like Shaw and Alex Morgan, you’d expect the Wave to be one of the best attacking teams. But their success has come on the defensive side. Their nine goals conceded is second in the league, only behind NJ/NY Gotham FC’s seven. Meanwhile, their nine goals scored is second fewest in the league, only more than the last place Utah Royals.
The Pride have been fortunate recently to have the same back line. The Wave, on the other hand, have been deploying a different back four weekly. Despite the changes in personnel, they’ve only conceded multiple goals twice this season — in the opening game against the Current and on May 17 against Bay FC. They only gave up two goals in each of those matches.
Nobody has stepped up for the Wave offensively this season, a reason why they sit so low in the standings. Shaw, Doniak, and Carusa all have a team-leading two goals on the season. Emily van Egmond, Hanna Lundkvist, and Sofia Jakobsson have each added one goal.
“We understand that the last time we played them, they were probably a shadow of themselves. They’d been on the road for a long time, quick turnaround. So we don’t expect it to be anything the same as it was before,” Hines said about tonight’s game. “We’re also going to their place, which is always a tough environment to go and play. As well, they’ve got some internationals that are on duty right now, so it will be interesting to see what personnel is out there on Friday. But Casey (Stoney) is a great coach. She won the shield last year. They’ve got a winning formula, but it hasn’t come to fruition this season. They probably want to get that ball rolling and it’s going to be a challenge for us. But, like I said, we’ve been thrown plenty of challenges this year and it’s no different and the players are fully prepared for what they need to do to go out there and get the three points.”
The Pride injury report includes Angelina (knee), Celia (hip), Simone Charley (leg), Luana (illness), Megan Montefusco (heel), and Viviana Villacorta (knee). Summer Yates is available after missing the Portland game with an illness. The Wave have no injuries or suspensions for tonight’s game.
Official Lineups
Orlando Pride (4-4-2)
Goalkeeper: Anna Moorhouse.
Defenders: Kerry Abello, Kylie Strom, Emily Sams, Bri Martinez.
Midfielders: Cori Dyke, Morgan Gautrat, Haley McCutcheon, Julie Doyle.
Forwards: Barbra Banda, Ally Watt.
Bench: McKinley Crone, Carrie Lawrence, Evelina Duljan, Ally Lemos, Summer Yates, Marta, Amanda Allen, Alex Kerr, Mariana Larroquette.
San Diego Wave FC (4-4-2)
Goalkeeper: Kailen Sheridan.
Defenders: Kristen McNabb, Naomi Girma, Abby Dahlkemper, Hanna Lundkvist.
Midfielders: Maria Sanchez, Danielle Colaprico, Savannah McCaskill, Mya Jones.
Forwards: Jaedyn Shaw, Alex Morgan.
Bench: Hillary Beall, Sierra Enge, Kaitlyn Torpey, Christen Westphal, Kimmi Ascanio, Emily van Egmond, Kyra Carusa, Makenzy Doniak, Sofia Jakobsson.
Referees
REF: Nabil Bensalah.
AR1: Stephen McGonagle.
AR2: Melissa Gonzalez.
4TH: Benjamin Meyer.
VAR: Adorae Monroy.
AVAR: Maggie Short.
How to Watch
Match Time: 10 p.m.
Venue: Snapdragon Stadium — San Diego, CA.
TV: None.
Streaming: Prime Video.
Twitter: For live updates and rapid reaction, follow @TheManeLand and the Orlando Pride’s official Twitter feed (@ORLPride).
Enjoy the match. Go Pride!
Orlando Pride
Orlando Pride vs. North Carolina Courage: Final Score 1-0 as Pride Win on Banda’s Late Goal
North Carolina hadn’t allowed a goal in the second half all season until Banda’s breakthrough.
A sloppy first 85 minutes finally gave way to a moment of brilliance from Barbra Banda as she worked her way free for the one and only goal to get the Orlando Pride (3-3-2, 11 points) back to their winning ways. Banda’s eighth of the season led to a 1-0 Pride win over the North Carolina Courage (2-3-3, 9 points) at Inter&Co Stadium. The Pride are still waking up from the international break, having lost the last two to Racing Louisville, a team well below them in the standings, and the Washington Spirit at home. Banda has scored five goals in the last three games, leading the NWSL in goals, but she’s the only one scoring.
“We’ve met as units. We watch film, we go over things,” Pride forward Simone Jackson said in preparation for this game. “We’re talking to each other. We’re working on shifting faster and covering splits and making change for this North Carolina game and making sure that our press is matching their style of play.”
Head Coach Seb Hines put the same lineup on the field as the previous game against the Spirit, with Anna Moorhouse in goal. The only changes were in where the players started. Cori Dyke moved from left back to right center back, with Oihane and Rafaelle to her left and Hailie Mace at right back. Additionally, Haley McCutcheon dropped into central midfield with Ally Lemos, while Angelina joined Summer Yates and Solai Washington in the attacking midfield with Banda up top.
“We felt we had conceded seven goals in two games and we needed to make a shift in the back line,” Hines said after the game. “Cori Dyke has played center back for me and Hailie Mace is a new player to the club and just finding a bit more comfort with her playing right back. We just felt we needed to shift a bit — not change the personnel but shift the personnel.”
The Pride opened the match with a free kick from 40 yards out that Lemos sent straight to Courage goalkeeper Kailen Sheridan. North Carolina was able to get to the end line four minutes later but the cross went straight to Moorhouse. At the eight-minute mark, Angelina intercepted a long ball and headed it to Yates at the top of the box, whose first touch failed her and snuffed out the counter.
Banda got her elbow up high in the 10th minute and caught Natalia Staude in the chin. That prompted a delay as the video assistant referee evaluated it for a red card offense but eventually play resumed without incident. Banda then showed her immense talents three minutes later, outracing and outmuscling center backs, Staude and Uno Shiragaki for 40 yards, but the double team eventually won out.
Moorhouse and Lemos collided defending a free kick at the 18-minute mark, which caused Lemos to take a moment to gather herself. Yates picked up a yellow card in the 21st minute for sliding under Riley Jackson and catching her with her studs in the fallout of a foul she herself had drawn on the play. Washington slipped by Jackson with a great move in the 25th but the play ended up with a corner that turned into nothing.
As a light rain (that eventually turned into a full-on downpour) settled in with 18 minutes to play in the half, the Pride definitely had shown more promise on offense but no real threats. It was a good start for a team that had fallen behind early previously but more precision was going to be needed on the offensive side. Washington worked herself free in the box but, again, the shot went wide.
The first real threat from the Courage came in the 31st minute as Manaka Matsukubo got on the end of a deflected corner and pushed it just wide of the far post. Yates went to the ground a minute later after she took a shot to the ribcage by Lauryn Thompson.
Whether it was the rain picking up or a tactical adjustment, the game flowed to where North Carolina started owning possession but without any real threats. The Pride couldn’t get out of their own end until the 40th minute when a pass from Lemos to Banda at the top of the box allowed her to open up enough space to rocket a shot just wide of the near post.
Thompson tried to chip a cross towards the Pride goal but ended up skying it into the stands in the 43rd minute. With five minutes added to the first half for the various video reviews and injuries, The Courage kept Orlando bottled up in their own defensive end. Trying to escape, Oihane overhit a touch and kicked the legs out of Thompson, picking up a yellow card in the third minute of added time. A shot by McCutcheon a minute later deflected off Banda just wide.
To wrap up the half, Lemos picked up a yellow card in the fifth minute of added time for tripping Matsukubo. North Carolina’s ensuing free kick went long and ended the half just as the rain let up.
It wasn’t a great half of soccer by either team, highlighted by minimal threats and mostly defined by turnovers. The Pride trailed possession (58%-42%), crosses (7-5) and passing accuracy (83%-76%) but led on shots (4-3). Both teams had two corners and neither put a shot on goal.
The Pride came out with energy in the second half trying to change that. Just 30 seconds in, Washington crossed it to Banda at the penalty spot but she scuffed the volley. One minute later, Banda held off Shiragaki to open up a shot but put it just over the bar.
“Honestly, to be switched on from the beginning,” Angelina said when asked about the halftime message. “We know that in past games we got scored on pretty early coming back from the half. That was a big goal for us to come and be disciplined.”
Dani Weatherholt elbowed Washington to the ground in the 50th minute, picking up the Courage’s first yellow card. Matsukubo unleashed a 40-yard through ball to Thompson at the 53-minute mark, freeing Thompson for a shot wide.
Hines decided to try to bring some precision to the attack in the 55th minute, bringing in Marta for Yates and Seven Castain for Washington. It didn’t lead to anything immediately and, in the 60th, Shinomi Koyama got free at the top of the box and put it just over the bar.
However, just seconds later, Banda held off her defender at midfield and dribbled to the middle, laying it off to Marta in the box, who worked herself free for the first shot on target for either team. Sheridan kept it out with a huge save. The ensuing corner by Lemos rattled off the near post, leading to nothing. Lemos was subbed off a minute later in the 64th, with Julie Doyle taking her place.
Marta’s influence on the game started to become even more apparent with a slick left-footed inside-of-the-boot pass that curled perfectly to Banda, but she dribbled in too deep and didn’t get a shot off, losing the ball to Sheridan while trying to round the keeper. Ryan Williams put a shot over the bar 90 seconds later off a block.
Marta rifled a corner in the 69th minute that Sheridan parried right to McCutcheon, who fired it just wide. The Courage then made their first substitutes, bringing in Chioma Okafor for Thompson and Ally Schlegel for Evelyn Ijeh. Ijeh is listed as the forward for the Courage, yet this is the first mention she got in this writeup.
There was a lot of back-and-forth play over the next few minutes until Sanchez pushed a shot just past the far post in the 76th minute. North Carolina then brought in Carly Wickenheiser for Jackson in the 77th minute.
Marta shook herself loose in the 81st and thought she had a corner off a Sheridan tip but it was judged as a missed shot. Angelina went down in the ensuing Courage possession and was subbed off for Luana at the 84th-minute mark. The Courage made a substitution in the 85th, bringing in Ivy Younce for Sanchez.
In the 87th, the Pride broke the scoreless deadlock. Rafaelle intercepted a long pass and fired it over the top to Banda, who was kept onside by Staude. Banda worked her way into the box on the left. The Zambian international sent a curling shot around Sheridan and inside the right post, finally converting and giving the Pride the lead they had been knocking on for a while. Banda had been wasteful all game, but a striker just needs one. The Courage had not surrendered a second-half goal all season but they hadn’t played Banda yet either.
Banda went down in the ensuing celebration and then again five minutes later after a tough shoulder-to-shoulder challenge. She was able to return and, 60 seconds later, held off three defenders while transitioning the ball all the way down the field. She looked winded at this point, but the Pride had used all their subs.
Rafaelle picked up a yellow card in the seventh minute of added time for an over-the-top challenge. That produced the last meaningful action of the half as the Pride wrapped up the win.
The Pride ended up with roughly the same amount of possession as in the first half, finishing behind the Courage (56%-44%). They trailed in shots (12-9) but led in shots on target (2-1). The Courage led in crosses (13-8), but the Pride had one more corner (5-4). Passing accuracy picked up for the Pride in the second half, but they still ended up trailing (82.4%-79.6%).
The Pride now head out on a long road trip. They’ll head to Boston for a game against the Legacy on Tuesday, fly to Denver for a Saturday game against the Summit. Orlando will then get an eight-day break before going to San Diego to play the Wave.
“Sometimes road trips are nice, because you get to bond as a team,” Moorhouse said. “You’re with your teammates 24/7, so you get to bond a bit and hopefully this win will now snowball.”
Orlando Pride
Orlando Pride vs. North Carolina Courage: Preview, How to Watch, TV Info, Live Stream, Lineups, Match Thread, and More
The Pride look to end their two-game losing streak as they welcome the North Carolina Courage to Inter&Co Stadium.
Welcome to your preview and match thread as the Orlando Pride (2-3-2, 8 points) look to bounce back from a tough loss as they welcome the North Carolina Courage (2-2-3, 9 points) to Inter&Co Stadium (8 p.m., Prime Video). This is the first of two meetings between the two teams this season, with the return game in Cary, NC scheduled for July 31.
Here’s everything you need to know about tonight’s game.
History
The Pride and Courage have played 28 times since the Western New York Flash moved to North Carolina and became the Courage in 2017. The Pride are 6-11-3 in the all-time series in NWSL play and 6-14-8 in all competitions (0-0-2 in the Fall Series, 0-3-2 in the NWSL Challenge Cup, and 0-0-1 in the NWSL x Liga MX Femenil Summer Cup.). Orlando is 3-6-0 at home in league play and 3-7-2 in home matches against the Courage in all competitions.
The most recent meeting between the two teams took place Sept. 19, 2025. The game appeared to be headed towards a scoreless draw until the end of normal time, when Shinomi Koyama converted to give the Courage the 1-0 win.
Prior to that game, the teams met on May 10 in Cary, NC. Feli Rauch scored in the first half to give the hosts the lead and it looked like they would hold on for all three points. But Prisca Chilufya’s equalizer in second-half stoppage time saw the game end in a 1-1 draw.
The first meeting in 2024 was held on May 1 in Orlando. Barbra Banda set up Ally Watt for the opener in the first half, and Watt repaid the favor just over 10 minutes later, as the Pride went up 2-0. Julie Doyle added a goal just before halftime, giving the Pride a commanding lead. Emily Sams’ own goal was the only scoring for the Courage, and Banda’s second of the night gave the Pride a 4-1 win.
On June 15, the Pride were the better team with more possession, shots, and shots on target, but the game ended in a scoreless draw. While they were disappointed with the result, the Pride were the first team to take points in North Carolina in 2024. On July 20 in the NWSL x Liga MX Femenil Summer Cup in North Carolina, Manaka Matsukubo gave the hosts the lead just before halftime before Celia equalized late for the Pride. The game went into penalties and the Courage won the shootout 5-4.
The first game between the Pride and Courage in 2023 took place April 19 in Orlando. The Pride took the lead after halftime when Summer Yates set up Watt for the opening goal, but Denise O’Sullivan equalized deep in second-half injury time, resulting in a 1-1 draw. On June 17 in North Carolina, it was all Courage. Kerolin and Meredith Speck gave the hosts a 2-0 lead before a Haley McCutcheon own goal made it 3-0 to North Carolina.
The Pride didn’t show up for the July 29 Challenge Cup contest in North Carolina, getting demolished by the Courage. Brittany Ratcliffe and Malia Berkely gave the hosts a 2-0 halftime lead before Frankie Tagliaferri made it three, and a late brace by Haley Hopkins completed the 5-0 beating. The Pride finally got a win over the Courage in 2023 on Sept. 17 at home. Watt scored inside the first minute. After assisting on the first goal, Adriana doubled the lead before halftime. Matsukubo got one back for the visitors, but it wasn’t enough and the Pride won 2-1.
The first meeting in 2022 came on May 18 in North Carolina. Sydney Leroux scored early and Mikayla Cluff doubled the lead with her first professional goal. A late goal by Brianna Pinto got the Courage back within one, but it wasn’t enough as the Pride took the2-1 win. On Sept. 21, 2022, at Exploria Stadium, Debinha scored early, assisted Tess Boade in first-half injury time to double the lead, and later added another goal, dooming the Pride to a 3-0 defeat.
The Pride and Courage were placed in the same division for the 2022 NWSL Challenge Cup, so the teams played twice before the regular season started. The first game took place March 26 in North Carolina. Merritt Mathias converted a penalty after Gunny Jonsdottir was called for a handball in the box, lifting the hosts to a 1-0 win. The return match in the tournament took place on April 16 in Orlando. The Courage scored three goals in the first nine minutes. Darian Jenkins netted a brace to make it 3-2, but a late Debinha goal put the game away and North Carolina won 4-2.
The teams played three times during the 2021 NWSL season. On May 22 in North Carolina, goals by Leroux and Alex Morgan gave the Pride a 2-0 lead late into the game. Jessica McDonald scored late to pull one back but the Pride held on for a 2-1 win. On July 4 in Orlando, Debinha and Havana Solaun goals helped the Courage take home a 2-0 win. The final game was played July 31 in North Carolina. Leroux opened the scoring but Ratcliffe equalized moments later and the teams drew 1-1.
The two teams were also matched up in the 2021 NWSL Challenge Cup but they only played once in that tournament. Neither team was able to find the back of the net in a scoreless draw.
Similar to the Challenge Cup, the teams were in the same group of the 2020 Fall Series, meeting twice. The first took place Sept. 19 in North Carolina and ended in a scoreless draw. The second was held on Oct. 17 at Exploria Stadium. Led by a Debinha brace, the Courage went up 3-0. But the Pride came back with goals by Marisa Viggiano, Kristen Edmonds, and Ally Haran for an exciting 3-3 draw.
The Pride and Courage played three times during the 2019 season. The first game was on April 17 in North Carolina. The Courage took a 1-0 lead into halftime but scored four times in the second half to win 5-0. They played a second time on June 1 in Orlando. Again, it was a dominant performance by the Courage as the Pride fell 3-0. The final meeting that year was another thrashing by North Carolina as the Pride fell 6-1.
The teams also met three times in 2018. On May 23 in Orlando, goals by Alanna Kennedy and Rachel Hill saw the Pride come back from a 3-1 deficit. But McDonald scored a winner in the 90th minute and the Courage won 4-3. The Pride went down by three goals in the final two games that season, but were unable to come back and fell 3-0 in both contests.
The 2017 season saw the teams meet for the first time. The Courage took the first game 3-1 on April 29 in North Carolina. They played a second time two weeks later in Orlando when the Pride took the 3-1 win. The final meeting in 2017 came in the final game of the season on Sept. 30. Kennedy netted a late winner, leading the Pride to a 3-2 win.
Overview
The Pride went into the three-week international break on a four-game point streak, recording a pair of wins and a pair of draws. However, they’ve had two poor results since then, a 3-2 loss to Racing Louisville on the road and a 4-2 loss to the Washington Spirit at home.
The most recent game got off to a terrible start as Sofia Cantore scored twice in the first five and a half minutes to give the Spirit a 2-0 lead. It looked worse when Ally Lemos had her penalty saved by Sandy MacIver. But Banda scored twice before the break to even the game at 2-2.
Unfortunately, Claudia Martinez and Trinity Rodman scored in the second half, lifting the visitors to a two-goal win and handing the Pride their second consecutive loss. The losses put the Pride in 12th place in the league standings, but just one point behind eighth.
With Kerry Abello and Kylie Nadaner out, the Pride’s back line has consisted of Cori Dyke, Rafaelle, Hailie Mace, and Oihane. Together with starting goalkeeper Anna Moorhouse, the defensive unit has conceded seven goals in the last two games. But that’s not the only reason they’ve struggled the last two weeks.
Finishing has been another problem for the Pride. The only player able to convert has been Banda, who has scored four goals in the two most recent games. As previously mentioned, that included a Lemos penalty saved against the Spirit.
Tonight, the Pride face a foe in a similar position, as the Courage also sit on nine points. They’ve played three games since the break. They returned from the international break with a 1-0 win over the Houston Dash before drawing Boston Legacy 2-2 and losing to the Kansas City Current 2-1.
The Courage are tied for the sixth-most goals conceded through their first seven games. That’s despite adding Canadian international goalkeeper Kailen Sheridan, who joined from San Diego Wave FC, where she was one of the league’s top shot stoppers.
The back line in front of Sheridan has been consistent recently, consisting of Dani Weatherholt, Maycee Bell, Uno Shiragaki, and Ryan Williams. However, Bell missed the team’s loss against Kansas City with a lower body injury.
Offensively, the Courage are led by U.S. international Ashley Sanchez, who has five goals. Matsukubo is second on the team with two goals and Weatherholt has the remaining one.
Williams leads the Courage with three assists so far this season, followed by Carly Wickenheiser, Matsukubo, Payton Linnehan, and Shinomi Koyama with one each.
“I think in any game in this league, it’s always going to be a tough matchup. I think they’re looking to bounce back from a defeat this past weekend. Similarly, we are as well,” Pride Head Coach Seb Hines said leading into tonight’s game. “We want to get our home form going again. Looking back at the Washington game, we’re very disappointed in the goals we conceded. We created some of our own as well and we have to capitalize on those moments. But there’s been a big emphasis on getting back to who we are as a team and not conceding sloppy goals.”
The Pride will play tonight without Kerry Abello (hip), Hannah Anderson (illness), Zara Chavoshi (lower leg), Cosette Morche (ankle), Jacquie Ovalle (thigh), Kylie Nadaner (maternity leave), and Viviana Villacorta (knee). The Courage are without Maycee Bell (knee), Payton Crawford (knee), Natalie Jacobs (ankle), Feli Rauch (suspension), and Olivia Wingate (knee).
Official Lineups
Orlando Pride (4-2-3-1)
Goalkeeper: Anna Moorhouse.
Defenders: Oihane, Raelle, Cori Dyke, Hailie Mace.
Defensive Midfielders: Haley McCutcheon, Ally Lemos.
Attacking Midfielders: Solai Washington, Angelina, Summer Yates.
Forward: Barbra Banda.
Bench: McKinley Crone, Nicole Payne, Reagan Raabe, Luana, Seven Castain, Julie Doyle, Simone Jackson, Marta
North Carolina Courage (4-3-3)
Goalkeeper: Kailen Sheridan.
Defenders: Dani Weatherholt, Natalia Staude, Uno Shiragaki, Ryan Williams.
Midfielders: Manaka Matsukubo, Shinomi Koyama, Riley Jackson.
Forwards: Ashley Sanchez, Evelyn Ijeh, Lauryn Thompson.
Bench: Molly Pritchard, Sydney Schmidt, Cameron Brooks, Ivy Younce, Carly Wickenheiser, Ally Schlegel, Hannah Betfort, Cortnee Vine, Chioma Okafor.
Referees
REF: Lauren Aldrich.
AR1: Zeno Cho.
AR2: Seun Yinka-Kehinde.
4TH: Elvis Osmanovic.
VAR: Anya Voigt.
AVAR: Kaili Terry.
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!
Orlando Pride
Orlando Pride vs. Washington Spirit: Final Score 4-2 as Pride’s Defense Falls Flat in Home Loss
The Pride rallied from 2-0 down early to tie the match by halftime, but Orlando’s defense gave up two more in a home collapse.
The Orlando Pride (2-3-2, 8 points) squandered a first half comeback from 2-0 down with some glaring defensive mistakes and an offense that couldn’t get past a stout Washington Spirit (3-1-3, 12 points) defense in a 4-2 home loss. The crowd of 7,507 fans had to wait out over an hour and a half weather delay to be disappointed in the end, despite Barbra Banda’s brace rallying Orlando back to level terms by halftime. Two second-half goals and a lack of offensive threat by the Pride led to the team’s second straight loss in league play.
The Pride have now conceded seven goals in their last two league games, and the team’s trend of starting halves poorly continues, as Orlando fell behind 2-0 within the first six minutes of the game. Sofia Cantore’s early brace set the tone, Claudia Martinez broke the 2-2 tie 10 minutes after halftime, and Trinity Rodman killed the game off in the 70th minute.
“You go in promising positions where I thought we started that first probably one or two minutes, and then, you know, you get punished for not ending it, not finishing your press,” Orlando Pride Head Coach Seb Hines said after the match. “Switched off at the back, and it allows [a] team like Washington, who are really dangerous in transition, with acres of space to run into.”
Goalkeeper Anna Moorhouse started behind a back line of Cori Dyke, Rafaelle, Hailie Mace, and Oihane. Angelina and Ally Lemos were the defensive midfielders behind an attacking line of Solai Washington, Haley McCutcheon, and Summer Yates, with Banda up top. Marta was on the bench after taking a knock last week but did not see the field, even when the Pride fell behind in the second half.
The match, which was scheduled for 4 p.m., finally kicked off at 5:37 p.m., after a delay for inclement weather. But it was the Spirit who handled the start of the game much better, pulling ahead in just the second minute with their first attempt of the game.
Cantore finished off a perfect Trinity Rodman feed over the top that Anna Moorhouse couldn’t stop.
In the sixth minute, Orlando tried to respond, with Banda working herself free on the right side and sending a dangerous cross into the box for Solai Washington’s run. The rookie left her shot too close to goalkeeper Sandy MacIver, who got a touch to it, pinging it off the left post. The rebound sparked a Spirit counterattack, which ended with another Rodman assist and a Cantore goal as Rafaelle lost track of the Spirit striker and couldn’t recover, allowing an easy finish to make it 2-0 in the sixth minute.
Following the second goal, the Pride began to assert possession but rushed their buildup, losing control in the process. They eventually worked the ball to Haley McCutcheon for a shot on goal, but it was easily saved by MacIver.
In the 16th minute, Hailie Mace struggled to contain Rodman, conceding a corner. Washington recycled several balls into the box, but Orlando’s defense eventually cleared them. The Pride then fashioned a counterattack, only for Lucia Di Guglielmo to pull Solai’s shirt, earning a yellow card.
Orlando started to string together periods of possession, but their connections in the buildup were too slow to truly pressure Washington. They earned a corner in the 25th minute, but MacIver scooped it up after a brief scramble in the box.
The Pride’s pressure should have paid off in the 30th minute. A scramble in the box led to Tara Rudd’s foul on Banda, handing Orlando a penalty kick. It was Ally Lemos who stepped up to the spot, but her run-up was easy for MacIver to read and, Lemos placed the ball far too close to the keeper and right at chest level. MacIver made an easy save, sending it out for a corner.
However, after squandering the spot kick, the Pride made the ensuing set piece pay off.
The corner was sent in to Rafaelle, who headed it down and forward to Banda. The Zambian did a good job of boxing out her defender, taking a touch to chest it down, spinning, and firing it in to put it away, cutting the lead to 2-1 in the 33rd minute.
The Pride were buoyed by the goal, coming alive. Orlando prowled around the box with sustained possession, and Banda struck again in the 38th minute to tie the game. Lemos sent a good ball over the top to Oihane on the right. The Spaniard sent in a low cross, and Banda again turned on it and blasted it past MacIver.
The match then settled into a midfield battle, with possession changing hands frequently. In the 43rd minute, Yates fired a shot high over the goal. Washington countered by working the ball into Orlando’s 18-yard box in the 45th minute, but no one was there to finish. The visitors repeated the play in the 48th minute from the other side, but neither attempt was particularly threatening.
The first half ended with possession even (50%-50%), but Orlando led in shots (9-4), shots on target (5-2), corners (3-1), and passing accuracy (80%-73%).
The Spirit started the second half on the front foot and looking to get back in front, but Orlando broke up their efforts to build, and managed to work a Banda shot in the 48th minute that was saved easily by Maclver. Washington worked her way down Orlando’s left side in the 52nd and put a cross into the box but it was too close to Maclver, who caught it easily.
Both teams managed some minor advances into each other’s territory, but good defense by both teams repeatedly snuffed out each chance.
The game turned in Washington’s favor when Mace and Rafaelle both stepped up, and a line-splitting pass allowed Martinez to in behind and put Washington up 3-2 in the 55th minute.
Again the match settled into a bit of back and forth, with not much in the way of threatening attacks. Rodman had a shot in the 63rd but sent it right at Moorehouse. Mace committed another mistake in the 65th, as she passed the ball right to Rodman, who settled and fired but the shot was blocked. Rosemonde Kouassi took a shot after getting onto the rebound but Moorhouse made the save.
The Pride made a triple substitution in the 66th minute, putting Simone Jackson in for Yates, Nicole Payne on for Oihane, and Julie Doyle on for Washington.
The subs didn’t change the game much though, and in the 70th minute, Rodman struck again. It was a simple ball over the top into space, bypassing an Orlando back line asleep to the danger. A precise cross in from Kouassi led to a tap-in by Rodman, putting Orlando in a deep 4-2 hole from which the Pride could not recover.
Luana subbed on in the 74th minute for Angelina and Seven Castain replaced Lemos in the 78th.
Orlando scratched out a few minor efforts in the Spirit’s box, but they still could not test Maclver.
The Spirit almost put another one away on a counterattack in the 85th but it was right at Moorhouse. Orlando responded with a counterattack, with Banda fighting her way through the defense and managing a close-range shot at a sharp angle that wound up over the end line for a corner. McCutcheon sent the ensuing ball in over the crossbar in the 87th.
The Pride spent the rest of the match failing to fashion any real chances with Washington playing keep-away to run out the clock, which they did well.
In the 95th minute Banda managed an attempt from the widest of angles that was easily saved and that was it for the Pride on a disappointing night that had a moment of hope going into half time.
Washington held the most possession (55%-45%) and a slight advantage in passing accuracy (77%-76%), but Orlando led in shots (16-10), shots on target (8-7), and corners (6-2).
“It can’t always be Barbra. It would turn into a one player team,” Hines said. “They do contribute in so many different ways. You know, I think some of the pressing was great. [I] think the creativity from Summer Yates was brilliant as well. You know, taking players on and getting [into] dangerous positions. That first goal again, it comes from a position where you know, you think you’re going to score. We hit the post. I think we hit the bar as well. And these are the fine margins that are kind of letting us down. We don’t want to concede four goals. (I) hate conceding. It hurts a lot. But there’s a few positives that we can take away going into the next game.”
“I think it’s definitely a difficult one. Obviously, nobody likes to lose at home,” said Payne, who made her Pride debut in the second half. “We’ve been working really hard. Especially after the last game, we really went to work to try and work on the things that we needed to fix and tweak. We fell a little bit short, but obviously, we’re a very, very good team, and we’ll have more moments. We know that we can do better and clean up those things that we need to.”
Next up, the Pride face the North Carolina Courage at home on Friday.
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