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Orlando City B

Orlando City B vs. Crown Legacy FC: Final Score 4-1 as OCB Wins Crucial Game Away from Home

OCB nets four goals in 4-1 win over Crown Legacy FC.

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Image courtesy of Orlando City B

Orlando City B (9-7-9, 40 points) took three points on the road with a 4-1 win over Crown Legacy FC (10-8-6, 40 points) this afternoon in Matthews, NC. Alex Freeman had a first half brace and Jack Lynn made it 3-0 shortly after halftime. A goal by Nikola Petkovic in the 75th minute made it 3-1 and the hosts had a penalty in the 80th minute, but Joao Pedro missed. Shak Mohammed put the game away in the 84th minute with a fourth goal for the Young Lions.

OCB Head Coach Manuel Goldberg was suspended for this game, though he was present in the stadium. Julian Vergara took over as coach and the staff made two changes from the team that beat Huntsville City FC 2-1 on Sept. 1. First-team regulars Jeorgio Kocevski and Lynn entered the lineup for Colin Guske and Wilfredo Rivera.

The back line in front of Carlos Mercado was Luca Petrasso, Thomas Williams, Nabi Kibunguchy, and Alex Freeman. Imanol Almaguer and Kocevski were the defensive midfielders behind Yutaro Tsukada, Jhon Solis, and Mohammed with Lynn up top.

OCB dominated the first half in every way, creating several chances and scoring twice while keeping Crown Legacy from keeping possession. The hosts were much better in the second half, creating chances early and often. However, the Young Lions defended well for most of the second 45 minutes. Crown Legacy did get a goal back and had a penalty that would’ve made it a one-goal game, but the misses ended their chance of a monumental comeback.

The first chance of the game came in the third minute when Solis laid the ball off for Tsukada at the top of the Crown Legacy box. The midfielder’s first touch was a shot on goal, but it was right at Crown Legacy goalkeeper George Marks.

The hosts nearly had their first chance in the sixth minute when Jaylin Lindsey played Nicholas Scardina down the right. The midfielder sent a dangerous ball into the box with a teammate making a run, but Kibunguchy got there first and cleared it away.

In the 12th minute, Tsukada received the ball in a seemingly innocuous position. The midfielder took a touch inside before unleashing a hard shot towards the near post. Marks dove to his right to ensure the ball didn’t sneak in, but it skipped wide.

The Young Lions continued to threaten in the 15th minute when Mohammed sent a low cross to the top of the six-yard box for Freeman. Marks did well to come out and tip the ball before the OCB right back could reach it. It looked for a moment like Tsukada would put the rebound in, but the defender got to it first.

Seconds later, Petrasso found Almaguer in the box and the OCB captain fired on goal. Marks could only tip the strong shot over the crossbar.

OCB took the lead in the 18th minute when Kocevski played a long ball for Freeman behind the back line and Marks came out in an attempt to challenge the right back. Freeman was able to tap the ball around the goalkeeper, leaving him with an empty net. Despite a somewhat tight angle, Freeman played the ball in nicely to give the Young Lions an early 1-0 lead.

Crown Legacy felt that Freeman was offside and interim Head Coach Kevin Sawchak let the fourth official know, earning a yellow card for dissent. However, MLS NEXT Pro doesn’t have VAR, so the decision stood.

Crown Legacy nearly had a chance in the 27th minute through an excellent individual effort by Jamie Paterson. The newly-signed Charlotte FC midfielder megged Kocevski before playing a give-and-go with Tyger Smalls. He got behind the OCB back line, but Mercado reached the ball before the attacker.

OCB had a chance to double their advantage in the 36th minute when Williams pushed forward from his center back position. The defender played the ball around Lindsey and the right back tripped him, earning the Young Lions a free kick.

The set piece by Tsukada was towards the far post where Marks pushed it away. Almaguer received the ball outside of the box and attempted an ambitious shot that went wide of the target.

The fourth official displayed four minutes of first-half stoppage time and that was enough for the Young Lions to double their advantage. In the second minute of added time, Solis sent Petrasso long down the left sideline. The left back played a beautiful ball beyond the reach of three defenders to Freeman, making a run to the far post. The right back did well with his first touch to guide the ball past Marks for his second goal of the game.

The Young Lions had one more first-half chance in the fifth minute of stoppage time. A poor clearance attempt by Crown Legacy enabled Mohammed to take possession. The attacker tried to beat Marks, but the goalkeeper made the stop and OCB took a 2-0 lead into the break.

At halftime, Crown Legacy had more corner kicks (4-2) and crosses (11-2) but were unable to create anything from them. Meanwhile, OCB had more shots (7-1), shots on target (5-0), and better passing accuracy (92.9%-90.5%).

Crown Legacy were the aggressors early in the second half. In the 48th minute, Scardina entered the box and went down after some contact. The Crown Legacy players, coaching staff, and crowd appealed for a penalty, but it wasn’t given.

A minute later, the hosts earned the first corner kick of the second half. The Young Lions got a pair of heads to the ball but were unable to clear. It eventually fell to Cam Duke who fired on goal. Mercado wasn’t in position to stop the shot, but it deflected off a defender and out of play. The second set piece was cleared and OCB maintained their two-goal lead.

The Young Lions extended their lead in the 51st minute from a set piece. Almaguer sent a long ball from his own half of the field behind the back line. Freeman couldn’t reach it, but the ball bounced to Lynn right next to him. The first-team forward took his time, placing his shot around Marks to give OCB a 3-0 lead.

Crown Legacy had a golden chance to get one back in the 56th minute when Smalls found Nimfasha Berchimas wide open in the box. Mercado came off his line to close down the striker’s angle and the forward shot right at the OCB goalkeeper.

The hosts won a corner kick from the attack and Smalls’ cross was blocked out by Kibunguchy. The second attempt fell in the six-yard box before Williams cleared it away. Crown Legacy’s third successive corner kick was headed over the crossbar, enabling the Young Lions to clear without conceding.

OCB nearly scored a fourth in the 69th minute when Petrasso played Lynn behind the Crown Legacy back line. This time Marks did well to get down and block Lynn’s shot wide of the near post.

Tsukada’s ensuing corner kick was played short for Petrasso, who sent a cross to the back post. Freeman was making a run, but Marks caught the attempt before it reached the OCB right back.

Crown Legacy quickly went the other way, playing second-half substitute Brian Romero behind the back line. The attacker tried to chip Mecado and got the ball over the goalkeeper, but it sailed high and wide of the goal.

Three minutes later, Aron John played a wonderful switch to Romero, setting up another attempt for the attacker. It was a strong shot but right at Mercado, who knocked it down and collected the rebound.

A goal was coming for Crown Legacy and they finally converted in the 75th minute. Petkovic touched the ball inside to create space from Kocevski and sent a shot that hit the near post. The rebound went right to Jonathan Nyandjo, who tapped it in to cut the OCB lead to 3-1.

Immediately after the goal, the Young Lions made their first two changes. Yeiler Valencia and Tahir Reid-Brown came into the game for Tsukada and Petrasso.

Crown Legacy almost scored a second in the 78th minute when Duke found Scardina in the box. The midfielder was aiming for the near post and beat Mercado but missed just wide.

Two minutes later, Crown Legacy had an even better opportunity when Mohammed gave the ball away in the OCB third of the field. Petkovic took possession and entered the box, drawing contact from Kibunguchy. The referee took some time to consider the situation before pointing to the spot and awarding a penalty.

Before the penalty was taken, OCB made a third change as Favian Loyola came in for Lynn.

Pedro stepped to the spot with a chance to make it a one-goal game. Mercado dove to his left and it should’ve been an easy finish, but Pedro sent the attempt over the crossbar.

The Young Lions made the hosts pay for the miss by netting a fourth in the 84th minute. Solis played a great ball forward, sending Mohammed behind the back line. With nobody near him, the attacker took his time to send the ball by Marks and in to give OCB a 4-1 lead.

OCB made their final two changes in the 89th minute as Gustavo Caraballo and Jackson Platts came on for Freeman and Solis.

Valencia got his first chance at goal in the first minute of stoppage time. He was looking to send his shot just inside the near post but hit the outside of the net.

Mohammed had one last chance in the fifth minute of stoppage time with a shot from the right. The midfielder was looking to beat Marks to his far post, but the ball skipped just wide. That was the last chance for either team as OCB won 4-1.

At full time, OCB had more shots (14-13) and shots on target (8-4). Crown Legacy had more corner kicks (8-3), crosses (17-4), and better passing accuracy (90%-89.3%). The better shooting efficiency by OCB was a major factor as the Young Lions won by three goals.

The three points moves OCB up to sixth in MLS NEXT Pro’s Eastern Conference, even on points with Crown Legacy for fifth place with three games left. However, OCB has played more games than the teams around them.


After this brief road trip, the Young Lions will return home for a pair of games at Osceola County Stadium — their final two of the regular season —  before finishing the season in Cincinnati. The first of those home games is on Sept. 15 against New England Revolution II.

Orlando City

Four OCB Players Who Could Make MLS Debuts In 2026

Who are the most likely OCB players to make their first team-debuts during the 2026 season?

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Image courtesy of Orlando City B / Mark Thor

Orlando City has invested significantly in youth development since Luiz Muzzi and Ricardo Moreira arrived prior to the 2019 season. After signing just four players in the first five years after the club’s expansion announcement, Orlando City has signed 14 academy products to first-team deals in the last seven years.

While Muzzi departed the club this off-season, Moreira took over the role, so the emphasis developing homegrown talent is unlikely to change.

This past season alone, the club saw Colin Guske, Gustavo Caraballo, and Zakaria Taifi make their first-team debuts. Additionally, Tahir Reid-Brown, despite not getting on the field, was on the senior side’s bench for four games.

With that in mind, let’s take a look at the most likely OCB players to join the first team for the 2026 season.

Tahir Reid-Brown, 19, Defender

The most likely player to make his first team debut in 2026 is 19-year-old fullback Reid-Brown. He’s already on an MLS contract and plays left back, a position currently of need for the Lions. The defender has been with the Young Lions for the last four years, making 56 appearances with 36 starts.

Reid-Brown initially played opposite Alex Freeman on the OCB back line before Freeman made the jump to the MLS squad and was replaced by Taifi, who also ended the 2025 campaign with the first team. 

Adding to the likelihood that Reid-Brown might see playing time is the uncertainty at left back. Adrian Marin is the current projected starting left back, but the Spaniard was less than impressive in his first season with Orlando City. Unless the club signs more depth at that position before the season begins, you can exepct to see Reid-Brown get some MLS playing time before long.

Jackson Platts, 18, Defender

Another player who could see his first team debut in 2026 is center back Jackson Platts. The 18-year-old was a regular OCB starter alongside Thomas Williams in 2024 before being relegated to the bench in 2025. However, the starter alongside Williams last season was Hayden Sargis, who didn’t come from the academy and is currently out of contract.

Like all defensive positions, the Lions have a lack of depth that could provide opportunities for young players. The only center backs are Robin Jansson and David Brekalo, forcing the need for a backup. The club also traded Williams, opening more room.

Platts is also a versatile option. While his natural position is center back, he’s also spent time as an outside back and in the midfield. That versatility could result in him seeing MLS action this year.

Justin Hylton, 18, Forward

The OCB player that took the biggest leap in 2025 was unquestionably Justin Hylton. The teenager was a star for the U-17 team before making his professional debut for the Young Lions. Originally a backup, he soon became a focal point of the attack and created problems for opposing defenses.

Hylton made his OCB debut on June 1 and didn’t start until Aug. 23. But he was in the starting lineup for the final six games of the season and was a crucial part of the team’s late successes. He ended the season with 11 appearances, starting six games, and recording two assists.

The only issue for Hylton is that his position is currently not the most in need. Whether the club sees him up top or in the attacking midfield, there are players in front of him. However, we could see him make his debut in an Open Cup or Leagues Cup game, if not as a late substitute in the regular season.

Dylan Judelson, 17, Midfielder

Judelson is another player who joined OCB from the academy in 2025. He started the season on an academy contract but signed to the club’s second team on Aug. 5. The defensive midfielder was a key part of the team from day one, starting the first four games of the season.

In all, Judelson made 20 appearances in 2025 with nine starts. He was in and out of the lineup with Guske, Riyon Tori, and Jhon Solis also seeing time in the role. But the Canadian youth international was very solid when on the field.

Although the departure of Cesar Araujo works in Judelson’s favor, he’s still behind veterans Eduard Atuesta, Braian Ojeda, and Wilder Cartagena, as well as Guske and MLS U22 Initiative signing Luis Otavio, while Joran Gerbet is also under contract but will miss the first part of the season recovering from a knee injury.

It’s a crowded field in front of Judelson in his position group, meaning he’ll have the biggest uphill climb of the players mentioned in this column to make his first-team debut. However, we could see the teenager with the first team for the first time this year if his development continues and there are injuries and suspensions ahead of him on the depth chart.


After years of the academy failing to produce talent for the first team, Orlando City has become one of the league’s standard bearers. That’s likely to continue this season, and it might be the start of a successful professional career at the senior level for these young players.

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Orlando City B

Orlando City Exercises Contract Option on OCB Head Coach Manuel Goldberg

Manuel Goldberg is back to lead the Young Lions of OCB in 2026 after the club exercised his contract option.

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Image of OCB Head Coach Manuel Goldberg holding up an OCB scarf.
Image courtesy of Orlando City B / Mark Thor

Orlando City announced today that the club has exercised the option on Orlando City B Head Coach Manuel Goldberg’s contract, keeping him in purple through 2026. The Young Lions’ boss enters his third season in the position in 2026 and his fifth overall with the team.

“Since taking over the role as head coach of OCB, Manu has done a tremendous job connecting with our MLS NEXT Pro players, developing their skillsets and preparing them for opportunities with the first team and beyond,” Orlando City General Manager & Sporting Director Ricardo Moreira said in a club press release. “His deep understanding of our player pathway and internal processes has been invaluable. The continuity Manu provides is critical for the career development of both our players and staff.”

Goldberg initially joined the club in 2022 as an assistant to Martin Perelman. When Perelman was promoted to first-team assistant, Orlando City announced Goldberg as his successor on March 11, 2024. At 30 years old, Goldberg became the youngest head coach in the short history of MLS NEXT Pro.

In his first season in the position, Goldberg led his team to a record of 11-9-9 (28 points), finishing fifth in MLS NEXT Pro’s Eastern Conference. The Young Lions took fourth-seeded Chicago Fire FC II to penalties in the first round of the playoffs away from home, where they fell 5-4 to end their season.

The 2025 campaign was particularly disappointing, as the Young Lions failed to qualify for the postseason for the first time since 2022. They finished the year with 28 points (9-13-6) and tumbled to 11th in the Eastern Conference after a promising start.

Overall, Goldberg has a record of 18-21-16 in 55 games leading the Young Lions. His draw in Chicago in 2024 (and subsequent penalty shootout loss) was his only playoff appearance. Meanwhile, his teams have been 9-7 in penalty shootouts over the past two seasons.

However, Goldberg has been successful in his primary objective of producing players for the first team. Since becoming head coach of OCB, three players — Colin Guske, Gustavo Caraballo, and Zakaria Taifi — have signed Homegrown Player contracts, while Justin Ellis is seemingly on the brink of signing one as well. He’s also coached backup goalkeeper Javier Otero and, most notably, starting right back Alex Freeman, helping them develop into first-team contributors.

Goldberg began his coaching career at Israeli side Hapoel Katamon in 2015 following a three-year playing career in the country. He then joined Club Nautico Hacoaj in Buenos Aires, Argentina as an assistant coach from 2017 to 2019 before becoming a competitive program coach at Barça Academy PRO Miami. After two years in South Florida, he was hired by Orlando City as Perelman’s assistant with OCB.

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Orlando City B

Orlando City B vs. FC Cincinnati 2: Final Score 4-1 as Loss Eliminates OCB from Playoff Race

OCB ended its 2025 MLS NEXT Pro campaign with a 4-1 loss to FC Cincinnati.

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Image of Gustavo Caraballo chasing down a loose ball against FC Cincinnati 2.
Image courtesy of Orlando City B / Mark Thor

Orlando City B (9-13-6, 37 points) ended its 2025 MLS NEXT Pro campaign with a 4-1 loss to FC Cincinnati 2 (9-12-7, 41 points) today at Osceola County Stadium in Kissimmee. Albright Chikamso scored the lone goal for the Young Lions, and Gerardo Valenzuela, Stefan Chirila, and Kenji Mboma Dem scored for the visitors.

OCB Head Coach Manuel Goldberg made only one change to the team that drew 3-3 with Carolina Core FC on Sept. 27 and won 4-2 on penalties. Chikamso made his first start for the team, replacing Tahir Reid-Brown, who left injured in the first half in North Carolina.

The back line in front of goalkeeper Carlos Mercado was Chikamso, Thomas Williams, Hayden Sargis, and Riyon Tori. Colin Guske and Justin Hylton were the defensive midfielders behind Gustavo Caraballo, Justin Ellis, and Titus Sandy, Jr., with Shak Mohammed up top.

The Young Lions started the day in 10th place but with an opportunity to qualify for one of the eight playoff spots. Results around the league went their way, but the team failed to take advantage, as FC Cincinnati 2 dominated the match to end OCB’s season.

Cincinnati’s opening goal always seemed likely, and when it did, it briefly woke up the Young Lions. They converted an equalizer in the 30th minute but fell apart after that. Cincinnati dominated the remainder of the game, putting it away before halftime.

Cincinnati was the more attacking team early as OCB struggled to clear the ball. Valenzuela dribbled near the OCB box in the second minute before Hylton stepped on his foot, conceding a free kick near the top of the penalty area.

Mboma Dem went for goal on the set piece, sending it on target. However, Mercado got to his near post to tip the ball over the crossbar for a corner kick. FC Cincinnati 2 committed a foul on the ensuing ball into the box, ending the attack.

The visitors created another attempt in the 10th minute when Valenzuela received a pass near the top right corner of the OCB box. The attacker fired, but Chikamso blocked it out for a corner kick. Again, Cincinnati couldn’t create anything from the set piece and the Young Lions cleared the danger.

The Young Lions nearly took the lead when Hylton played Sandy down the right in the 15th minute. The rookie played it back central for Hylton near the top of the box, where he was taken down by Stiven Jimenez. Caraballo took the set piece, sending his attempt off the crossbar. The ball bounced around before being cleared to Guske at the top of the box. The Homegrown Player volleyed the ball wide of the far post.

The visitors scored in the 20th minute through a wonderful run by Valenzuela. The midfielder weaved through defenders into the OCB box, beating Williams, Chikamso, and Sargis, before guiding the ball past Mercado and inside the far post from just inside the six-yard box, giving his team the 1-0 lead.

Mohammed made a run to the top of the Cincinnati box in the 24th minute, shooting from distance. Andrei Chirila deflected it wide for a corner kick. Caraballo took the ensuing set piece, sending it through the box untouched and out for a goal kick.

In the 26th minute, Sandy sent a cross into the box that found Ellis’ head, but he sent his shot over the crossbar. Two minutes later, Hylton shot from the top of the box that deflected off Yamir Uculmana, forcing Cincinnati goalkeeper Paul Walters to tip it wide. The Young Lions kept possession in the Cincinnati third, creating another chance when Mohammed found Ellis at the top of the box. He played it forward for Sandy, whose low cross was cleared wide.

OCB continued on the attack, earning a corner kick in the 30th minute. Caraballo sent the set piece into the box, where Chikamso headed it inside the far post for his first professional goal, evening the game at 1-1.

Mboma Dem took a shot from the top right corner of the box in the 34th minute that Guske blocked. However, the OCB midfielder took the worst of it, going down injured. Since he received attention for something other than a head injury, he had to leave the game briefly, leaving the Young Lions with 10 men. The visitors took advantage when a pair of brothers converted with the help of an OCB mistake.

Andrei Chirila sent a long ball down the right for Stefan Chirila. Williams stepped in front to intercept, but he missed the ball, allowing the attacker to shield Sargis and get behind the back line. The attacker placed the ball behind Mercado, retaking the lead for Cincinnati.

Valenzuela took a layoff from Stefan Chirila in the 41st minute. The midfielder took a shot, looking for his second goal of the game, but Hylton deflected it out for a corner kick. The ensuing set piece resulted in two crosses before Uculmana pulled Hylton back, earning a yellow card.

Two minutes later, the visitors extended their lead. Hylton had the ball near the top of the OCB box, losing possession to Stefan Chirila. The midfielder touched the ball forward for Mboma Dem, who beat Mercado to his near post to give his team a 3-1 lead.

Guske went down for a second time in the first minute of first-half stoppage time. It initially looked like Goldberg would make his first change, but he decided to end the half with 10 men to avoid using a substitution window.

The final chance of the half came in the fifth minute of stoppage time when Hylton failed to clear the ball. Valenzuela took possession of the ball, firing on target and forcing Mercado to go down to make the stop.

After 45 minutes of action, Cincinnati had the edge in shots (8-7), shots on target (5-2), corner kicks (4-2), and passing accuracy (91.2%-89.5%). OCB had more crosses (3-2) but trailed by two goals at the break.

OCB made one halftime substitution at central midfield as the injured Guske was replaced by Dylan Judelson.

Cincinnati started the second half the way it ended the first half, putting pressure on the OCB back line. In the 46th minute, Valenzuela played Mboma Dem forward, but Mercado blocked his shot out of play for a corner kick. The ensuing set piece resulted in several headers that the Young Lions were unable to clear. Eventually, Williams knocked it out for another corner kick that landed on the foot of Uculmana, but his attempt went wide.

The Young Lions had one of their best attacks in the 51st minute, passing the ball around the top of the box. Mohammed took a shot from the top right corner that Andrei Chirila blocked. The ball deflected to Ellis, who fired, but Noah Adnan blocked it.

The Young Lions forced a turnover in the 53rd and went on the break with Hylton finding Mohammed to his right. The forward took a couple of touches before shooting from the top of the box, but Andrei Chirila made another block.

The visitors extended their lead again in the 59th minute when Tori blocked Stefan Chirila’s pass. Unfortunately, it went straight to Mboma Dem, allowing him to get behind the OCB back line. He sent it past Mercado to give Cincinnati a 4-1 lead.

The Young Lions nearly got one back in the 61st minute when they earned a corner kick. Caraballo sent the set piece into the box, where Sargis got his head to the ball. The center back sent it to the back post where the ball bounced off the woodwork, keeping the deficit at three goals.

Chikamso went down injured in the 67th minute, requiring attention. The stoppage allowed Goldberg to make three more changes. Favian Loyola, Noham Abdellaoui, and Jacob Ramirez entered the game for Chikamso, Williams, and Hylton.

The Young Lions should have netted a second goal in the 71st minute when Caraballo found Ellis open near the penalty spot. Ellis somehow managed to send the shot wide. Loyola got into the action in the 72nd minute, receiving the ball well outside the box. Rather than crossing it in for a teammate, he went for goal from 25 yards out, sending his attempt right to Walters.

On the other end, Carson Locker attempted a long-distance attempt, but this one sailed well over the crossbar.

Caraballo made a run to the top of the box in the 75th minute before backheeling the ball to Ellis behind him. The attacker’s second touch was a shot that forced Walters to dive to his right to tip it wide. The Young Lions couldn’t create anything from the ensuing set piece as Cincinnati cleared.

Goldberg made his final change during the second-half hydration break, replacing Sandy with Jake Basinet.

Loyola played Mohammed to the end line in the 82nd minute and the forward reached it before it went out of play. His pass was a little behind Ellis, who flicked it on frame with his heel. It was a close-range chance on target, but Walters reacted well to make the stop.

The Young Lions came close again in the 88th minute when Judelson drew a foul on Yair Ramos near the top of the OCB box. Loyola’s set piece found Abdellaoui’s head, but he sent his attempt off the post.

Mohammed earned a corner kick in the first minute of stoppage time. Loyola’s ensuing set piece delivery found Ellis, who sent his header attempt wide.

At full time, OCB had more shots (18-14), crosses (8-3), and corner kicks (7-6). However, the Young Lions struggled to put their chances on target, sending fewer on frame than the opposition (8-4). Additionally, the visitors had better passing accuracy (89.5%-88.8%).

Three points in this game would have qualified the Young Lions for a third consecutive postseason. Unfortunately, they failed to show up when needed, being completely outplayed. Meanwhile, Cincinnati was up to the occasion, earning a playoff spot on the last day of the season.


That concludes OCB’s 2025 season. The Young Lions put themselves in position to qualify for the playoffs with a three-game winning streak in August and September, but losses to teams below them were costly. Overall, it will be seen as a disappointing season for OCB.

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