Connect with us

Orlando City

Orlando City vs. FC Dallas: Five Takeaways

Here’s what we learned from Orlando City’s 3-1 road victory over FC Dallas.

Published

on

Image courtesy of Orlando City SC / Mark Thor

Orlando City visited the Lone Star State to face Western Conference foes FC Dallas. The Lions entered the match needing a victory to clinch a postseason spot and accomplished that mission, thanks to a total team offensive effort. What follows are my five takeaways from a resounding 3-1 victory.

Possession with Purpose

In the opening 15 minutes of the match, Orlando enjoyed a significant amount of possession with little to show for it. However, that changed quickly as the first goal came on the heels of some technically sound and visually pleasing play. Crisp passing and solid spacing allowed Rafael Santos to find the space to send in a lethal cross from the left side, which was placed with pinpoint accuracy. The cross found the head of Ramiro Enrique who made a sneaky run into the box to beat the much taller Omar Gonzalez to the ball. Enrique made solid contact with his head to flick it past Maarten Paes. Winning the possession battle helps control a match and the Lions not only won that battle, but also played with purpose when they possessed the ball throughout the majority of the match.

Schlegoal

Orlando City has taken the second-most corner kicks in Major League Soccer throughout the regular season thus far, and although the Lionss often don’t seem to do much with them, they made one count in the second half in Dallas. Martin Ojeda played a corner into the box in the 51st minute which found the head of a streaking Rodrigo Schlegel, who powered it into the back of the net. It is always fun when the team gets a contribution from an unexpected source, and I did not have a Schlegoal on my Bingo card. The goal doubled Orlando’s lead just a few minutes into the second half and provided a bit of breathing room.

Torres Punctuation Mark

Four minutes after Orlando City took a two-goal lead, Designated Player Facundo Torres took a beautifully weighted pass from Ramiro Enrique into a 1-v-1 situation against Paes. Torres calmly slotted it into the net as two defenders were closing in on his position. For Torres, the goal not only put his team up with a commanding 3-0 lead but also pulled him level with club legend Cyle Larin for most goals scored across all competitions in team history. Smart money says that that record will be Torres’ before the end of the season.

McGuire’s Missed Chances

While the team will enjoy the road victory and success at Dallas for the first time in club history, the game wasn’t 100% perfect. Second-half substitute Duncan McGuire came on in the 65th minute along with Luis Muriel in a double change for Ojeda and Enrique. McGuire was given three clear-cut chances on goal which should have completely buried the home side. The first came just moments after he came onto the pitch.

Just moments after entering the game, Muriel played Robin Jansson in on the left on a recycled corner kick before the captain crossed it onto McGuire’s foot right in front of goal. McGuire made solid contact, but the placement was much to be desired as it was almost directly at Paes. Just a few minutes later, Muriel sent McGuire behind the defense in the 71st minute, finding himself in alone on goal. With a defender on his hip, McGuire attempted the shot with his weaker left foot and got neither the power nor placement he would have liked on an attempt which ultimately didn’t bother Paes much. Finally, Muriel again sent McGuire in behind in the 97th minute down the left. This time, McGuire wanted to pull it onto his preferred foot and in doing so, he allowed Marco Farfan time to catch up and block the effort.

These are the kinds of opportunities one would expect McGuire to finish and Muriel’s passing on all three deserved to be rewarded.

Nervy Finish

The end of that match felt more stressful than it needed to be, didn’t it? Nicolas Lodeiro came on in the 73rd minute to provide fresh legs in the defensive midfield and just minutes after coming on he committed a foul in the box to concede a penalty. Paul Arriola calmly stepped up and found success from the penalty spot, inching Dallas into the match. That left the home squad down two goals with 12 minutes to go, and things only got more stressful from there as Dallas found the crossbar on a Petar Musa shot and then appeared to have a second goal as the game approached the 90th minute. The goal was correctly overturned after video review by referee Jair Maruffo due to Arriola being just offside in the buildup, and Orlando saw out the final minutes of stoppage time. Nonetheless, the closing minutes were far too stressful in a game Orlando City had dominated from the opening kick.


Those are my takeaways from a 3-1 road victory. Orlando City put in a solid effort across the board and now returns to the City Beautiful sitting in fourth place in the East with just a few games left to go in the regular season. Most importantly, the Lions qualified for the playoffs for the fifth straight season and can now work on securing a top-four position to get home field advantage in the best-of-three first round.

What stood out to you the most? Be sure to let us know in the comments below and, as always, vamos Orlando!

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Orlando City

Orlando City vs. FC Dallas: Final Score 3-1 as Lions Clinch Playoff Spot with First Road Win at Dallas

Orlando City is in the postseason for the fifth straight year, thanks to goals by Ramiro Enrique, Rodrigo Schlegel, and Facundo Torres.

Published

on

Image courtesy of Orlando City SC / Mark Thor

Orlando City continues to score goals in bunches, bouncing back from last week’s loss at Colubus with a 3-1 win over FC Dallas at Toyota Stadium in Frisco, TX. Ramiro Enrique, Rodrigo Schlegel, and Facundo Torres scored to lead the Lions (13-11-7, 46 points) to their first road win ever against FC Dallas (10-14-7, 37 points). Orlando City clinched a playoff spot with the win.

Things got nervy at the end, as Paul Arriola scored from the penalty spot after a foul in the box by Nico Lodeiro, and FC Dallas had a second goal overturned due to Arriola being offside in the buildup.

“One more time we qualify for the playoffs. It’s a credit for the group of players that had a big heart and a big love for the club too, and a lot of passion for what they do,” Orlando City Head Coach Oscar Pareja said after the match. “So, I’m very happy. It’s a special night today, coming here to Dallas, in a very difficult city to play against, and we won, scored three goals. We played an excellent (first) 75 minutes, and the reaction of Dallas in the last part was very good as well. Complicated the game, but we finally clinched, and that was the first objective, and we’re happy.”

Pareja’s lineup featured Pedro Gallese in goal behind a back line of Rafael Santos, Robin Jansson, Schlegel, and Kyle Smith, with Dagur Dan Thorhallsson out with a lower leg injury. Cesar Araujo returned from suspension to play in the central midfield with Wilder Cartagena behind an attacking line of Ivan Angulo, Martin Ojeda, and Torres, with Enrique up top.

Orlando City held most of the possession in the first half, but didn’t create much out of it. Some of that was due to unselfishness, turning down shooting opportunities to try to play in a teammate, and then sending in a poor return ball that the FC Dallas was able to intercept. The crossing also left a lot to be desired at times, including just three minutes into the match, when Santos had space on the left but sent the ball in for Maarten Paes to easily catch.

Petar Musa had the first good look for Dallas in the 15th minute, taking the ball wide of Cartagena and fizzing a shot over Gallese’s crossbar.

The Lions broke the scoreless deadlock three minutes later. Santos got his cross right this time, sending in a near-post ball. Enrique got across the much larger Omar Gonzalez and sent a glancing header just under the bar past Paes to open the scoring in the 18th minute. It was Orlando City’s first-ever road goal at Dallas.

Ojeda nearly doubled the lead two minutes later. Left with space just outside the area, the Argentine smashed a shot toward goal. Paes did well to get down to make the save. Ojeda’s placement was too close to the goalkeeper, otherwise the Lions would have had a two-goal advantage in the 20th minute.

Arriola had a go from outside the area in the aftermath of a Dallas corner in the 27th minute, forcing Gallese to get down to make a good save.

Musa thought he’d scored for Dallas in the 31st minute off an Arriola cross but there was an obvious push by the midfielder on Angulo to win the ball back and Orlando was correctly awarded a free kick.

The Lions were slow to close down in the 35th minute and it was nearly a costly mistake, as a cross found Arriola’s head at the near post. His back-post effort was just wide of goal.

Ojeda made a great cutback pass to Enrique in the box in the 39th minute but the striker got under his shot and fired it high into the crowd.

Arriola’s cross for Musa late in the half was caught in the air by Gallese, and the Dallas striker took a hit in the ensuing collision but was able to continue.

The last good chance of the half fell to Orlando as Enrique stole the ball in the attacking third. He had an opportunity to shoot from the right, but he opted instead to try to pick out a teammate and the Dallas defense intercepted his pass.

At the half, the Lions held the advantage in possession (60.2%-39.8%), shots (4-3), shots on target (2-1), and passing accuracy (94.4%-86.8%). Both teams earned two corner kicks in the opening period.

Although it was only a 1-0 lead at the break, Orlando dominated the first half of the game.

“I thought it was a clear idea that we had with the players during the week, after our game in Columbus, that we wanted to have more domination of the ball and more compromise, and trying to look for the spaces with personality,” Pareja said. “That was our compromise with the players. And I think that is what I saw on the pitch. I saw them moving everywhere and provided support to their teammates when they had the ball. Our line of passing was very correct, the occupation of the spaces as well. So, we had a very complete half.”

FC Dallas changed shape in the second half but not much changed. Orlando conceded more of the possession but was able to add to its lead and could (and should) have scored even more than the two it got in the second half.

Dallas got the first chance of the second period in the 50th minute when a deflected ball fell for Musa, who volleyed it toward goal but couldn’t keep his shot down.

Just seconds after that miss, the Lions doubled their lead. A dangerous cross from Smith on the right was intended for Angulo at the back post but former Lion Ruan knocked it behind for a corner. Ojeda sent in a good delivery and Schlegel attacked it in the air, powering a header into the upper right corner to make it 2-0 in the 51st minute.

“It’s obviously something that we work on constantly throughout the week,” Schlegel said of the set piece goal. “It’s almost automatic that we’re going to work on those set pieces. Sometimes in the games they don’t come out well. They don’t turn out the way that we practice them, or that we hoped, a lot of times based on the defense too. And obviously, it’s been a while since I was able to score. But that doesn’t mean that the work ever stopped. Thankfully, it went in tonight, and just really happy with this whole team.”

Ruan tried to get his team right back in it, blazing down the right flank in the 54th minute and sending a fierce cross through the six, but it was in front of everyone and went out of play on the other side on a deflection by Orlando.

The Lions again immediately punished Dallas for missing an opportunity. Enrique took the ball away in the attacking end on an errant Dallas back pass and immediately sent the ball behind for Torres’ attacking run. Torres slowed down, took a look at goal, and passed the ball past Paes to make it 3-0 in the 55th minute.

With the goal, Torres tied Cyle Larin for the club’s all-time lead in goals across all competitions, with 44.

FC Dallas didn’t give up, rolling the dice with multiple substitutions and sending more numbers forward into the attack in a desperation move that backfired multiple times, but the Lions were unable to punish the hosts further, despite some good chances to do so.

Alan Velasco tried a blast from outside the area in the 63rd minute that required a Gallese save. Orlando City then got down the left side and Enrique won a free kick near the corner. The ball in bounced off a couple of players and Dallas looked to counterattack, but the Lions were able to recover defensively to stop the transition before it resulted in a chance.

Pareja sent Luis Muriel and Duncan McGuire on in the 65th minute for Enrique and Ojeda, and it nearly paid dividends right away. Angulo won a corner kick and the ball was initially cleared, but the Lions recovered and recycled the attack. Jansson ended up with the ball on the left side in the area and played it across for McGuire in front. The striker’s shot was saved by Paes’ foot from point-blank range as he hit it too straight with either side available in the 66th minute.

Moments later, the alarm bells rang in Orlando’s defensive third as Santos and Angulo were beaten in the box by Tsiki Ntsabeleng. A shot was headed inside the left post but Schlegel was there to block it and clear it away.

Muriel sent McGuire in behind in the 71st minute with a perfect through ball. Again McGuire was denied by Paes as his shot was soft and poorly placed, allowing the Dallas keeper to make the stop.

FC Dallas came right back the other way and Gallese had to make a save on a Musa shot.

Lodeiro subbed on for Cartagena in the 73rd minute and one of his first involvements threw Dallas a lifeline. Going for a loose ball in the box, he was beaten to it from his right side and he got the man instead of the ball, fouling Bernard Kamungo. Jair Marrufo awarded the penalty immediately.

Arriola waited for Gallese to commit and slotted it down the middle to make it 3-1 in the 78th minute.

Things got weird in the 80th minute as the Lions started to get beaten by runs in direct play. Gallese came out of his area to head away a ball over the top and got caught out when Dallas regained possession. Kamungo tried to score from distance but Gallese recovered and got his hand to it, knocking it out for a corner. Logan Farrington was left unattended at the near post on the set piece, but he missed the net with his header in the 81st minute. Musa then was all alone in front two minutes later but sent his header right at Gallese.

In the 85th minute, Musa came within inches of making it a one-goal game, smashing a wicked shot off the crossbar near the left post from a tight angle. Farrington won another Dallas corner in the 88th minute and this time second-half substitute Show was left alone at the near post but missed his header wide.

Dallas appeared to pull within 3-2 in the 90th minute. The ball was sent to Arriola out wide on the left and his cutback cross was put in by Farrington. Marrufo went to the monitor and found that Arriola was about a foot offside in the buildup, nullifying the goal by Farrington, who was booked for dissent after the call was made.

The hosts continued to look threatening during six minutes of stoppage time that grew to eight. Gallese did well to come off his line and get to a ball just in front of Kamungo in the 94th minute. Ntsabeleng sent a shot just wide in the 96th minute from outside the area.

McGuire again got in behind the defense in the 97th minute on another excellent ball from Muriel. This time, the big striker was on the left side. As he teed up a shot on his stronger right foot, Marco Farfan arrived to block it.

Farrington got one more good chance for Dallas in the 98th minute, but Gallese made the save. Orlando got the ball forward, and Marrufo blew the whistle for full time.

Orlando City ended the game with the advantage in possession (52.4%-47.6%), shots on goal (7-6), passing accuracy (90.3%-86.4%), and corners (7-6). With its late flurry, Dallas ended up with more total shot attempts (16-13).

“At the end, we started defending low. We lost control of the ball, and Dallas pushed, sent numbers and complicated those last 15 minutes,” Pareja said. “Credit to them too. I thought that they did a good job in that part, but once again, we’re happy. The game plan worked, and the boys clinched. And congratulations to everybody who is involved in our club and the fans.”

“Obviously, we’re very happy,” Schlegel said. “Our first goal for the year was to qualify for the playoffs and clinch a spot in the playoffs. So, obviously, we’re very happy and just very proud of every player in this group, and every member of the technical staff, and this whole group together.”

With the win, Orlando City has reached the postseason for the fifth consecutive season, qualifying every year since Pareja took over as head coach prior to the 2020 campaign.


The Lions return home Wednesday for a midweek match against the Philadelphia Union.

Continue Reading

Orlando City

Orlando City vs. FC Dallas: Preview, How to Watch, TV Info, Live Stream, Lineups, Match Thread, and More

The Lions look to bounce back from a loss in Columbus when they visit the Lone Star State.

Published

on

Image courtesy of Orlando City SC / Mark Thor

Welcome to your live match thread for a Saturday night matchup between Orlando City (12-11-7, 43 points) and FC Dallas (10-13-7, 37 points) at Toyota Stadium (8:30 p.m., MLS Season Pass on Apple TV). It’s the only scheduled meeting between the clubs this season, and just the eighth overall.

Here’s what you need to know ahead of the match.

History

Orlando City is 1-4-2 in the all-time series and 0-2-1 on the road against FC Dallas. The teams did not meet in 2023, so the last time these teams have played was at Exploria Stadium in 2022, with FC Dallas erasing a 1-0 halftime deficit and winning 3-1 in Orlando. Ercan Kara put the Lions ahead just before halftime, but Paul Arriola’s second-half brace and Franco Jara’s goal turned the game around.

The teams last met at Toyota Stadium in Frisco, TX on Sept. 27, 2020, when they played to a scoreless draw. Sebas Mendez got sent off in the 69th minute of that match for Orlando, so it was a better result for the Lions than for the hosts.

The Lions got their first (and, so far, only) win in the series in a 2-0 victory at Exploria Stadium, back on Aug. 3, 2019. Former Dallas striker Tesho Akindele and Carlos Ascues provided the offense for Orlando, and those were the first two goals the Lions had ever scored against FC Dallas.

Dallas won 2-0 in Texas on Oct. 6, 2018 on goals by Santiago Mosquera and Victor Ulloa. The teams played to a 0-0 draw in Orlando in 2017. That game was memorable only for the Hoops playing an ineligible player — Michael Barrios, who was scratched from the starting XI after the lineups were turned in and then came off the bench.

Dallas won in 2016 on July 4 at Toyota Stadium by a 4-0 final score and it could have been worse if not for Joe Bendik’s performance in goal for Orlando. Dallas led 2-0 within 20 minutes of the start and cruised to an easy win behind goals by Walker Zimmerman, Barrios, Matt Hedges, and Fabian Castillo. That game turned out to be Adrian Heath’s last as Orlando City’s head coach, as the gaffer was sent packing a couple of days later.

The first meeting ended in a 2-0 Dallas win back in 2015 at the Citrus Bowl. Mauro Diaz (pen.) and David Texeira provided the offense in that one and the Lions failed to even get one shot on target.

Overview

Orlando City is coming off a 4-3 road loss at Columbus, which snapped the Lions’ three-game winning streak. After not conceding in their prior three matches, the Lions were sloppy against a team that punishes mistakes. Despite falling behind 3-0, Orlando made a game of it before giving up one goal too many to overcome. The Lions are 6-6-3 on the road this season but have dropped their last two away from home and conceded seven times in those two games.

FC Dallas enters with some confidence, having dispatched LAFC 3-1 at home one week ago. Tonight’s hosts are also good at home, posting a 9-4-2 home record in 2024, compared to a 1-9-5 mark on the road. Aside from that, FC Dallas is five points adrift of a postseason spot with just a few games remaining, so the Lions will get the hosts’ best shot tonight as they look to close the gap on Minnesota United.

This will be only the third time since his arrival in Orlando that Oscar Pareja will face the club for which he played from 1998-2005, and where he managed from 2014-2018. Papi is still beloved in Dallas after winning consistently during his tenure there, including a Supporters Shield and a U.S. Open Cup — both in 2016.

The key for Orlando will be stopping Petar Musa, who paces FC Dallas with 15 goals, adding two assists. The Croatian is tied for sixth among MLS goal-scoring leaders. It’s difficult to believe Dallas is where it is in the table when you consider that Musa is joined by such accomplished MLS attacking players as Sebastian Lletget, Arriola, Jesus Ferreira, and Alan Velasco, although the team has suffered through some injury issues in 2024. Speaking of attacking players, Orlando City players will see a familiar face on the other side, as former Lion Ruan was dealt to Dallas in the most recent transfer window.

“I think we have had a very good semester, a good second semester,” Pareja said ahead of the match. “The boys ended the game against Columbus with a very good reaction and good form. We ended up almost tying the game and we lost against a good rival. All these things we need to digest and prepare for the next one like we have done when we have played three on the road. So, we’re good. It’s a nice challenge to go to Dallas and it’s important for them as well. At this point, we need to qualify first our objectives and after that we’ll see.”

Orlando will be without Mason Stajduhar (lower leg) and David Brekalo (thigh), while Dagur Dan Thorhallsson (lower leg) is listed as questionable. FC Dallas will be without Asier Illarramendi (suspension), Geovane Jesus (knee), Paxton Pomykal (knee), and Liam Fraser (upper leg).

Match Content


Official Lineups

Orlando City (4-2-3-1)

Goalkeeper: Pedro Gallese.

Defenders: Rafael Santos, Robin Jansson, Rodrigo Schlegel, Kyle Smith.

Defensive Midfielders: Cesar Araujo, Wilder Cartagena.

Attacking Midfielders: Ivan Angulo, Martin Ojeda, Facundo Torres.

Forward: Ramiro Enrique.

Bench: Javier Otero, Luca Petrasso, Michael Halliday, Felipe, Heine Bruseth, Nico Lodeiro, Yutaro Tsukada, Luis Muriel, Duncan McGuire.

FC Dallas (3-4-3)

Goalkeeper: Maarten Paes.

Defenders: Marco Farfan, Omar Gonzalez, Sebastien Ibeagha.

Wingbacks/Midfielders:  Paul Arriola, Patrickson Delgado, Sebastian Lletget, Ruan.

Forwards: Alan Velasco, Petar Musa, Jesus Ferreira.

Bench: Jimmy Maurer, Nkosi Tafari, Bernard Kamungo, Ema Twumasi, Tsiki Ntsabeleng, Sam Junqua, Eugene Ansah, Logan Farrington, Manuel Cafumana.

Referees

REF: Jair Marrufo.
AR1: Chris Wattam.
AR2: Felisha Mariscal.
4TH: Matthew Corrigan.
VAR: Ismail Elfath.
AVAR: Mike Kampmeinert.


How to Watch

Match Time: 8:30 p.m.

Venue: Toyota Stadium — Frisco, TX.

TV/Stream: MLS Season Pass on Apple TV.

Radio: Real Radio 104.1 FM (English), Mega 97.1 FM (Spanish).

Twitter: For rapid reaction and live updates, follow along at @TheManeLand, as well as Orlando City’s official Twitter feed (@OrlandoCitySC).


Enjoy the match. Go City!

Continue Reading

Orlando City

Intelligence Report: Orlando City vs. FC Dallas

Find out everything you didn’t know about FC Dallas, courtesy of someone who knows them best.

Published

on

Image courtesy of Orlando City SC / Jeremy Reper

I hope you all made it safely through Hurricane Helene, and that you remain safe if you’re in an area that is still feeling the effects of the storm. Orlando City will return to action Saturday on the road against FC Dallas, as the Lions enter the home stretch of the regular season with just four more games to play.

A trip to Dallas means I spoke to Drew Epperley, the manager of the excellent independent outlet Big D Soccer. Drew was kind enough to bring us up to speed on how FC Dallas’ season has been, and offered up some great information about this week’s opposition.

Talk me through some of the transfer business from FC Dallas this season. Who are some of the new faces, and how have they performed?

Drew Epperley: FC Dallas didn’t make a ton of moves this year in the transfer market as the club had a fairly set roster going into the season. The big splash, however, was signing Petar Musa from Benfica for a record deal. That move has certainly paid off. Musa is near the top of the league in goals scored this season and has become one of the best players to debut for FC Dallas in the club’s history. 

In the U-22 world, FC Dallas went down to South America and signed Patrickson Delgado. Most of us assumed he was going to be a defensive midfielder coming in, but it turns out, he’s more suited as a No. 8 or even a No. 10 at times. 

Aside from the transfers, the club also made a splash in the SuperDraft last December by trading up to snag Oregon State forward Logan Farrington. I keep saying that if the league still handed out a Rookie of the Year award, Farrington would be a shoo-in this season. He currently has four goals and eight assists. 

Elsewhere, the club has brought in some familiar faces like veteran Omar Gonzalez, former Orlando City fullback Ruan (so far we’re loving him here!), and Angolan midfielder Show.

Peter Luccin is the current interim manager after Nico Estevez was sacked back in June. What sort of setup and style does Luccin prefer to use with FC Dallas?

DE: Luccin hasn’t changed a ton of how the team lines up from what Estevez was running. The club switched to a 3-4-3 formation this season that allows the wingers to shift into a 5-3-2 when the club needs to be more defensive or to move up the field into the attack. The club struggled offensively last year, and this was a move to allow more attacking players to get onto the field. 

The downfall was that it didn’t work well under Estevez for a number of reasons, primarily the club’s injury situation kept key players like Alan Velasco, Jesus Ferreira, Geovane Jesus, and Paxton Pomykal away from the field for either the majority of the season (Velasco, Pomykal, and Jesus) or large chunks of games (Ferreira). Secondly, the team never had the right players in the defensive side of the formation to make it work this season. 

Luccin did find a way to unlock some passion and energy out of this group, even sticking with this formation. The team still struggles at times defensively but they tend to play more aggressively than they were earlier in the year, which has led to some more entertaining games out of this group.

Dallas is five points off the final play-in place with four games to go. What needs to happen in order for the club to climb above the line and get into the postseason?

DE: Simple, winning. If they don’t find ways to win at least two of their last four games, they can probably kiss the postseason goodbye. Aside from that, the less simple route is seeing either Portland or Minnesota lose their remaining games. 

Will any players be unavailable due to injury, suspension, etc.? What is your projected starting XI and score prediction?

DE: The big one this weekend for FC Dallas will be Asier Illarramendi being out due to a yellow card suspension. The veteran is a key player that drastically changes how the club plays in the midfield. On the injury front, the team still isn’t fully immune with Pomykal and Liam Fraser on the season-ending injury list. Geo Jesus is also on that list as well. 

As for our starting lineup, it should look similar to last week’s win over LAFC: Maarten Paes, Marco Farfan, Sebastien Ibeagha, Nkosi Tafari; Ruan, Patrickson Delgado, Sebastian Lletget, Paul Arriola; Jesus Ferreira, Alan Velasco, Petar Musa.

Score prediction: FCD 2, OCSC 1.


Thank you to Drew for helping get us up to speed on FC Dallas. Vamos Orlando!

Continue Reading

Trending