Orlando Pride
Orlando Pride Defender Carrie Lawrence Announces Her Retirement
Pride defender Carrie Lawrence has announced her retirement from professional soccer.
The Orlando Pride announced this afternoon that defender Carrie Lawrence has announced her retirement. The defender joined the Pride in 2019, but a major injury derailed a promising professional career.
“Carrie means so much to this club but also means so much to the city of Orlando. To be a native of Orlando, play at UCF, and represent the Pride badge the way she has speaks volumes to the type of person she is,” Pride Vice President of Soccer Operations and Sporting Director Haley Carter said in a club press release. “Her perseverance to battle back from injuries and constant positive energy epitomize the kind of players we want to represent this club. We are so thankful for everything Carrie has done for us and can’t wait to continue to support her in any way she needs during this transition. We are proud to have Carrie a part of our Pride family and are so excited to see what she does in the next chapter of her life.”
The 27-year-old originally joined the Pride as a training player in 2019 and signed a short-term contract on Sept. 8, 2020 for the Fall Series. She impressed enough to earn a one-year deal on Jan. 5, 2021 with an option for an additional season. The team kept the young defender on its books following the 2022 season, signing her to a new two-year deal that expired following the 2024 season.
Unfortunately, Lawrence’s bright future soon turned sour. The defender tore her ACL during the team’s 2023 preseason camp, causing her to miss the entire season. By the time she returned for this year, the team had built a stronger defensive unit, leaving Lawrence on the sidelines. She got some playing time this year, but her most impactful performance was getting sent off against the Kansas City Current in July.
Lawrence’s professional debut came on Sept. 19, 2020 in a 0-0 draw with the North Carolina Courage. She played 90 minutes that day and had a goal-line clearance, helping the Pride’s defensive unit to a clean sheet. Her final appearance was a start on Oct. 11, 2024, a 2-0 loss to the Portland Thorns. She played 65 minutes in that game before being replaced by regular starter Emily Sams.
The Orlando native made 33 appearances with 23 starts in all competitions, recording 2,041 minutes and two assists. This year, the defender made 11 appearances in all competitions with five starts, recording 465 minutes and an assist.
“After giving my whole life to this sport, I am extremely blessed and grateful to announce my retirement,” Lawrence said in the club’s press release. “There is nowhere else I’d rather be than Orlando. It’s been my home from the start of my professional career, and it gave me everything in return. Winning the shield and the championship this year is more than I could have dreamed. Most importantly this group of people made it that much sweeter. Orlando will forever be home!”
Prior to joining the Pride as a training player, Lawrence played three seasons for the UCF Knights, making 49 appearances between 2016 and 2018. She scored four goals, added 11 assists, and was named second team All-American Athletic Conference during her senior year.
What It Means for Orlando
Lawrence was a key contributor to the Pride defense before her injury prior to the 2023 season. However, she soon found herself with a much lesser role as the team built up its back line, signing Brazilian international Rafaelle during the 2023 campaign and slotting in Kerry Abello in a new role at left back. Kylie Strom moved from left back to center back this year, making it even more difficult for Lawrence to find a spot on the field.
In all likelihood, the Pride weren’t going to re-sign Lawrence after this season, forcing her to find a new home. However, she’s currently engaged to Pride captain Marta, who has indicated her intention to play one or two more years — likely remaining in Orlando if she does so. This decision likely had a significant impact on Lawrence’s decision to retire from the game.
At one time, it looked like Lawrence would be a key piece of the Pride lineup moving forward, but the team has largely moved on without her, causing her to see limited minutes. As a result, this decision won’t have a tremendous impact on the Pride moving forward aside from opening a roster spot.
Orlando Pride
2024 Orlando Pride Season in Review: McKinley Crone
A look back at a season in which the local product made her professional debut in competitive action between the sticks for Orlando.
McKinley Crone’s previous contract expired at the end of the 2023 season. There were questions about what her future might be in Orlando when the club signed Finnish top flight goalkeeper Sofia Manner on December 1, 2023. However, the Pride signed Crone through the 2024 season on March 11, and the then-25-year-old (now 26) showed enough to earn a new multi-year contract through the 2026 season on Sept. 6.
While most expected Manner to challenge Anna Moorhouse for the starting spot and Crone to be the depth option primarily for training purposes, the Maitland native and University of Alabama product passed Manner on the depth chart as the usual bench keeper behind NWSL ironwoman Moorhouse and finally seeing her first professional minutes.
Let’s take a look at how Crone performed this season.
Statistical Breakdown
Crone did not play in the regular season. As mentioned above, Moorhouse played every minute of the season (and postseason) for the Pride in goal. However, Crone was given her first professional start in the Summer Cup on July 20 at North Carolina, playing all 90 minutes in the match and becoming the goalkeeper of record in the club’s first-ever penalty shootout, in which she stopped two of the Courage’s seven shooters — the first one she faced, Riley Jackson, and former Orlando midfielder Dani Weatherholt. Unfortunately, the Pride had two penalties saved and missed the net once to lose the shootout.
In her 90 minutes (plus stoppage time), Crone faced down 20 shot attempts from North Carolina (six on target), allowing just one goal and finishing with five saves on the day for a save percentage of 83.33%. She completed 25 of 35 passes (72%), including six of her 15 long balls (40%). Although it was her only appearance of the year, Crone acquitted herself well, dealing with a lot of pressure as the Courage held 66% of the ball and outshot the Pride by a wide margin. She did well under pressure, saving two penalties, including the first, giving her team a chance to go on and win the shootout.
Best Game
Having played in only one match, this is one of the easiest decisions we’ll make throughout our 2024 Orlando Pride Season in Review series. Crone was a key reason the Pride remained unbeaten in all competitions with the 1-1 draw at North Carolina on July 20. However, even if she’d played a lot more games, this match may have still won the honors as her best. She made some key saves to keep the Pride in it, including this 1-v-1 breakaway chance for Meredith Speck in the 24th minute.
Crone couldn’t do anything about Manaka Matsukubo’s tap-in off a perfect cross through the box in the 44th minute, but Celia’s goal in the 82nd kept the unbeaten streak alive, even if the defender missed the opportunity to win the shootout for Orlando as the last of the team’s five shooters. It was a solid first professional game for Crone.
2024 Final Grade
With only 90 minutes to her credit across all competitions in 2024, Crone didn’t play enough to get a grade for the 2024 season, receiving an incomplete from The Mane Land staff. However, Crone showed fans why she has been able to stick with the team, and it was no surprise she earned a contract to stay with the club for a while longer.
2025 Outlook
With Moorhouse signed through the 2025 season, Crone will likely serve as the primary backup again next year, unless Manner — also under contract through 2025 with a club option in 2026 — can show the coaching staff enough to surpass the local product as the No. 2. Crone has the confidence of her coaching staff and her teammates, and next season could be an audition to see if she has a future as the club’s primary shot stopper.
Previous Season in Review Articles (Date Posted)
- Amanda Allen (11/28/24)
Orlando Pride
2024 Orlando Pride Season in Review: Amanda Allen
A look back at the Canadian’s second year with the Pride.
The Orlando Pride signed Canadian international forward Amanda Allen on April 3, 2023, to a three-year contract through the 2025 NWSL season. After playing just nine total minutes in three appearances with Orlando in 2024, Allen played a bit more this season, but it was still a limited number of matches.
Back in September, the Pride loaned Allen to USL Super League side Lexington SC for the 2024-2025 season, which runs through May. When you’re behind players like Barbra Banda and Ally Watt on the depth chart, a loan is a good decision.
Let’s take a look at how the young Canadian forward did in her limited minutes for the Pride in 2024.
Statistical Breakdown
Allen took part in eight of the Pride’s 26 NWSL regular season games this season, coming off the bench in all eight and recording 82 minutes. She didn’t score a goal, but she recorded an assist for her first goal contribution. The 19-year-old took one shot that was not on target and completed 22 of her 31 pass attempts (71%), recording one key pass (her assist). Defensively, Allen won four of her six tackle attempts (67%), committed one foul, and was booked once.
Allen appeared in all three of the Pride’s matches in the NWSL x Liga MX Femenil Summer Cup, coming off the bench in each and recording 111 minutes. She did not attempt a shot or provide an assist. The attacker completed 15 of her 24 passes (69%) with no long balls or key passes. Defensively, Allen won both of her two tackle attempts (100%) and both of her two aerial duels (100%). She committed two fouls and was not booked.
Best Game
Allen’s best game wasn’t the one with the most minutes played, or the one where she had the most touches. It was the game where she provided the assist to Summer Yates to complete the Pride’s comeback draw against Racing Louisville in the first match of the season. She helped start the NWSL-record, 23-match unbeaten run for the club. It was her only goal contribution of the season, but it was a big one.
In the 86th minute, Angelina took a free kick well outside the box. Her delivery found the head of Allen, who nudged it forward to Yates, who then hit it off the outside of her right foot and into the back of the goal. That set the tone for the rest of the season. In addition to her assist, Allen had a total of eight touches in the match, completing five of her six pass attempts (84%).
2024 Final Grade
As she did last year, Allen fell shy of the minimum total minutes across all competitions to get a score for her second season (that mark is 400 minutes across all competitions in 2024), so she receives a grade of incomplete from The Mane Land staff for 2024.
2025 Outlook
Allen, who turns 20 in February, is under contract with the Pride through the 2025 season. As mentioned above, she is on loan with Lexington SC for the 2024-2025 USL Super League season, which concludes at the end of May (plus playoffs). I expect her to be with Lexington through the end of that loan. The Pride have the right to recall her, but with how stacked Orlando’s offense is, I don’t see that happening. Allen is a player the Pride see as having a future at the club. As such, she may get a new contract after 2025 depending on how she performs at Lexington.
This is the first of our Season in Review articles for the Orlando Pride. Check back to see how the other Pride players performed in 2024.
Orlando Pride
Orlando Pride Have Built Something Special and Sustainable
How playing style and culture earned the Pride an NWSL Championship and will keep them competetive in the coming seasons.
The Orlando Pride are your 2024 NWSL champions and NWSL Shield winners. These awards capped a season where they set the league records for longest win streak, longest unbeaten streak, most points, most shutouts, and most wins, among many other accolades. That level of success was deserved after a years-long rebuild, both in personnel and club culture.
In a league like the NWSL, it can be difficult to sustain such performances and stay at the top for long. Despite the challenges ahead, Orlando showed in the NWSL Championship, as well as the whole 26-match season, that due to the team’s talent, playing style, and strong culture, this is a club that will continue to fight for trophies for years to come.
Saturday night in the NWSL Championship, the Pride showed all the foundational elements of their record-breaking season, including that trademark gritty defense and the lightning quick attacking transitions. On the defensive end, there just aren’t many more ways to write about how dominant the Pride are. The win over the Washington Spirit was Orlando’s 14th clean sheet of the season and its eighth 1-0 victory in 29 matches.
While the Pride conceded 26 shots in the match, only five were on target for the Spirit, and their efforts got more and more speculative as the minutes wore on. Trinity Rodman had some success against Kerry Abello in one-on-one situations, but Kylie Strom and NWSL Defender of-the Year Emily Sams were lively in snuffing out the danger early. Behind it all, Anna Moorhouse was commanding in the box, coming out to collect several crosses and free kicks to kill off the opposing attack.
When it comes to next year, there will not be any relief for the rest of the league’s attacks. For how elite the Pride defense was, it can be surprising how young the group is. In the NWSL Championship, Orlando’s back four featured a rookie (Cori Dyke), a second-year player (Sams), and a third-year player (Abello), who are all 25 years old or younger.
Add in starters Kylie Strom, Anna Moorhouse, and critical depth pieces Rafaelle — actually a starter when healthy, but a defender who missed the rest of the season after the Olympic break — and Carson Pickett, and Orlando’s most reliable defenders are all under contract through next year as well. With this ideal mix of experience and youth and a full year playing together as the league’s best defense, the expectation is that the back line will remain dominant next year as well.
On the attacking front, the Pride showed once again that they only need a handful of chances to get the winning goal, especially with a player like Barbra Banda. Their chances don’t need to come from intricate buildup play either, as it has felt at times this season that the Pride would rather cede possession and attack off the counter than waste time working the ball slowly up the pitch. Against the Spirit, that’s exactly how it went. For the match, the Pride had 43% possession and completed 100 fewer passes than the Spirit. Orlando only managed nine shots, with three on target, but once the Pride had the lead, they were even more content to play in transition, limiting their offensive output but still creating several threatening situations.
Statistics aside, most of the big opportunities on the night for Orlando, including the lone goal, came from similar situations. These plays started with Orlando winning possession off of the Spirit in the Pride’s defensive third. From there, the Pride played long balls forward and let Banda or Marta go to work. First, in the 15th minute, Banda was able to gather a loose ball in her own half and drive forward. Once she had committed the Spirit defenders to her, she fed the ball out wide to Marta, who was able to create space for a shot that ended up straight at the keeper.
On the goal, only two players in purple touched the ball. Angelina won the ball off of Leicy Santos and heaved it forward to Banda, who chased it down, beat her defender in the box, and rifled a low and hard shot past the keeper. Later in the match, there was potentially the best opportunity of the night but it did not end in a shot. Banda was in a similar position to the first big chance, with three defenders around her, driving towards net. However, she was unable to find a pass to Marta, who was open in space near the top of the box.
This chance showed that there is still room for improvement for Banda, as crazy as it sounds. Improvements to her passing and finishing with her feet could take her even higher, and as she is just 24 years old, she will have years to sharpen those areas of her game in Orlando. This year she showed that the sky is the limit. To score 17 goals across all competitions in her first season, including a record-setting four goals in the postseason, is an incredible accomplishment. While Temwa Chawinga won league MVP for her record-breaking debut campaign of 20 regular-season goals, Banda is sure to be happy to have the NWSL Championship MVP award instead. It is absolutely wonderful for the NWSL and women’s soccer as a whole, to have those two going head to head for years to come.
The culture in Orlando may be the biggest factor in the Pride’s success in 2024, but the foundations were laid in prior seasons. In the aftermath of Amanda Cromwell’s suspension, the club turned to an unknown commodity in Seb Hines to lead the team in an interim capacity. While he was unknown as a head coach, those at the top of the organization felt they knew his character well enough to trust him to take care of the club through the end of 2022. That off-season, Haley Carter joined as general manager and vice president of soccer operations — recently swapping out the “general manager” part of her title for “sporting director.” The duo of Hines and Carter deserves much of the credit for the rebuild.
These two have been instrumental in establishing a culture of hard work and creating an environment that values each player as a person above all. It was that ethos that led to the club sanctioning the trade of 2023 Rookie of the Year candidate Messiah Bright to Angel City, a move that seemed like a risk at the time, but one the player requested. The club demonstrated that it values players as individuals and also wants players who want to be in Orlando — something that likely helped convince several free agents to join the team, such as Morgan Gautrat and Angelina. With the players more bought-in to the club than ever before, Marta, the longest-serving member of the club (staff included) and Strom acted as captains and as a bridge between the staff and the players both in the locker room and on the pitch.
For all their hard work and togetherness, the players played for each other and unlocked even more in this already talented roster en route to the NWSL Championship. Now that the staff and the players have created a strong and positive culture in Orlando, they will know what it takes to continue to keep the culture going and can grind for more results and more trophies. These players who have been through it will also be able to demonstrate to any new faces just what it means to be a part of this winning organization.
While playing style and club culture have set the Pride up for success, continuity of the staff and the roster can be a huge factor to ongoing success in the league. While it’s always unknown exactly what the Pride squad and starting 11 will look like next season, it is a massive benefit for Carter that only one starter, Marta, is not already under contract for next season. She is the only player who was on the pitch for more than 300 minutes this NWSL season that is out of contract.
It has to be said that Marta was a vital leader and a massive part of the Pride’s successes this year and for years prior, but if the club must try to fill a hole left by her potential absence, it is much easier to concentrate time and funds on one big piece as opposed to a total rebuild. With the increased revenue and exposure from an NWSL Championship and rising ticket sales, expect the club to make a splashy signing or two to cement its position at the top of the league.
Roster continuity also allows for continued growth of the players that remain. As mentioned above, Banda, Summer Yates, and the young defenders all played big roles this year and already showed improvement as the season wore on. There is no reason that these players can’t continue to learn from Hines and his staff and benefit from another off season to hone their skills. Behind these players is also a cohort of young athletes who may not have played as much as they hoped this year, but are primed to push for more minutes in the future. This goes for players like Evelina Duljan and Ally Lemos, who showed flashes this season, and Amanda Allen, who should be learning a lot on her loan to Lexington Soccer Club. This winter will also be the first without an NWSL draft, and the Orlando Pride should be a desired destination for more top young players.
Looking forward to 2025, one of the loftiest goals for the Pride would be to play soccer as well as they did in 2024. This NWSL Championship and Shield were well-earned; the club went through an effective and focused rebuild led by Hines and Carter. The players picked up along the way, either free agents, draftees, or big-name acquisitions, all played phenomenally well this year, especially in the playoffs. The performances on the pitch matched the culture that was built in the locker room, leading to something special. For all the club’s hard work, the Pride will know that the foundations are solid, and the team will not relinquish its spot among the best in the league anytime soon.
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