Orlando City
2024 Orlando City Season in Review: Cesar Araujo
The Uruguayan midfielder turned in another solid performance in his third season in Orlando.
Orlando City signed Uruguayan midfielder Cesar Araujo on Jan. 7, 2022, from Montevideo Wanderers, making him the club’s first-ever MLS U22 Initiative signing. Araujo inked a three-year contract through 2024 with an additional club option year in 2025. The midfielder has since been moved out of a U22 slot.
The 2024 season was Araujo’s third in Orlando, and he continued to do the kinds of things that we’ve seen since he arrived and immediately seized a spot in the starting XI. Let’s look back at Araujo’s performance during the 2024 MLS season.
Statistical Breakdown
Araujo appeared in 30 of Orlando City’s 34 games during the regular season, starting 28 and playing 2,424 minutes. All of those numbers either set new or equaled career lows, but with more competitions — and more yellow cards — Oscar Pareja wisely got his midfield stopper off the field when he could, even beyond the two matches he missed due to suspensions for accumulation. The Montevideo, Uruguay native also missed a pair of games with an ankle injury. Araujo scored one goal, equaling a career high, and added one assist. He set a new career high in shots (25), but put only two of them on target. He passed at an 89.8% rate with 12 key passes, one successful cross, and 47 completed long balls. Defensively, Araujo chipped in 64 tackles, 29 interceptions, 20 clearances, and eight blocks. He committed 47 fouls, drew 70 on the opposition, and picked up 11 yellow cards but no red cards.
In the playoffs, Araujo started all five of Orlando City’s matches, playing 448 of the 450 available minutes. He did not score a goal, but he provided one assist, attempting six shots without putting any of them on frame. He raised his passing rate to 91.6% — his highest accuracy in three playoff runs — including one key pass, one successful cross, and 20 completed long balls. Defensively, Araujo contributed three tackles, seven clearances, and a block in the postseason. He committed four fouls, drew 10 on the opposition, and saw one yellow card.
Araujo played in three of Orlando City’s four Concacaf Champions Cup matches, starting two and logging 215 minutes. The ankle injury kept him out of the away match at Tigres. He did not make a goal contribution in the competition, attempting five shots and putting one on target. He completed 67 of his 82 passes (81.7%), including one key pass, no cross attempts, and six completed long balls on seven attempts (85.7%). Defensively, the midfielder contributed seven tackles, one interception, and three clearances. He committed seven fouls, drew four, and was shown one yellow card in the competition.
In Leagues Cup, Araujo started all three of Orlando’s games and went the full 270 available minutes. He did not score a goal or assist on one, attempting four shots without putting one on target. He completed an outstanding 141 of his 153 passes (92.2%), including three key passes, one successful cross on his only attempt, and 11 completed long balls on 12 attempts (91.7%). On the defensive end, Araujo contributed two tackles, two interceptions, two clearances, and one block. He committed two fouls, drew 10 on the opposition, and was shown one yellow card.
Best Game
The Uruguayan had a number of standout games this season. It’s tempting to take the 3-0 win at Nashville on July 17, in which Araujo scored his only goal of the regular season, opening the scoring 19 minutes in.
However, I’m going to select the game right before that one. On July 13, the Lions visited the New England Revolution riding a modest two-game winning streak. It was the first time all season Orlando City had posted back-to-back wins. To keep that momentum going, the Lions would have to do something they’d never done before — win a game at Gillette Stadium. Araujo’s performance that evening helped Orlando City do just that, as the Lions captured a 3-1 victory.
Araujo contributed on both sides of the ball that night, but Orlando City still found itself trailing 1-0 at halftime in its house of horrors on a Giacomo Vrioni goal as Dagur Dan Thorhallsson and Rodrigo Schlegel lost communication defensively in the 23rd minute. Facundo Torres scored in the 51st minute to pull the Lions level, and then Araujo helped Orlando take the lead eight minutes later on a set piece. Martin Ojeda sent a corner kick from right of goal to the back post, where three Lions were waiting. Araujo got up and headed the ball down in front of goal, where Ramiro Enrique flicked it in to make it 2-1.
It was a smart play by Araujo, who was not likely to score from that position. By heading it in front, he gave his teammates a chance to make a play on the ball, and Enrique took advantage of the opportunity, giving the Lions a second-half lead. A late second goal by Torres put the match away, giving Orlando City it’s first-ever road win in New England.
Araujo’s evening went far beyond the assist. In his 89 minutes, the Uruguayan attempted a season-high three shots, although none of them found the target. He had one of his best passing performances of the season, completing 94.6% of his attempts, including his one key pass that turned into an assist and three successful long balls. Araujo completed six dribbles in the match, which was one shy of his season high. Aside from his contributions in the attack, Araujo chipped in three tackles and an interception, helping the Lions hold the Revolution at bay and retain the lead once they’d gotten it. The performance helped stretch Orlando City’s winning streak to three games, building momentum that propelled the team into the top four by season’s end.
2024 Final Grade
The Mane Land staff gave Araujo a composite grade of 7 out of 10 for the 2024 MLS season. This is a step down from the 7.5 we gave him last year, although I don’t think he necessarily played worse than he did in 2023. Perhaps it’s a function of the team’s slow start and worse finish in the standings. It’s also a full point below the 8 out of 10 he received from TML in 2022. The midfielder played well and I don’t know that there’s been a lot of variation from him from his arrival, but opinions wax and wane, and perhaps the staff overall simply expects more in his third year. It would be nice if he’d chip in an additional goal here or there, but he at least attempted more shots this season. He could also cut down some of the unnecessary cards, earning a career-high 11 this year. If I’ve got a knock on him in 2024 as opposed to previous seasons, it’s that he conceded three penalties, although the one on Aidan Morris vs. Columbus was one of the softest shirt pulls given in my 10 years of watching OCSC at the MLS level. Pedro Gallese stopped Josef Martinez on one of those penalties.
Araujo was still a solid central midfielder, and his partnership with Wilder Cartagena has been essential to any success the Lions have had the last three seasons. The duo of Araujo and Cartagena limited opponents to the fourth-fewest shots against per match and the sixth-fewest goals per game in MLS in 2024, tying for fifth in MLS in clean sheets. Additionally, the team allowed just one goal in the run of play in the postseason and it had nothing to do with the midfield.
2025 Outlook
Araujo’s option year for 2025 was automatically triggered by performance metrics, so although he’s still under contract for another year, it is open ended on whether he’ll be in Orlando beyond next season. At just 23, Araujo is entering his prime years, but he is costly, as his budget charge of $675,000 in base salary and $714,000 in guaranteed compensation is about $200,000 above that of his more experienced central midfield partner. That said, he was the eighth-highest paid player on the squad, which places him in the middle of the starting XI (three players making more were coming off the bench in the second half of the 2024 season) and one of those starters making more was former Lion Facundo Torres.
Unless the club opts to break up the midfield partnership and go in another direction, or City simply receives a transfer offer too good to pass up, Araujo should still be winning fouls in the Orlando City starting midfield in 2025. A good starting central midfield pairing with effective chemistry is as important as a dependable back line. If the central midfield can pick up where it left off at the end of the season — and it might need to do so quickly if the club can’t replace Torres’ offense — the club should try to lock Araujo in with a new contract. The team is well positioned financially, after all. I am hopeful we will see fit to give Araujo’s final score a bump after another solid campaign in the Orlando midfield in 2025.
Previous Season in Review Articles (Date Posted)
- Alex Freeman (12/5/24)
- Michael Halliday (12/6/24)
- Yutaro Tsukada (12/7/24)
- Mason Stajduhar (12/8/24)
- Javier Otero (12/9/24)
- Jack Lynn (12/11/24)
- Shakur Mohammed (12/12/24)
- Luis Muriel (12/13/24)
- David Brekalo (12/14/24)
- Facundo Torres (12/14/24)
- Rodrigo Schlegel (12/15/24)
- Rafael Santos (12/16/24)
- Kyle Smith (12/17/24)
- Martín Ojeda (12/18/24)
- Dagur Dan Thorhallsson (12/19/24)
- Nico Lodeiro (12/20/24)
- Ramiro Enrique (12/21/24)
- Wilder Cartagena (12/22/24)
- Ivan Angulo (12/23/24)
- Duncan McGuire (12/26/24)
- Robin Jansson (12/27/24)