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Orlando City vs. Toronto FC: Final Score 4-2 as Lions Pick Up First Win of 2025

Lions bounce back from their opening day loss in a big way by drubbing Toronto as four different players found the net.

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Image courtesy of Orlando City SC / Jeremy Reper

The Lions found the net four times and avoided most of the mistakes that plagued them a week ago, as Orlando City (1-1-0, 3 points) pounded Toronto FC (0-1-1, 1 point) 4-2 at Inter&Co Stadium. Cesar Araujo and Alex Freeman scored two minutes apart just past the half-hour mark to push Orlando out in front, with Martin Ojeda and Dagur Dan Thorhallsson twice extending the Lions’ lead to three goals. Sigurd Rosted and Deybi Flores scored late for the Reds, but Orlando was in control after Freeman’s strike.

“A great night for us,” Orlando City Head Coach Oscar Pareja said after the match. “Today, we had a much more complete performance. We played well, we scored goals, and we have our first win in front of our fans. So, it’s very healthy for the group. “

Pareja’s staring lineup included Pedro Gallese in net behind a back line of Rafael Santos, Kyle Smith, Rodrigo Schlegel, and Freeman, as neither Robin Jansson nor David Brekalo dressed. Araujo and Eduard Atuesta started in midfield behind an attacking line of Ivan Angulo, Ojeda, and Marco Pasalic, with Ramiro Enrique up top.

The first half hour was a cagey, probing, and kind of dull affair as the teams sized each other up. Toronto held more of the ball but did less with it than Orlando’s forays up the field.

Freeman had the game’s first shot attempt in the 15th minute. The right back got his head to a good back-post cross from Ojeda but sent his effort well wide of the right post.

Three minutes later, Freeman nearly scored into the wrong net. Tracking back, he did well to chest down a cross for Gallese, but his effort was a bit off line. Gallese did well to get down and get a hand to it to keep it out before collecting it.

Former Lion Richie Laryea picked up a knock and had to sub off for Toronto in the 22nd minute after receiving treatment for a second time. Zane Monlouis came on for the Canadian international, eating up one substitution window for the visitors.

Not much happened between the 20th and 30th minutes but then business picked up when Pasalic was fouled just outside the box in the middle of the field. Unlikely free kick takers Araujo and Santos stood over the ball. When the referee blew his whistle, Araujo smashed a gorgeous shot in off the left post to make it 1-0 in the 33rd minute.

“It was training,” Pareja said, referring to how Araujo got his opportunity on the set piece. “He was spending a lot of time with Eduard (Atuesta), with Rafael (Santos), Martin (Ojeda), Luis (Muriel). And curiously, on Friday here in the stadium, they were practicing with a lot of responsibility. But we as footballers, sometimes it’s casual, But they were not (casual). They were doing it very serious, and when they were going to take that (free kick), we had much more confidence, and it really happened.”

The Lions doubled the lead just two minutes later. A long ball from Smith from left to right found Freeman isolated on his defender. Freeman muscled his way past and got in behind on goal, blasting a left-footed shot past Sean Johnson to make it 2-0 in the 35th minute. It was his first MLS goal on his first MLS start.

“I feel like their line was high all game, and I feel like they pressed too high,” Freeman said. “Me and Kyle talked about it before the game, he’s really got that long ball to be able to just curve it right inside, so it’s toward goal so I can get the run in, and that’s what I did. He looked up, and I already knew. And I was just running, and then I took a good first touch with my thigh. And then it was just looking at the goalie to see where I could place it with my left foot. And then I scored and I went wild. Great ball from Kyle Smith.”

“Alex today is just demonstrating one more time something that we see in the training ground,” Pareja said. “That he’s ready, that he can become one of the best fullbacks in this country. I don’t have any doubt about that.”

“I think it was the intensity,” Angulo said about the change in Orlando City’s play after the half-hour mark. “I think that was something that we were lacking in the first 30 minutes, and it was something where we knew that we were lacking that intensity and that intention to show show who we are and the respect that they need to put on playing in our house, in our stadium. I think it was the intensity and the shift in mindset that we had that really set us apart, and the confidence that we had after scoring that first goal.”

Toronto regrouped and went on the attack on its next possession, with Federico Bernardeschi firing well over the bar in the 37th minute from near the left corner of the box.

Atuesta made a great move in the 43rd minute to break Toronto’s lines and then delivered a pass to Angulo on the left. The Colombian cut inside and fired a shot that deflected off a defender and just missed wide of the right post. Atuesta then had the last good look of the half when he hit the left post from the right side of the box in stoppage time, and the Lions took their two-goal edge into the locker room.

At the break, the visitors had the advantage in possession (51.3%-48.7%) and passing accuracy (83.5%-82.8%), while Orlando attempted more shots (5-3) and put more on target (2-0). Each team won one corner in the opening period.

The first half-chance of the second half went Orlando’s way when Ojeda made a great move to fake out Monlouis and get down the left with speed. He had Enrique breaking in front but the cross didn’t quite have enough bend on it, allowing Johnson to catch it in the 50th minute.

Orlando had a couple more half chances before Ojeda made it 3-0 in the 63rd minute. Araujo picked up the ball in his own end and made a great pass to send Ojeda through the gap between the center backs. The Argentine faked Johnson to the turf, stepped around the keeper, and slotted it home with his right foot.

It was an emotional goal celebration for Ojeda, who pulled up his jersey to reveal a t-shirt honoring his late grandmother, who passed away recently.

Toronto pulled one back shortly after a nasty collision between Atuesta and Rosted going for a 50/50 aerial. Both players were able to continue, and it was an unfortunate free kick given to the visitors for two guys arriving at the ball together. That free kick turned into a corner, and that allowed the Reds to get on the board. Rosted had a free header at the back post, leaving Gallese no chance, as the marking on set pieces for Orlando City continues to be poor early in the season. Rosted’s goal cut the lead to 3-1 in the 72nd minute.

Bernardeschi nearly pulled the Reds within a goal two minutes later, firing a shot through traffic from near the top of the area. Gallese didn’t appear to see it initially but was able to get down and make the save.

Thorhallsson made it 4-1 with what may have been his first touch of the match after coming on for Ojeda in the 80th minute. Fellow sub Luis Muriel, who came on for Pasalic, made a perfect pass to send the Icelandic international in behind, and he finished calmly to extend the lead back to three goals.

Freeman had a chance for a brace three minutes later. He got in past the back line on the right but was at a severe angle. The right back unselfishly tried to pick out Enrique at the penalty spot but his pass was a bit too far behind the striker.

Toronto bagged a second goal in the 86th minute. Toronto sent a ball into the box from the right and three Lions converged on it to knock it away. They got in each other’s way a bit, and the ball fell outside the area for Flores to run onto. Taking it in stride, Flores blasted a shot just inside the right post to make it 4-2.

“Our priority as coaches is to see what is that area that we need to get better, and I’m not happy with conceding two goals,” Pareja said. “But we will work on it.”

From there, the Lions had little trouble seeing out the final minutes, although Toronto fought to the end to try to get back into the game, even forcing a nice save from Gallese late in stoppage time off a blast from Bernardeschi.

Gustavo Caraballo was a late subsitute for the Lions, becoming the youngest player to play in a match for Orlando City at just 16 years old.

Toronto finished with the advantage in possession (54.5%-45.5%) and passing accuracy (88.5%-84.8%), while the teams each finished with nine shot attempts, four shots on target, and two corners.

With four goals tonight, the Lions have six across their first two matches of the season. That’s the most goals scored by Orlando in its first two games in the team’s MLS era.

“If we score goals, we’re going to win,” Pareja said. “And six goals in the first two games, that’s great. I’m very happy, and how we scored, and the variety of the players that are participating on the scoring, too. So, very positive.”

After falling at home on opening day, it was imperative to get in the win column before the team heads out of town for the next two matches against difficult opponents in places they have historically not gotten a lot of positive results.

“We knew that we had to come out tonight and take a win,” Angulo said. “And it was really important for us to go out there and play the way that we did, to play like that in front of our fans, and take this win in front of our fans and get the three points tonight. We knew that there’s going to be a lot of really difficult games coming up in the season, so it was important for us to go out and put three (points) on the board tonight.”

“Three points is what we needed,” said Freeman, who was voted Man of the Match by the fans. “A very good bounce back from last week. And now we’re just looking forward to next week away.”


The Lions hope to carry some momentum with them when they hit the road for their first away match of the season next Saturday at New York City FC.

Lion Links

Lion Links: 7/13/26

Pride and OCB win, Maxime Crepeau to compete in MLS All-Star Skills Challenge, Latest MLS transfer roundup, and more.

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Image of Marta blasting a goal from long range against Kansas City.
Image courtesy of Orlando Pride / Mark Thor

Hello, Mane Landers! I hope all is well with you down in Florida. I’ve been very busy at work, but I look forward to watching the 2026 FIFA World Cup semifinals and final this week. We’ve got plenty to cover today, so let’s get to the links.

Pride Shut Out Kansas City Current at Home

The Orlando Pride defeated the Kansas City Current 3-0 at Inter&Co Stadium Friday night, bouncing back from a tough outing at Angel City the previous week. After a scoreless first half, Marta scored the opener from long distance to give Orlando the lead. Hannah Anderson and Barbra Banda added a goal apiece as the Pride have won three out of their last four league matches. Goalkeeper Anna Moorhouse earned a clean sheet in her 100th appearance for the club. Orlando remains eighth in the NWSL table with 20 points. The Pride will be back in action at home Wednesday, taking on Boston Legacy at Inter&Co Stadium.

OCB Wins at FC Cincinnati 2

Orlando City B beat FC Cincinnati 2 by a 2-1 scoreline at NKU Soccer Stadium in Highland Heights, KY on Sunday. Issah Haruna’s goal gave the Young Lions the lead in the first half. In the second half, Cincinnati leveled the match, but Matthew Belgodere scored the winner on the road. That result pulls the Young Lions into third in the MLS NEXT Pro Eastern Conference standings with 33 points, just one point off leaders Chattanooga FC. OCB will be away for another road test Saturday against Chattanooga FC at Finley Stadium.

Orlando City Reportedly Submits Transfer Offer for Alex Moreno

Orlando City has reportedly submitted a transfer offer to sign Girona defender Alex Moreno. No agreement has been reached between the two sides, and conversations remain ongoing, according to reports. Moreno made 31 appearances for Girona last season in La Liga and recorded three assists. The 33-year-old left back remains under contract with Girona through 2027, but the club was relegated from La Liga to La Liga 2 last season. Several European clubs have also expressed interest in signing Moreno, including La Liga sides Real Betis and Rayo Vallecano.

Crepeau to Compete in MLS All-Star Skills Challenge

Orlando City goalkeeper Maxime Crepeau will compete in the 2026 MLS All-Star Skills Challenge at Truist Field in Charlotte on July 28, the club announced Friday. The competition will feature top players from Major League Soccer and Liga MX competing to test their soccer skills on the pitch. Five skills challenge competitions are featured, including the All-Star Goalie Wars, All-Star Crossbar Challenge, and the MLS vs. Liga MX Relay Challenge. Each competition will crown its own champion this year, switching from the traditional MLS-versus-opponent format used in previous years.

Latest MLS Transfer Roundup

According to Tom Bogert of The Athletic, Sporting Kansas City has emerged as a potential option to sign former Liverpool forward Mohamed Salah.

🚨🇪🇬 Sources: Sporting KC has emerged as top MLS suitor for Liverpool legend Mo Salah.Still a longshot of course, as sources believe he prefers Europe + Saudi very interested, but SKC the top MLS option now.More here with @paultenorio.bsky.social: www.nytimes.com/athletic/743…

Tom Bogert (@tombogert.bsky.social) 2026-07-10T19:35:14.046Z

D.C. United has reportedly acquired forward Nathan Ordaz from LAFC.

🇸🇻 BREAKING: D.C. United to acquire El Salvador international forward Nathan Ordaz from LAFC, per sources.Ordaz, 22, is a product of LAFC's academy. Made 98 first team apps. 9g/4a in 2,163 mins over last two years.Gets chance to earn more mins at D.C.

Tom Bogert (@tombogert.bsky.social) 2026-07-12T13:55:49.973Z

Meanwhile, the Seattle Sounders have reportedly traded defender Cody Baker to the New England Revolution.

Free Kicks

  • Former Lion Silvester van der Water has signed with Cambodian Premier League side Preah Khan Reach Svay Rieng FC.
  • Ted Lasso actor Cristo Fernandez, who plays Dani Rojas in the show, made his professional debut for USL Championship side El Paso Locomotive over the weekend.

That will do it for me today, Mane Landers. Enjoy your Monday, and I’ll see you next time.

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Orlando City Trades Duncan McGuire to Houston Dynamo

The Lions send the 2023 first-round pick to Houston for a pile of Garberbucks.

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Image of Duncan McGuire playing the ball against New York City FC.
Image courtesy of Orlando City SC / Mark Thor

Orlando no longer runs on Duncan as Orlando City has traded 2023 first-round draft pick Duncan McGuire to the Houston Dynamo. The big striker with the even bigger smile and the back flips joins the Dynamo, with the Lions receiving $600,000 in 2026 General Allocation Money (GAM), $400,000 in 2027 GAM, and $250,000 in 2027-2028 GAM. The return could also include up to $1.15 million in GAM add-ons if certain performance metrics are met. OCSC will retain a percentage of any sell-on by Houston.

It became clear that something was up with McGuire, as he did not dress for Orlando City’s friendly against Tampa Bay on Wednesday.

“Duncan has meant a great deal to this club since the day he arrived in Orlando,” Orlando City General Manager and Sporting Director Ricardo Moreira said in a club press release. “His resilience, determination, and willingness to fight through challenges both on and off the field have earned the respect of everyone throughout our organization. He has played a major role in our success over the last several years, and when the opportunity arose, we wanted to ensure it was a move that made sense for both Duncan and the club. We’re grateful for everything he has given to Orlando City and wish him and his family nothing but success in this next chapter.”

The Lions selected McGuire out of Creighton with the No. 6 overall selection in the first round of the 2023 MLS SuperDraft. Although he was not a Generation Adidas player, the striker had signed a pre-draft contract with the league, meaning Orlando City didn’t need to spend time agreeing to a contract. The 6-foot-1 forward quickly became a starter for the Lions during his rookie year, and put together back-to-back, double-digit goal-scoring seasons in his first two professional seasons. Now in his fourth pro year, McGuire has appeared in 85 MLS matches (45 starts) for the Lions, scoring 29 goals and adding eight assists. In all competitions, McGuire has contributed 32 goals and nine assists in 109 appearances (55 starts).

Once one of the most promising up-and-coming American strikers in any league after his 24 goals across his first two MLS campaign, Mcguire underwent surgery on both shoulders in separate procedures after the 2024 MLS Cup playoffs, which have restricted his availability, affected his form, and have limited him to just five goals and three assists in his last 29 matches. He has sat behind various other strikers starting in his place the last couple of seasons, including Ramiro Enrique, Luis Muriel, and Justin Ellis.

After his breakout rookie campaign, in which the Omaha, NE native scored 14 goals, he was courted by several teams in Europe. He signed with Blackburn Rovers in 2024, only to see the transfer rejected by the English Football League due to an administrative error by the EFL Championship club. Upon his return, the Creighton product signed his most recent contract on Aug. 22, 2024, locking him down through 2027 with a club option for 2028. That deal now belongs to the Dynamo.

McGuire’s hot start to his professional career had him climbing the U.S. Men’s National Team player pool. Gregg Berhalter called him up to the USMNT for the first time in January 2024 ahead of the team’s friendly against Slovenia. The striker made his first USMNT appearance in that match, coming off the bench to replace Brian White on Jan. 20, 2024, in a 1-0 loss. That is his only cap to date, although he had previously appeared nine times and scored one goal for the U.S. U-23 side.

The 2022 Hermann Trophy winner spent three seasons at Creighton, where he appeared in 24 games (23 starts) in his final (junior) season, logging 1,591 college minutes. McGuire scored 23 goals and added three assists in 2022.

What It Means for Orlando City

It makes sense to deal a striker making a base salary of $600,000 ($921,000 in total guaranteed compensation) if he can’t crack the starting lineup. While some of that comes down to coaching decisions and other players emerging, it didn’t help McGuire that he struggled to regain the consistent form he showed in his first two years in Orlando. In the end, this is a bit of a blow financially to the club, as the initial agreement with Blackburn was for a reported $4 million. He now departs for considerably less money, but his value understandably dropped with his production and the two shoulder surgeries.

McGuire is still just 25 years old, and sitting out after two surgeries means he has fewer miles on his legs than many players his age. He could still regain the form that saw him score 14 times in 2023 and 10 more times in 2024 and had the USMNT and European clubs paying attention. Orlando City will hope that he returns to form, because that will influence how much GAM the club eventually receives for this transaction.

A fan favorite since his arrival, McGuire will be missed, and while the Lions could perhaps have benefitted from getting a player back in return to bolster an area of need, the influx of GAM can help accomplish the same goal.

McGuire’s departure appears to solidify Justin Ellis’ position on the first team, although his play in the first half of the season likely already did that. It may also open up more minutes for Tiago. But the trade also tells us that unless a new striker is brought in, the Lions will play without a traditional target striker for the time being, allowing players who have typically either played as wingers, attacking midfielders, or false nines to have the freedom to fluidly change positions and force defenders out of their comfort zones when it comes to coverage. Martin Ojeda, Antoine Griezmann, Ellis, Ivan Angulo, Marco Pasalic, and the team’s fullbacks will be harder to keep tabs on under such a system.

Whether it will work or if it will further stress the team’s shoddy transition defense (or both) remains to be seen.

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Flashback Friday: July 10, 2022 vs. Inter Miami

Let’s rewind to a match against the Herons that featured the unlikeliest of heroes.

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Image courtesy of Orlando City SC / Mark Thor

With both the United States Men’s National Team and Colombia suffering World Cup exits that were both agonizing in their own right, this summer’s tournament has lost a little luster for me. Don’t get it twisted, I’m still looking forward to the rest of the games, but I’d be lying if I said it wasn’t going to be a little bittersweet.

Fortunately, Orlando City will be back in action before we know it, and in the meantime we can continue our practice of looking back on Lions matches from years gone by. Last week we relived a 4-0 win over Toronto FC from July 4, 2023. This week we go a little farther into the past to July 10, 2022, and a visit from Inter Miami.

Going into the match with the Herons, OCSC was badly in need of a result. The Lions were in the midst of a summer slump and had won just one of eight matches since squeaking by Toronto FC 1-0 back on May 14. To try to turn things around, Oscar Pareja sent out a lineup of Pedro Gallese in goal; a back line of Kyle Smith, Robin Jansson, Rodrigo Schlegel, and Ruan; Junior Urso and Cesar Araujo in the double pivot; Benji Michel, Mauricio Pereyra, and Facundo Torres in attacking midfield; and Ercan Kara up top.

Orlando’s effort to try to pick up a win had to wait a little longer than originally planned, as kickoff was postponed by close to two and a half hours due to lightning in the area. Once the game eventually started, both Orlando City’s fans and players probably wished it had been delayed a little longer. The Lions came out of the starting blocks slow and were guilty of a number of bad passes and miscommunication that made it difficult to get going offensively.

The bad start nearly cost the home side early, as Pereyra played a bad back pass in the seventh minute that was snagged by Indiana Vasilev, who promptly broke toward goal. Fortunately, his shot smashed into Gallese’s face and went wide of the net to spare Mauricio’s blushes. Speaking of the Uruguayan, Miami seemed to have keyed on him as a player to stop at all costs, because whenever the Lions started to get a rhythm in the final third, the Herons promptly fouled him to break up the flow of things.

It took half an hour for the first decent chances to finally surface for Orlando City. When those opportunities arrived, it was in the form of Urso taking a pop from outside the box that got blocked on the way through, and Michel nearly getting on the end of a training ground corner kick routine, only to be let down by a bad first touch.

That was mostly everything of note in a largely quiet first half. Miami had the more dangerous chances, but there wasn’t much to separate the teams in the end. Miami had a slim lead in possession (50.6%-49.4%), and also had more shots (6-3), shots on target (1-0), and corners (3-2). Orlando City was a shade more accurate in its passing (84.5%-83.6%).

Once the second half started, Miami very nearly got an early goal once again, but Robert Taylor didn’t get good contact on a header attempt and the ball went out harmlessly for a goal kick. Vassilev had a much more dangerous effort in the 49th minute, but he put his shot over the bar and wasted a nice passage of play from the visitors.

Orlando carved out an excellent chance of its own nine minutes later. Ruan played a clever cutback for Michel, but like Taylor, he didn’t get good contact on his shot and sent it tamely right to goalkeeper Drake Callender. Torres and Urso sent shots wide and high shortly afterward, before Miami really should have scored from a 72nd-minute corner kick. Aime Mabika found himself all alone in front of goal after the initial ball was played short, but he put his header wide right.

Tesho Akindele was one of the substitutes brought on, and he flashed his fresh legs by getting on a couple of chances as the game wound towards the 90th minute. Unfortunately, he wasn’t able to convert either one, and things looked sure to end in a scoreless draw. Enter an extremely unlikely hero: Jake Mulraney.

In the second of four minutes of stoppage time, the winger sent a hopeful cross into the box with just two men in purple to aim for. The ball had relatively little chance of reaching Akindele, who was bracketed by two defenders, but Damion Lowe tried to clear it and instead sliced it off the underside of the crossbar and into the Miami net making it 1-0 to the good guys.

Unsurprisingly, given the state of the game up to that point, neither team managed to muster any real chances after that, and Orlando narrowly came away with three much-needed points.

OCSC ended the game with more possession (54.7%-45.3%) and better passing accuracy (96.6%-82.9%), while Miami took more shots (10-8) and won more corners (6-2). Both sides put just one shot on target, making the final score somewhat unsurprising.

Marcus Mitchell was at the helm for Player Grades in this game, and he gave the outstanding Cesar Araujo the Man of the Match award, with a grade of 7.5 out of 10. The midfielder racked up eight tackles, drew nine fouls, and played a key pass while snuffing out a lot of Miami’s danger before it could truly develop.

Those three points didn’t exactly galvanize the Lions in the short term, as they won just one of their next six games in all competitions, not counting a friendly loss to Arsenal. Fortunately, better times lay ahead in the U.S. Open Cup.


That’ll do it for this week’s edition of Flashback Friday. We’ve only got one more of these before Orlando City returns to action on July 22, so enjoy the reminiscing while you can. Vamos Orlando!

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