Orlando Pride
Orlando Pride vs. Chicago Stars FC: Final Score 6-0 as Pride Open The Season With A Dominant Performance
Pride start 2025 NWSL season with a dominating home win over Chicago Stars FC.

The Orlando Pride (1-0-0, 3 points) opened the 2025 NWSL season with a dominant 6-0 win over Chicago Stars FC (0-1-0) tonight at Inter&Co Stadium. Haley McCutcheon, Ally Watt, and Julie Doyle netted goals for the Pride, while Barbra Banda scored a brace. The other goal was an own goal by Hannah Anderson just after halftime.
The fans showed up for the celebration with an announced attendance of 19,237. That’s the second-highest home attendance in club history and the largest crowd for a Pride game at Inter&Co Stadium.
Pride Head Coach Seb Hines displayed the same lineup that drew 1-1 with the Washington Spirit in the NWSL Challenge Cup last Friday night. Anna Moorhouse was in goal behind a back line of Kerry Abello, Rafaelle, Kylie Nadaner, and Emily Sams. Morgan Gautrat and McCutcheon were the defensive midfielders behind Angelina, Marta, and Watt. Banda took her usual starting position up top.
The night started on a high as the Pride celebrated their double last season. Recently retired alumni Carrie Lawrence, Celia, and Megan Montefusco carried the NWSL Shield and NWSL Championship trophies onto the field before the two banners were raised above The Wall.
“It’s great. It’s, again, an incredible achievement to get both the shield and the championship,” Hines said. “It’s incredibly difficult as well in this league. The parity between the teams and all the challenges that come along with it. But to do that for the city, or we said, we always wanted to give back to the city and bring a championship to the city. And you know, as a representation of what we did last year, to see the banners in our home stadium is great for us.”
“Kylie and I were looking at them. They’re so beautiful,” McCutcheon said about the new banners. “But I think what’s even more beautiful is seeing those fans out there. I don’t know how many we had tonight, but it was absolutely electric and I think one of the biggest crowds I’ve seen since I’ve been here.”
When the game started, the Pride went on the early attack, putting the Stars on their heels. In the second minute, Watt was unable to control Marta’s cross, but the ball went right to McCutcheon. The defensive midfielder’s shot was deflected and blocked by Stars goalkeeper Alyssa Naeher. Chicago was unable to clear, allowing Banda to get a shot of her own. However, Naeher was up to the task, tipping it over the crossbar.
In the seventh minute, the Pride took the lead. Angelina sent Banda into the box and the forward shielded Bea Franklin off the ball. Her shot from a tight angle was blocked by Anderson, going right to Gautrat. The midfielder laid it off for McCutcheon, who blasted her shot past Naeher to give the Pride an early 1-0 lead.
It was the quickest goal the Pride have scored in a season-opening game in club history. Additionally, McCutcheon has now scored in three of the last four games after scoring in two of the three playoff games last year.
“I think that with the special players we have and their qualities, they take a lot of attention from defenders,” McCutcheon said of her goal streak. “And so if I can find myself getting those opportunities, I just feel like I’ve been in the right place at the right time and made the most of that. So I want to continue to do that.”
In the 17th minute, Banda made a run down the right, sending a cross into the box. She was looking for Marta or Angelina making runs into the six, but it was blocked by Anderson. The ball went directly to Abello at the top of the box, but her shot was blocked by Shea Groom. Finally, the Pride got a shot that reached the end line when Gautrat took a shot from the top of the box. However, her attempt missed wide.
The Stars got their first real chance in the 29th minute when Ally Schlegel’s cross into the six-yard box was blocked out of play by Moorhouse for a corner kick. The ensuing set piece found the head of Franklin, who put the attempt on target, but it was right to Moorhouse and didn’t cause the Pride shot stopper any trouble.
Moorhouse immediately threw the ball long and to the right for Marta. The Pride captain cut inside to beat Camryn Biegalski with Banda sprinting down the middle of the field. The Brazilian sent a hard ball across that Banda did well to chest down. The Zambian shot, but Naeher was up to the task, blocking it wide for a corner kick.
Marta’s ensuing corner kick headed out and cleared away by Nadia Gomes.
In the 34th minute, an Angelina corner kick was cleared out wide where the Brazilian took control. She sent another cross that was just out of the reach of Rafaelle and off Nadaner. Unfortunately, neither could redirect the ball on goal.
In the 37th minute, Watt dribbled to the end line and her cross was blocked out of play by Anderson for another corner kick. Marta’s set piece was to the near post where Watt outjumped Biegalski and Taylor Malham, knocking it past Naeher to give the Pride a 2-0 lead.
“I saw the ball come off Marta’s foot and I ran into the front post. And I just hoped to God I don’t get punched in the face, because I know Alyssa (Naeher) was coming off her line,” Watt said about her goal. “And we’ve been working so hard on set plays for the last week, because we get a lot of corners. We get a lot in attack, we get a lot of corners, and honestly, we should score off more. But, I just, I made my run. I keep making my run, and then Marta always puts in a fabulous ball. So I just had to make sure I was in the right spot. And I was.”
In the second minute of stoppage time, Rafaelle tried to send Banda behind the Chicago back line. Franklin got there first but misplayed the ball. Banda took possession and turned her, attempting to beat Naeher to the near post. However, the ball hit the outside netting.
“It’s renowned that 2-0 is always a dangerous scoreline and that next goal is vitally important. And so we talked about that at halftime with the team that we have to continue our momentum, our aggressive nature,” Hines said about his halftime speech. “And getting that third goal so early into the second half really kind of put the game at rest. And we could have the ability to rotate and make some substitutions and get players time on the field while still being aggressive and still trying to score more goals.”
That was the final chance of the first half as the Pride took a 2-0 lead into the break.
The Pride started the second half like they ended the first, striking early. In the 47th minute, Gautrat sent a cross into the six-yard box for Banda, but Anderson stepped in the way. However, the ball bounced off the center back and in to give the Pride a 3-0 lead.
“I think tonight, coming in at 2-0 at halftime is always kind of a weird scoreline. And so to start off, I think we scored the first two minutes into the second half,” McCutcheon said about the early second-half goal. “So again, just when we come out on the front foot, not only from half to half, but dead balls, things like that. We’ve really just tried to lock in on. We call them big five moments.”
The Pride had a chance for a fourth in the 49th minute when Naeher misplayed a pass back from Franklin. The goalkeeper was attempting to clear the ball upfield, but gave it right to Watt instead. The attacker had plenty of time and tried to curl her second touch into the top left corner, but sent the attempt off target.
Hines made his first three changes in the 62nd minute. Cori Dyke, Julie Doyle, and Prisca Chilufya came on for Rafaelle, Gautrat, and Watt. The Rafaelle change wasn’t surprising as she returns to full fitness. The move sent Dyke to right back and moved Sams to center back alongside Nadaner.
The Pride netted a fourth in the 65th minute and it was one of the substitutes. It started when Sams collected a Stars clearance and played Banda down the right. The striker used a nice touch to beat Anderson, giving her a path into the box. She played the ball central, where Chilufya was making a run, but Doyle called for it behind her. Chilufya wisely let it go and Doyle put it in to give the Pride a 4-0 lead.
In the 72nd minute, Doyle went down with a non-contact injury. After passing the ball forward for Banda, the midfielder held her right knee with tears in her eyes. After receiving treatment from the medical staff, she was helped off the field and replaced by Ally Lemos.
When play resumed, the Pride were given a good chance when Angelina’s shot was off the arm of Franklin just outside the box. Marta stepped up to take the set piece, curling it around the post.
Banda netted her first of two goals in the 80th minute when Chilufya played her forward. Anderson got to it first, but misplayed the ball, allowing Banda to split her and Franklin. Malham tried to challenge the striker, but was no match. Banda opened up and took the attempt well, putting it past Naeher to make it 5-0.
Three minutes later, Hines made his final change of the game as Viviana Villacorta came into the game for Marta.
The best goal of the night came in the 87th minute and it was Banda again. She intercepted a weak pass from Malham to Franklin, giving herself a shot from distance. It was a rocket over the outstretched arm of Naeher to give the Pride a 6-0 lead.
The goal tied a club record that was set on June 24, 2024 when the Pride won 6-0 over the Utah Royals in the same stadium. Banda scored a brace in that game as well.
“I think that’s huge. I think scoring goals is usually the last thing to come as we’re going through preseason and finding ourselves in the first match. So to get a six right off the bat is really good to kind of get in a flow,” McCutcheon said about tying the club record. “That’s something that we’ve worked really hard all preseason doing. And so we want to just be more dynamic on all fronts. And obviously we did that, and you score six goals, it’s going to be tough to lose that game, so we’re feeling good about it.”
It looked like the Pride scored a club-record seventh goal in the second minute of second-half stoppage time when McCutcheon played the ball long for Chilufya. Banda made a diagonal run to the middle and her international teammate found her. Chilufya passed the ball in, but the flag went up because Banda was offside on the initial pass from McCutcheon.
That was the final attempt for either team as the Pride came away with a 6-0 win. The Pride dominated this game in every way, ending with more possession (63.6%-36.4%), shots (26-8), shots on target (8-2), crosses (23-3), and corner kicks (13-2). They also had better passing accuracy (88.6%-76.2%) in the 90 minutes.
“It’s a good start to the year, especially with the celebration at the start and the banners and the trophies being in front,” Hines said. “It was always worrying because, obviously, that’s in the past, and that was all that we achieved last year. And trying to flip that mindset to the task at hand. And obviously priority was winning the game tonight and getting off to a good start. And yeah, I thought we played some really good football. I thought we were defensively pretty solid. And yeah, to score six goals in NWSL is a massive achievement. So yeah, it’s been a really good day for all of us.”
In addition to tying the club record for most goals in a game, it’s the Pride’s first-ever season-opening win. Previously, they’d drawn three times and lost five times to open seasons. It’s the first time the Pride have won a home opener since 2016, when they defeated the Houston Dash in front of a club-record crowd of 23,403.
The Pride continue their recent domination over the Stars. They’re now 3-0-1 in their last four games, dating back to 2023. They’ve outscored Chicago 10-1 in the last two games, which includes the playoff game last year and tonight’s season opener.
The Pride will look beyond this celebratory night as they prepare for their first road game of 2025. They’ll travel north to face NJ/NY Gotham FC on March 23 in New Jersey.
Orlando Pride
Orlando Pride vs. Portland Thorns: Final Score 1-0 as Pride Fail to Score at Providence Park
The Pride’s Portland problems popped up to punish the team once again.

The Orlando Pride (5-2-0, 15 points) continued to have difficulty when visiting Providence Park, losing 1-0 tonight to the Portland Thorns in Oregon. The home team took the early lead on Reyna Reyes’ 16th minute goal. The Pride were unable to generate any good chances on goal no matter who Pride Head Coach Seb Hines put on in the second half.
Hines made five changes to the team that won against Angel City. Oihane once again replaced Cori Dyke at right back, Zara Chavoshi got the start next to Emily Sams in place of Kylie Nadaner. Carson Pickett took over at left back, with Kerry Abello moving into the midfield. Ally Watt also returned to the starting lineup in place of Prisca Chilufya. The back line in front of goalkeeper Anna Moorhouse was made up of Pickett, Chavoshi, Sams, and Oihane. Haley McCutcheon and Abello were the defensive midfielders behind Watt, Marta, and Ally Lemos with Banda up top.
Early in the match, the Pride tried the route one approach, sending long balls up to Banda. The first two times it worked well enough for Banda to get the ball cleanly, but she was unable to make anything from it. After that, the Pride continued to try this approach, but it was less successful.
Portland made things difficult for the Pride, pressing early and often. In the 16th minute it paid off for the home team. Pickett played a defensive ball out for a Thorns throw-in. Portland worked the ball across to Reyes. She moved the ball onto her left foot and put a very good shot inside the left post for what ended up being the game-winning goal.
The Pride did have some chances but nothing with any type of power behind it to beat McKenzie Arnold. The Pride looked flat through most of the first half, and the Thorns brought more energy. Orlando looked disjointed and disinterested.
In the 37th minute, Pride supporters got a big scare. Banda took the ball into the box, but then pulled up as if she had a noncontact injury. Play was eventually stopped for the trainers to check on her. Mercifully, Banda was not injured and was able to continue.
Things almost got much worse for the Pride in the 39th minute. Reilyn Turner took a through ball into the box, rounded Moorhouse and put the ball on frame. Fortunately, Chavoshi recovered and made a clutch goal-line save to keep the score at 1-0.
After 45 minutes of play, the Thorns had the advantage in shots (7-5) and shots on target (4-1). The Pride had the advantage in possession (53%-47%) and corners (3-0), but were not able to generate much of a threat.
Hines did not make any changes to start the second half despite the lack of scoring. The Thorns started quickly as Deyna Castellanos got on a long ball in the box. Luckily, her shot went wide. One minute later, Moorhouse was fouled. She took a shin to the head, and boot to her right hand. After several minutes she was subbed off for McKinley Crone.
The second half was much like the first. The Pride had difficulty breaking Portland’s lines. When they did, the chances did not threaten Arnold. A perfect example of this came in the 64th minute. Watt stripped the ball from a Portland player and fed it to Banda, who gave it back to Watt for the chance, but there was nothing on it.
In the 68th minute, Hines brought on Dyke, Angelina, and Viviana Villacorta for Oihane, Lemos, and Pickett. One minute later, Banda had a chance, but her near-post shot was saved by Arnold. On the other end, Crone saved a shot by Payton Linnehan in the 74th minute. In the 75th minute, Chilufya came on for Marta.
Hines made his final substitution in the 83rd minute, bringing on Grace Chanda for Watt. Between Moorhouse’s injury and various other fouls, there were 11 minutes of second-half stoppage time. Being up a goal against the defending champs, Portland players immediately headed for the corner whenever they got the ball.
Despite double digits to work with in stoppage time, the Pride failed to equalize and suffered their second loss of the season. At full time, the Pride had the advantage in possession (58%-42%), corner kicks (7-2), and passing accuracy (80%-75%). Portland had the advantage on shots (15-11), shots on target (7-4), and, most importantly, on the scoreboard.
“You have got to try and create the space. You have got to move, make unselfish runs and you have got to be proactive rather than reactive,” Hines said about the team’s lack of offense. “I felt today that Portland were one step ahead of us in their defensive structure. We didn’t create too many opportunities. They were well organized. You have got to find different ways, and we had different solutions during the run of game and changed different buildup shapes, but it wasn’t enough to get that equalizer.”
Hines praise the play of Chavoshi and Crone in the match, with both players short on experience.
“I think they are the main positives out of the game,” Hines said. “Giving Zara [Chavoshi] the first opportunity to start the game in a hostile environment and get tested in certain situations, I thought she did very well for her first NWSL start. [McKinley Crone] has been waiting a long time for that opportunity. It is in a way that we didn’t want it to happen, obviously, you never want to see a player get injured. Mac has been patient waiting for this opportunity and I thought she did well when she came on.”
Fortunately for the Pride, the Kansas City Current and the Washington Spirit also lost their matches, meaning the Pride remain tied for first with the Current. Sadly, this was a missed opportunity to put some daylight between those other top teams.
“My head is all over the place at the moment, honestly,” Crone said about getting on the pitch. “I don’t really (know) if I can pinpoint a singular emotion. I am really honored, especially being from Orlando, just to be able to represent the city. This is such a tough place to come in and play. I thought the team fought hard. Now at this point, it is about turning our focus to the next game. It is such a long season, and we have so many more games ahead of us, it is now about how can we respond to this result today.”
The Pride remain on the road next weekend for an away match against the North Carolina Courage at WakeMed Soccer Park in Cary, NC.
Orlando Pride
Orlando Pride vs. Portland Thorns FC: Preview, How to Watch, TV Info, Live Stream, Lineups, Match Thread, and More
The Pride look to claim their second-ever win in Portland as they take on the Thorns away from home.

Welcome to your match preview as the Orlando Pride (5-1-0, 15 points) travel west to take on Portland Thorns FC (2-2-3, 9 points) at Providence Park in Portland, OR. This is the first two games these teams will play with the return game in Orlando scheduled for Oct. 10.
Here’s everything you need to know about tonight’s game.
History
The Pride have struggled historically against the Thorns, with a record of 4-14-2 in 20 games (4-13-2 in league play and 0-1-0 in the playoffs). They’re 1-8-0 in Portland with the only win occurring in 2018.
The most recent meeting between the two teams came on Oct. 11, 2024 in Portland. The Pride secured the NWSL Shield the previous game, so several starters were given a break. It showed on the field as the Pride lost 2-0, ending a 23-game unbeaten run. Morgan Weaver gave hosts the lead in the 13th minute and Christine Sincalir doubled the advantage in the 55th minute.
The meeting prior to that loss came on May 24 in Orlando. It was the Barbra Banda show as the Pride striker scored two goals 10 minutes apart, giving her team a 2-0 halftime lead. Izzy D’Aquila got one back for the visitors, but it wasn’t enough as the Pride won 2-1.
The first game between the two teams in 2023 was on March 26 at Providence Park. Weaver opened the scoring early and Sophia Smith doubled the advantage a few minutes later. Hina Sugita made it three, and Michele Vasconcelos wrapped up the scoring as the Thorns won 4-0. On June 11, 2023, in Orlando, Smith gave the visitors the lead, but the Pride took over after that. Adriana scored a brace and Messiah Bright’s 69th-minute strike lifted the Pride to a 3-1 win.
The teams met twice in 2022, with the first coming on Sept. 9 at Exploria Stadium. Yazmeen Ryan gave the visitors the lead and Sugita doubled the advantage as the Thorns won 2-0. That was the second meeting of the season after the teams met on June 19 in Portland. In Seb Hines’ second game as interim head coach, the Thorns smashed the Pride, 6-0.
The teams met earlier in the year during the 2021 season, playing on May 26 in Orlando. The Pride won for only the second time against Portland since the team’s inception. Orlando won 2-1 with goals from Alex Morgan and Sydney Leroux.
The second meeting that year came on July 18 in Portland, and the home team won again. Smith gave the hosts the lead and Marissa Everett doubled the advantage. Marisa Viggiano got one back in second-half stoppage time, but it wasn’t enough as the Thorns won, 2-1.
They met a third time on Aug. 14. The Pride took an early lead when Courtney Petersen found Jodie Taylor for the opening goal. But Simone Charley equalized and the teams drew 1-1.
The Pride and Thorns didn’t play in 2020 after the season was canceled due to the global pandemic and they weren’t in the same group for the NWSL Fall Series. As a result, the most recent meeting prior to 2021 was in 2019.
The teams opened the 2019 season against each other in Orlando, but the Thorns got the better of the clash. The game was decided on either side of halftime as Caitlin Foord scored just before the break and Tobin Heath scored four minutes after the restart, lifting Portland to a 2-0 win. They met again in Orlando on May 11 and the visitors won again. Toni Pressley gave the Pride an early lead, but it was all Portland after that. Dagny Brynjarsdottir equalized, Andressinha gave Portland the lead, and Foord finished it off.
The final meeting between the two in 2019 was a goal fest in Portland and another Thorns win. Hayley Raso gave the Thorns the lead just three minutes into the game and Midge Purce’s goal made it look like it would be a dominant performance by the hosts. But Marta got one back to make it 2-1. Sinclair made it 3-1, followed by a Thorns own goal by Emily Menges. It looked like the Pride would get a rare point through Erin Greening’s 90th-minute goal, but Tyler Lussi scored in second-half injury time, dooming the Pride to another loss in Oregon.
The teams faced off three times in 2018, which featured the Pride’s lone win in Portland. The Thorns won the first game, 2-1 on April 15. But on May 12, goals by Morgan and Christine Nairn gave the Pride a 2-0 lead. Sinclair got one back for the hosts, but the Pride held on for their only result at Providence Park. The third meeting went back to usual, with the Thorns winning 2-0 through Lindsey Horan and Raso.
The teams started the 2017 season against each other in Portland with the Thorns winning 2-0. They met again in the penultimate game of the season in Orlando, ending in a scoreless draw. The most important game between the two teams was the Pride’s only playoff appearance. Unfortunately, it was all Portland, as the Thorns beat the Pride 4-1.
The first meeting of 2016 was the Pride’s first-ever game. Steph Catley gave the visitors a surprising lead, but Brynjarsdottir equalized and Horan won it for Portland. They met again on June 26 at Camping World Stadium in Orlando. Two second-half goals by Brynjarsdottir and Horan lifted the Thorns to another 2-1 win.
Overview
The Pride got off to a great start this season, winning their first four games. A 1-0 loss to the Washington Spirit on April 19 and a slow start against Angel City on April 25 was a little worrisome. But the Pride came back from a 2-0 deficit to score three goals in the final 20 minutes, defeating the California-based visitors 3-2.
Tonight, the Pride head back out on the road for the first time since they beat Seattle Reign FC 1-0 on April 12. It’s no surprise the team is led offensively by Banda. The Zambian netted a late brace in a 6-0 win over the Chicago Stars to start the season before failing to score in the following two games. However, she’s converted in two of the last three games, including a 76th-minute header in the most recent contest.
The team’s been very solid defensively this season, only conceding four goals. Two of those goals came in the most recent game against Angel City. They’re currently tied with the Kansas City Current on 14 goals scored and four conceded for a +10 goal differential.
Tonight, the Pride head to a stadium they’ve struggled in since the team’s inaugural season. They’ve only taken points once in nine games in Portland over the past 10 years. While many of those years the Thorns were near the top of the league and the Pride near the bottom, even last year the Pride couldn’t find a way to beat the Thorns.
One thing that should make the task a little easier is the Thorns’ absences. Sinclair retired following the 2024 season after over a decade in Portland. Sophia Wilson is also out for this game due to pregnancy. The U.S. international’s absence creates a tremendous challenge for the Portland attack.
The Thorns currently sit in sixth in the NWSL standings with nine points. However, they’re only three points behind the Spirit for third. A win at home tonight against the Pride would put them only three points back of second and possibly first, depending on how the Current do.
Portland’s led offensively this season by second-year professional Reilyn Turner with three of the team’s 10 goals. Rookie Jayden Perry sits second on the team with two goals and several players have one, including Olivia Moultrie, Jessie Fleming, and Deyna Castellanos.
The Thorns got the season off to a rocky start, losing 3-1 in Kansas City. But the back line quickly got it together, only conceding three goals in the next five games. That strong defensive effort went away on April 27 when the Thorns conceded three goals for the second time this season in a 3-3 home draw with Racing Louisville FC.
“Historically, it hasn’t always been a great place for us to go play. But we’re a different team now,” Pride Head Coach Seb Hines said about tonight’s game. “I think different contexts, different circumstances. We’re still early on in the season, so we are wanting to continue that momentum from last week. We showed great character to come back from two goals down. The players are in good spirits. It shows the collective as well, players coming off the bench and playing a role and influencing the game. So there’s a real togetherness here. It’s going to be a good environment. It’s always a nice place to go play with the fans, the opponent, everything that comes with it. So, yeah, we’re excited to get across there and play another game of football.”
There aren’t any changes to the Pride availability report for the second consecutive game. They’ll be without Simone Charley (ankle), Luana (illness), Amanda Allen (shoulder), Aryssa Mahrt (knee), Julie Doyle (knee), Rafaelle (thigh), and Summer Yates (ankle).
The Thorns are without Daiane (knee), Caiya Hanks (hip), Marie Muller (knee), Nicole Payne (knee), Olivia Wade-Katoa (maternity leave), Morgan Weaver (knee), and Sophia Wilson (maternity leave).
Official Lineups
Orlando Pride (4-4-2)
Goalkeeper: Anna Moorhouse.
Defenders: Kerry Abello, Zara Chavoshi, Emily Sams, Oihane.
Midfielders: Carson Pickett, Haley McCutcheon, Ally Lemos, Ally Watt.
Forwards: Barbra Banda, Marta.
Bench: McKinley Crone, Cori Dyke, Brianna Martinez, Kylie Nadaner, Morgan Gautrat, Viviana Villacorta, Angelina, Grace Chanda, Prisca Chilufya.
Portland Thorns FC (4-2-3-1)
Goalkeeper: Mackenzie Arnold.
Defenders: Reyna Reyes, Jayden Perry, Isabella Obaze, Sam Hiatt.
Defensive Midfielders: Sam Coffey, Hina Sugita.
Attacking Midfielders: Olivia Moultrie, Mimi Alidou, Reilyn Turner.
Forward: Deyna Castellanos.
Bench: Bella Bixby, Kaitlyn Torpey, Sophie Hirst, Jessie Fleming, Carissa Boeckman, Mallie McKenzie, Payton Linnehan, Pietra Tordin, Alexa Spaanstra.
Referees
REF: Nabil Bensalah.
AR1: Fernando Fierro.
AR2: Cameron Siler.
4TH: Dion Coxe-Trieger.
VAR: Anya Voigt.
AVAR: Kaili Terry.
How to Watch
Match Time: 7:30 p.m.
Venue: Providence Park — Portland, OR.
TV: Ion.
Streaming: None.
Social Media: For live updates and rapid reaction, follow @manelanddave.bsky.social on Bluesky and the Orlando Pride’s official Twitter feed (@ORLPride).
Enjoy the game. Go Pride!
Orlando Pride
Orlando Pride vs. Angel City FC: Final Score 3-2 as Pride Complete Comeback Win
The Pride scored three goals in the final 20 minutes to turn a 2-0 deficit into a win.

The Orlando Pride (5-1-0, 15 points) bounced back from last week’s loss, coming back to defeat Angel City FC (2-2-2, 8 points) 3-2 tonight at Inter&Co Stadium. The visitors took an early lead through Riley Tiernan in the ninth minute and Katie Zelem doubled the advantage just before halftime. But the Pride came storming back in the final 20 minutes with goals by Marta in the 72nd minute, Barbra Banda in the 76th minute, and an own goal by M.A. Vignola in second-half stoppage time.
Pride Head Coach Seb Hines made three changes to the team that lost 1-0 to the Washington Spirit on April 19. Cori Dyke started in place of Oihane, who left injured at halftime against Washington, and Ally Lemos also got the start for Haley McCutcheon. Prisca Chilufya got her first start as a member of the Pride, replacing Ally Watt.
The back line in front of goalkeeper Anna Moorhouse was made up of Kerry Abello, Kylie Nadaner, Emily Sams, and Dyke. Lemos and Morgan Gautrat were the defensive midfielders behind Angelina, Marta, and Chilufya with Banda up top.
The first half was hard to watch for Pride fans. Despite flying across the country, Angel City dominated the first 45 minutes. The Pride looked much better coming out of the half, putting the opposition on the back foot. After failing to challenge Angel City goalkeeper Angelina Anderson in the first half, the Pride put her under constant pressure as the game wound down. The pressure paid off as the Pride netted three goals in the final 20 minutes.
Angel City was the team on the attack early in this game. The first shot came in the sixth minute when Zelem received a pass back and attempted a shot from long distance. However, the shot sailed over the top of the goal.
In the ninth minute, the visitors took the lead. Kennedy Fuller sent a long ball down the right sideline where Tiernan was making a run behind Nadaner. The forward cut back to lose Nadaner before entering the box. It was a tight angle, but Tiernan went for the near post anyway. Moorhouse should have had that space covered, but the ball slipped between her and post to give Angel City an early 1-0 lead.
Angel City nearly scored a second in the 25th minute when Fuller used some nifty footwork before knocking the ball off Chilufya for a corner kick. Her set piece into the box found Vignola near the penalty spot and the defender put the ball on target. It looked to be past Moorhouse, but the Pride goalkeeper did well to dive backwards and tip it wide.
The visitors should’ve had a second in the 31st minute when Tiernan was sent forward. The attacker dribbled to the end line before playing the ball across the box. It was a bit too far in front of Fuller, but it went straight to Zelem with an open goal. However, the midfielder lost her footing and sent the attempt wide.
The Pride finally took their first shot of the game in the 33rd minute off a set piece. Marta’s corner kick was to Dyke near the top of the box. The right back fired on goal but sent her attempt well off target.
In the 40th minute, Abello got down the left and sent a cross into the box. She was aiming for Banda at the near post, but Savy King got her head to it first, cleaning it across the box.
The Pride kept possession and it ended up back up with Abello. The left back’s ball towards the six was blocked by Sarah Gorden, but it went right back to Abello. The defender took a second shot, sending it well wide of the target.
On the other end, Angel City extended their lead. Claire Emslie found Zelem to her left just outside of the box and the midfielder played Fuller just inside the 18. After making a move to lose her defender, Fuller took a shot at goal, forcing Moorhouse to tip it over the crossbar.
The ensuing corner kick was won by Alanna Kennedy, but she couldn’t put her header on goal. Gautrat and Abello both had a chance to clear the danger, but neither were able to get anything on the ball. It fell right to Zelem, who put it past Moorhouse to give the visitors a commanding 2-0 lead shortly before halftime.
The final chance of the first half came in the fourth minute of stoppage time. Banda fouled Tiernan from behind as she entered the Pride third of the field, earning a yellow card. The ensuing set piece went to Nadaner and Kennedy. It was redirected towards goal, but Moorhouse was there to catch it.
After 45 minutes of play, the Pride had the advantage in possession (57%-43%), crosses (12-5), corner kicks (7-4), and passing accuracy (85%-79%). But Angel City took more shots (8-5) and put more on target (4-0).
“Angel City are a good team in transition. And so, if you give away the ball in dangerous areas, they can punish you,” Hines said about the halftime deficit. “And ultimately, the first goal comes from a transition moment. The second goal is a set piece, and it’s unfamiliar territory for us. You know, it’s been a while since we’ve been a couple of goals down in games. But, again, two halves are never the same. We rectified it in our halftime team talk. And, yeah, we went after it. You know, nothing to lose at that point.”
“I think we just weren’t ourselves individually,” Abello added about the first half. “I think our press was a little off and we kind of got it in our heads. And they broke it a few times. And when they break it with players like Alyssa Thompson and Gisele and Emslie, you feel that, right? Because those players can do really dangerous things and then we weren’t connecting our passes. On the flip side, we’d win the ball and give it right back to them. And honestly, I think that was the hardest part for us, is just keeping possession. Because, again, they have dangerous players that can exploit you when you give the ball away. So yeah, not our best half.”
The Pride were the more attacking team coming out of the locker room and created a pair of chances in the 50th minute. It started when Marta’s cross was off Gisele Thompson and out for a corner kick. The ensuing set piece went to the far side of the box, where Marta redirected it towards goal. But Kennedy was there to head it away.
Orlando recycled, creating an even better chance. Abello found Marta at the back post from the left with nobody on the Brazilian. Marta tried to volley the ball into the empty net, but it got caught in her feet and she was unable to get a shot off, allowing Anderson to collect it.
The Pride won another corner kick in the 51st minute, this time taken by Marta. She found Nadaner at the far post. The center back tried to get over the ball, but it was a little behind her and Nadnaer’s header was wide of the target.
A scary moment occurred in the 53rd minute. Gautrat and Kennedy went up for the ball and the Pride defensive midfielder elbowed Kennedy in the face. The former Pride player was down for several minutes before rising with a black eye. After a medical examination, it was determined she couldn’t continue and was replaced by Madison Hammond.
In the 59th minute, Hines made a triple substitution trying to get his team back into the game. Watt, McCutcheon, and Oihane came on for Chilufya, Gautrat, and Dyke.
It looked like the Pride had a chance to get a goal back in the 66th minute when Marta beat Vignola to a free ball and sprinted down the field. She played Banda forward and the striker had Watt — the fastest player on the field— on her right. It looked like Banda tried to play her the ball but put it into the feet of King instead.
The Pride got a goal back in the 72nd minute when Lemos sent Oihane down the right. Nobody closed down the right back, allowing her to send a cross into the box. It was behind Banda, but went straight to Marta, who turned it on goal. Anderson got a hand to the ball, but knocked it into the bottom corner, cutting the Pride deficit to 2-1.
“I think it gave us belief,” Pickett said about the goal. “I think we, deep down, have belief, but we kind of need that, ‘Okay, we’re really in this game, and we can fight back, claw back.’ It gave us that extra bit of confidence to go there and continue to score, because we saw that we can. We could find a way to break them down, and we need to do it again and again.”
“That goal was everything,” Abello added “I think, up until that goal, we had so much momentum, and we all thought we were going to score that first goal to get us back in the game. But, as time drags on, you’re like, is it going to come? Is it going to come even with good chances? And so, for her to put that away early enough for us to be like, oh, we still have so much time left. We have the momentum. We can do this. So, that goal changed everything.”
Immediately after the goal, Hines made the final two changes for the Pride. Grace Chanda and Carson Pickett came on for Angelina and Nadaner.
The Pride found their equalizer in the 76th minute. Watt sent a cross through the box from the right, but it went over everyone. Pickett recovered the ball before it crossed the touchline, sending in a cross of her own from the left. Banda and Zelem attacked the ball at the near post and the Zambian got there first, heading it off the inside of the post and in to even the game at 2-2.
“I love a good left-footed service,” Pickett said about her assist. “So, when you see people like Ally Watt and Barbra Banda in the box, you put it on their head. Or you try to find their head. So, I think that’s what I was aiming for.”
The goal was Banda’s fourth of the season, allowing her to maintain her team lead.
Oihane had a chance to give the Pride the lead in the 79th minute when she played Banda forward into the box. King got there first and knocked the ball off Banda’s foot, but it went straight to Oihane. The Spanish international had a clear shot on Anderson and the goalkeeper did well to get down and make the stop.
Seconds later, Marta played Watt into the box. The attacker had gotten behind her defender and had a clear chance on goal. But, again, Anderson did well to get down and tap the ball wide. Anderson palmed the ensuing corner kick away and a foul was called on the Pride, ending the threat.
In the 85th minute, Watt received a throw-in before being pushed over by Vignola. Marta’s free kick was headed out, falling to the foot of Oihane. The defender took a right-foot volley towards goal, but sent it well off target.
The fourth official showed eight minutes of stoppage time and the Pride completed their comeback in the third minute. Pickett sent a curling ball into the box where Vignola was first to reach it. Watt was charging in from the right, forcing Vignola to make a quick decision. The ball went off Vignola’s chest, past Anderson, and in to give the Pride a 3-2 lead.
There was a video review, because Watt extended her arms slightly as she reached the back of Vignola, but it was a quick decision that there wasn’t a foul and the Pride kept the lead.
Pressing opposing defenders into own goals has been a strong point for the Pride this season. They benefited from own goals in the season opener against Chicago and the following game against NJ/NY Gotham FC. This was the third own goal just six games into the season.
Angel City defended furiously as the clock wound down but was forced to push for an equalizer. However, the Pride were able to keep some possession, holding on for the 3-2 win.
At full time, the Pride had had the advantage in possession (53.7%-46.3%), shots (15-10), crosses (27-11), corner kicks (10-6), and passing accuracy (82%-77.1%). Both teams ended the game putting five chances on target.
“Tale of two halves,” Hines said about the game. “I think, obviously, being 2-0 down in this league is incredibly difficult to get back into it. But we showed our character. We showed our mentality. That never say die, never give up. You know, we showed what we’re capable of doing in that second half by scoring three goals and missed some chances as well. So it could have been a lot easier and different, but thankful for the three points and we move on.”
While the Pride have a 100% record in Los Angeles (3-0-0), this is the first time the Pride have beaten Angel City at home (1-1-2). Tonight also marked the first time in club history that the Pride have won a game after trailing by multiple goals.
The three goals late in the game were also significant coming off a performance where finishing was a problem. It looked like poor finishing would doom the Pride for the second straight week, but they were able to find the net three times in the final 20 minutes.
“Last week, whether it was the final cross or final pass or not getting across defenders, what I need to give credit to with our players is they take on feedback really well,” Hines said. “They take information from all the coaching staff really well, and if they listen and continue to grow and learn, then they get their rewards up like they did. You know, by scoring three goals, the crosses were phenomenal from Oihane, Carson, the finishes from Barbra, getting across the defender, Marta, getting in the right area. And, you know, if you have enough players in that area, you can force an error from the defender.”
The win moves the Pride back into a tie for first place with the Kansas City Current. However, the Current have a better goal difference and a game in hand. They’ll play their sixth game tomorrow night in North Carolina.
After this two-game homestand, the Pride now head back out on the road. They’ll face the Portland Thorns at Providence Park on May 3.
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