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Orlando Pride vs. Kansas City Current: Photo Gallery

A gallery of photos from the Pride’s 1-0 home loss to Kansas City.

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Dan MacDonald, The Mane Land


The Orlando Pride started Friday’s game against the first-place Kansas City Current on the front foot, and at first seemed like it would be an entertaining, open game between two high-quality opponents. Unfortunately, the game faded, and once Kansas City found a goal right after the intermission, the Current bunkered in and it felt like both teams were playing underwater for much of the second half. Given the temperature and lack of air movement at field level, it may have literally felt that way to the players as well.

Barbra Banda forced a good save in the first minute and had a second shot blocked, as Orlando created a few good chances over the first 15 minutes. As has become a trend of late, the Pride were unable to capitalize, however, and the Current became more organized as the half progressed. At the same time, the Pride got sloppy playing the ball out of their own end, turning the ball over repeatedly through the first half. However, Orlando was able to defend well in the opening 45 minutes, despite setting the visitors up repeatedly. The Pride made a late surge as the end of the half approached but again could not capitalize.

Shortly after the restart for the second half, the Current made the Pride pay for their inability to convert early, with Kylie Nadaner’s poor touch turning what should have been a comfortable recovery into a 1-v-1 for Temwa Chawinga, who finished past Anna Moorhouse for the game’s only goal. With the lead, Kansas City sat back and played for counter opportunities, knowing the Pride had to press forward for an equalizer. While Orlando held a lot of the ball and sent some dangerous balls into the area, the Pride were not able to find the right final pass or get shots on frame, ultimately suffering their third loss of the season.

We hope you enjoy this album of images from a hard-fought match between two of the top teams in the NWSL.

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Orlando Pride vs. Angel City FC: Photo Gallery

An album of images from Orlando’s 2-1 victory over Angel City at Inter&Co Stadium.

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Dan MacDonald, The Mane Land


Orlando Pride hosted Angel City FC at Inter&Co stadium for a Friday night game, eventually coming away with a 2-1 victory on two scrappy, late goals from Haley McCutcheon. It was a hard-fought affair, with excellent matchups all night with Barbra Banda vs. Sarah Gorden in one direction, and Sveindis Jónsdóttir vs. Hailie Mace and Rafaelle in the other.

The Pride did a good job of stifling the visitors through the first 75 minutes of the game, pressing well when their shape dictated, but executing a solid block when they couldn’t. As a result, the possession stats favored the visitors. Orlando did well with chance-creation however, generating the majority of their opportunities both line skipping to find Banda and advancing through the midfield via Jacquie Ovalle. Banda got in behind in the 10th minute but didn’t get a great shot off. Later, Rafaelle got a good look in the 30th minute but Angel City goalkeeper Angelina Anderson was there to make a good save for another corner.

On the ensuing set piece, Ovalle and Rafaelle executed an almost mirror image of the same combination, with Rafaelle finding the net this time, but a foul was called and the play was blown dead early, preventing the play from going to review. Banda managed to open space and get off a well-placed shot just inside the post in the 45th minute, but she didn’t get enough on it and it was saved by Anderson.

The second half continued with more of the same, with more physical play and smart defensive matchups. Banda got in behind immediately off the restart, but she was at a tight angle on the right and sent her shot straight at Anderson. McCutcheon netted in the 52nd minute off a great cross from Banda, but it was called back for offside.

Unfortunately, the trainers are going to have some new additions to the already significant injury list, as Ovalle needed assistance off the pitch in the 55th minute after trying to run down a break by Jónsdóttir, and Oihane was replaced on a concussion sub in the 75th minute due to head contact from earlier in the game.

As the game wore on and legs started to tire, the match loosened up and play was not as sharp, with both sides creating more set pieces and chances. Eventually, Banda fed in a dangerous cross from the left that pinged around the box. McCutcheon pounced on it in the defensive confusion for the final touch in the scrum, scoring the opening goal in the 84th minute. After a lengthy review, the goal was upheld.

Unfortunately, the lead did not stand long, as Angel City evened the score early in stoppage time. Giselle Thompson rattled the bottom of the crossbar on a recycled set piece, and the ball fell behind the goal line on the only shot on target of the night for the visitors.

But the Pride showed the grit that has been the hallmark of the Seb Hines era, earning a corner in the eighth minute of added time. The ball rattled around the box in traffic until McCutcheon eventually poked home her second goal of the night. The referee allowed a few more minutes beyond the originally allotted 10, but the teams mostly played aerial balls back and forth until the final whistle.

We hope you enjoy these photos of Orlando’s hard-fought victory over the (formerly) last unbeaten team in the NWSL.

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Orlando City vs. Inter Miami: Photo Gallery

An album of images from Orlando City’s 4-2 home loss to the Herons.

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Dan MacDonald, The Mane Land


In a reversal of Orlando City’s game on opening night, the Lions outplayed their visitors on Sunday for the opening 45 minutes, only to be undone in the second half. Turnovers in the defensive end and lapses in marking let Inter Miami climb out of a 2-0 hole and ultimately win 4-2, marking the first time the Herons have taken all three points out of Orlando.

While much has been made of Miami’s three previous trips that Lionel Messi skipped, the Argentine legend made the trip this time and his presence was felt, particularly in the second half, when he scored twice and set up a goal in the comeback. Only one pitch invader marred events, and that came late in the match.

Orlando City fans will fondly remember the first half, as the Lions appeared on their way to another regular-season win over their rivals when Marco Pasalic and Martin Ojeda powered the team to a two-goal lead inside the first half an hour. Maxime Crepeau made some excellent stops to preserve that lead into the half, despite playing behind two first-time MLS starters along the back line in Nolan Miller and Tahir Reid-Brown.

On the other side of halftime, substitute Matteo Silvetti pulled Miami back into the game after a defensive third giveaway and no one close enough to close down his blast from outside the area. Dayne St. Clair kept the Orlando lead from growing again at the other end of the pitch, and disaster struck when Messi scored the equalizer and Miller went down with an injury, requiring Iago to replace him.

Orlando City was unable to break out much in the second half once Miami pulled level, although St. Clair made a vital stop on Pasalic before the Croatian departed late in the game for fresher legs. Miami then scored the winner late when David Brekalo’s slip allowed a quick transition goal. Messi squashed hopes of an equalizer with a 90th-minute free kick goal, and the Lions fell for the second game to open the season.

Despite the result, Inter&Co Stadium was electric on Sunday night. We hope you enjoy these images from the match and that they bring to life some of the buzz that those in attendance felt until those fateful final minutes.

Images: Dan MacDonald
Words: Michael Citro

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Orlando City vs. New York Red Bulls: Photo Gallery

An album of images from Orlando City’s 2-1 opening day loss to the New York Red Bulls.

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Image of Maxime Crepeau making a save against the New York Red Bulls.
Dan MacDonald, The Mane Land


It should have been a night of excitement for a sellout crowd at Inter&Co Stadium to finally have Orlando City back in action in a meaningful match after the off-season. But the Lions struggled in their opening 45 minutes of the 2026 season, digging a 2-0 hole that was too deep to climb out of in a much-improved second half. Although the team battled hard to find a way back into the match, it wasn’t enough as Orlando City fell 2-1 to the New York Red Bulls in its second straight opening day loss.

The Red Bulls dominated the first half, shredding the rebuilt Orlando defense repeatedly, and keeping the Lions pinned in their own defensive half. More than 20 minutes passed before the hosts even had a touch in the opposition’s penalty area. The few times that Orlando was able to get the ball out of their own half, they broke down quickly with heavy touches and missed passes. Making matters worse was Wilder Cartagena’s return from last year’s Achilles tendon injury ended after just 14 minutes.

The visitors broke through just eight minutes into the match, and only a few missed opportunities and good goalkeeping by Maxime Crépeau kept New York from adding a second goal until the 40th minute after the failed clearance of a set piece. Teenager Julian Hall did all the damage for New York, scoring both goals. The 2-0 halftime score was flattering to an Orlando City team that had been completely swarmed for 45 minutes.

Oscar Pareja withdrew center back Iago and winger Marco Pašalić for 2026 draft pick Nolan Miller and Iván Angulo, respectively. He also made a tactical change, moving Angulo to a more interior midfield position than usual, allowing Tyrese Spicer — who had success getting forward, albeit generally undoing those efforts with poor passes and decisions in the final third — to continue getting into the spaces on New York’s right defensive flank. The tactical change and the substitutions infused the Lions with energy, and Orlando City was able to turn the tables in terms of possession and territorial advantage, if not on the scoreboard.

New York still looked dangerous on the counter, with Crépeau keeping his team alive with several highlight stops in a club single-game record-tying 11-save performance. However, the Lions had no choice but to leave space for transition chances as they were chasing the match throughout the second 45 minutes.

Griffin Dorsey, who had only had a few days of training with the team, was unlucky not to score a vital goal on his debut. Dorsey put the ball in the net in the 51st minute, but the ball had bounced off the turf and brushed his elbow for an inadvertent handball that nullified a strike that could have halved the deficit with most of the second half still to play. The Lions’ new right back also was robbed by a fantastic save by New York goalkeeper Ethan Horvath in the 70th minute.

Horvath made other big stops — notably on two brilliant shots by Martin Ojeda — to deny the Lions a route back into the match, and he got help with a deflectoin from the defense on an Angulo header that seemed surely destined to pull Orlando back into the match. City finally broke through deep in stoppage time as Angulo picked out second-half sub Zakaria Taifi’s run with a diagonal ball, and the Homegrown unselfishly provided a tap-in for debutante Tiago to spoil the shutout. As the goal came in the sixth minute of stoppage time, it was too late to change the outcome but a just reward for a good second-half performance.

The Lions will have a week to look at film and correct mistakes, and we could see some changes in the lineup as rival Inter Miami visits Sunday. The Herons are coming in bloodies after suffering a 3-0 defeat at LAFC on opening day.

We hope you enjoy these images from Orlando City’s opener, even if it wasn’t the result you were hoping for.

Images: Dan MacDonald
Words: Michael Citro

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