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Orlando Pride vs. Houston Dash: Photo Gallery

An album of images from Orlando’s last-gasp home victory over the Houston Dash.

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Dan MacDonald, The Mane Land


With key players returning from the international break, a different Orlando Pride starting lineup was called to action Saturday, and the Pride did just enough to slip by the Houston Dash at the death. After a sleepy first half, Orlando dominated the second period, but still somehow let it go to the last second, when Summer Yates and Cori Dyke found a way to combine to put the last kick of the game past Houston goalkeeper Abby Smith, sealing all three points at Inter&Co Stadium.

Head Coach Seb Hines kept a lot in reserve off the start, resting Marta, Barba Banda, Angelina, and others. Julie Doyle returned to the starting lineup up top with Ally Watt. Both teams spent a lot of time shuttling the ball across the midfield, but neither could create many clear-cut chances.

Once Hines started making substitutions after the intermission the Pride largely controlled the game however. Banda and Dyke came on at halftime, and immediately the Pride became the more assertive team. Banda herself attempted five shots, and most of them were dangerous looks, although only two were on target. Dyke provided six shot-creating actions. As Hines proceeded to send on Marta and Prisca Chilufya down the stretch, the field continued to tilt further in the Pride’s favor, and Houston seemed prepared to bunker in an try for the scoreless draw.

The hot and heavy atmosphere (even by Orlando standards) created a lot of stoppage time, and when the fourth official put eight minutes up for the second half, the team seemed to find just a bit more. Eventually, Yates recognized that Houston had left her enough space to get to the endline and pulled back one of her trademark crosses. The Houston defense got a foot to it — not enough to keep it from Dyke, but enough to make it hard to handle. Dyke took a difficult touch and smashed it off a Dash player and into net for her first goal with the Pride. After the celebratory smoke cleared, the referee allowed only a kickoff to occur, ending the game immediately.

We hope you enjoy these images from a dramatic and hard-fought victory. The Pride are on the road for the next two weekends, followed by the extended summer break, so it will be August before our next opportunity to get out and take photos at a Pride game again.

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Orlando Pride vs. Seattle Reign FC: Photo Gallery

An album of images from the Pride’s NWSL quarterfinals victory over the Reign at Inter&Co Stadium.

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Dan MacDonald, The Mane Land


The Orlando Pride hosted the Seattle Reign in the NWSL playoff quarterfinals Friday night, advancing 2-0 with a goal in each half. In a well-executed rematch of last weekend’s Decision Day matchup, Orlando created chances early and managed to take the lead in the first half with Haley McCutcheon providing more postseason magic. Once playing with the lead, the Pride stayed well organized but had to weather a lot of Seattle pressure as the visitors pushed to find a way back into the match. Ultimately, Marta — as she so often does — made the game’s decisive play, allowing Luana to push Orlando into the semifinals.

Orlando started the game as the aggressor, creating the majority of the shots early. Most of their chances were routine until the 17th minute, when Julie Doyle received the ball in the Seattle penalty area but didn’t get enough on the shot. The chance foreshadowed the opener four minutes later, as Doyle played a give-and-go with Marta, receiving an excellent through ball before finding McCutcheon in about the same place. McCutcheon placed her shot perfectly inside the left post for a 1-0 lead.

Orlando continued to try to create chances, but struggled to make the same quality entry passes for the remainder of the half. Seattle’s pressure started to affect the Pride and turn the hosts over, and the Reign attack grew into the game a bit more. While they didn’t have any exceptionally dangerous looks, the chances were all Seattle’s way through to the halftime break.

Orlando tried to catch Seattle off guard coming out of halftime with a well-placed shot from Ally Lemos in the 46th minute that forced a good save from Reign goalkeeper Claudia Dickey. Starting around the 60th minute, Seattle pushed numbers higher, repeatedly taking the ball away and looking to counter. As a result, most of the remaining chances went the Reign’s way, including a Sally Menti free kick off the crossbar in the 63rd minute and an Anna Moorhouse kick save against Maddie Mercado in the 76th.

In the 82nd minute, Marta showed the grit that has defined her career, stepping in front of a back pass and running solo against Seattle defense into the box. Jordyn Bugg defended well, ushering her to the corner of the penalty box despite the Brazilian’s appeal for a penalty, but this again foreshadowed future events in the game. At the next stoppage, Simone Charley came on in the 83rd minute and provided fresh legs for some outlet relief, creating two shots in the process, but neither was threatening.

Deep in stoppage time, Marta wove more of her magic. The veteran midfielder received a clearance just outside the Orlando penalty area and, instead of lumping it down into the corner to waste some time, Marta showed grit and determination, going on a full-field run into the Seattle penalty box. Phoebe McClernon and Samantha Menza could not stop her, instead conceding a penalty deep in second half stoppage time. Always a class act, Marta then protected the spot until players were set and turned over the ball to Luana, for an emotional close to the game. Her Brazilian international teammate didn’t disappoint, smashing her first Pride goal into the upper left quadrant of the net to put the match away.

We hope you enjoy these images to a memorable playoff victory by the Pride. It wasn’t the prettiest game, but Orlando was able to grind out a result in the postseason against a determined and organized opponent, advancing to the NWSL semifinals.

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Orlando Pride vs. Seattle Reign: Photo Gallery

An album of images from the Orlando Pride’s 1-1 Decision Day draw with the Seattle Reign at Inter&Co Stadium.

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Dan MacDonald, The Mane Land


The Orlando Pride wrapped up their 2025 regular season at home against the Seattle Reign Sunday night, drawing 1-1 to claim a top-four finish in the NWSL regular season table although the team slipped from third in the league to fourth in the final standings due to a goal differential tiebreaker. Orlando largely controlled Seattle in the first half but struggled to finish chances on the offensive end. On the defensive end, once again the Pride turned in a solid performance only to be burned by a momentary lapse.

Orlando started the game well, netting an apparent opener in the seventh minute on a line-skipping long ball from Rafaelle to Marta, but the goal was flagged for offside. After that, the Pride continued to control the game well, but the final product wasn’t there. Multiple shots from good areas were sent off target, with the best of those chances being a Rafaelle header just wide off a corner in the 27th minute. Marta also cleared herself for a good opportunity in the box but sent her shot right at Seattle goalkeeper Claudia Dickey.

Meanwhile, the Reign were stifled by the Pride defense in the half, with another Anna Moorhouse judgment lapse creating the main chance for the Reign, who finished the first half with only two shot attempts.

Seb Hines sent Summer Yates on for Haley McCutcheon to try to find a little more quality in the final third, while Seattle brought Jordyn Huitema on for Mia Fishel, allowing for more direct play by the visitors. Play was more balanced in the second half and quality chances were few for the first 25 minutes after the restart. It wasn’t until the 70th minute that a good scoring opportunity emerged when Nérilia Mondésir wrapped up Emily Sams, fouling the defender in a perfect position just outside the box. Marta took the free kick and her placement was good, but she didn’t get enough power on the strike and Dickey made a comfortable save.

Just minutes after the free kick chance, Jacquie Ovalle, who had been a major source of energy for the team all night, got down the right side and dropped a cross just over the center backs to Carson Pickett in the box. Pickett had enough time to trap the ball, pick her spot, and bury her half volley for a 1-0 Pride lead.

Unfortunately, another positional lapse and missed clearance would quickly bite the Pride, when a recycled corner was sent left to right. Cori Dyke got back in time to deal with it but opted not to play safely out for a corner, heading it upfield while running back toward her own goal line. As a result, the defender got little on her headed clearance attempt and was out of position when she landed to close down Jordyn Bugg, who tied the game just three minutes after the opening goal.

From there, neither side could find a winner, with the best chance coming Seattle’s way on a set piece conceded by Yates, who made up for her foul by making a vital challenge in the box to knock the ball off Huitema before she could free herself for a shot.

With the draw, Portland jumped over both teams to claim third place. Orlando will therefore host the Reign in consecutive weekends in the NWSL quarterfinal match between the fourth and fifth seeds. Seattle will visit Orlando again Friday at 8 p.m.

We hope you enjoy these images from a tightly contested match at Inter&Co Stadium.

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Orlando Pride vs. CF Pachuca, Concacaf W Champions Cup: Photo Gallery

An album of images from the Pride’s final match in the 2025-2026 Concacaf W Champions Cup.

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Dan MacDonald, The Mane Land


The Orlando Pride returned to Concacaf W Champions Cup action Wednesday night at home needing a win to reach the semifinals in their first time in the competition. Another shot of Marta magic was not enough by itself to provide a victory against CF Pachuca Femenil and the clubs drew 1-1. The Pride created plenty of chances to find a second goal, but were wasteful with those opportunities. As a result, they were eliminated from the tournament on goal differential, despite tying for second in the group with the visitors from Mexico.

Seb Hines played a few more starters than he had been using in the competition, but with three matches in eight days, he still opted for rotation rather than playing his best starters in a must-win match. He introduced more of those starters in the second half, but it did not produce the intended result.

The Pride came out on the front foot and Marta put Orlando on top with a stunning free kick goal, playing the ball perfectly over the wall and scoring off the inside of the near post in the 25th minute to take the lead.

Finding themselves trailing and in danger of being eliminated, Pachuca pushed forward after the goal, creating opportunities for the rest of the half against a turnover-prone Orlando, which held the visitors at bay.

Hines made three changes at the break, but one of those was detrimental, as he moved Cori Dyke from fullback to center back, withdrawing Rafaelle, who had played well in the first half. Pachuca drew level in the 54th minute on a ball into the area that Dyke couldn’t handle. It deflected off of her and straight to Chinwendu Ihezuo, who fired a shot off Emily Sams and past backup goalkeeper Cosette Morché to tie the score.

The introdduction of Jacquie Ovalle shortly afterward didn’t help Orlando much, as the team could not supply service to the Mexican winger. Still, the Pride built up some nice attacks up the left side but could not be lethal in front of net at the end of those buildups. The best of those chances fell to Summer Yates, who fired wide for the fourth time in the match, and a Marta header on a good ball in from distance was flicked straight down the middle for an easy save. Haley McCutcheon hit the crossbar late, and that was as close as the Pride could get.

Orlando fell short in the end, and the team’s first foray into international competition came to a disappointing end. As it has been throughout the regular season, the team’s biggest issue in the tournament was scoring goals. A few more goals against the weaker sides in the group or one more in the final match would have seen the Pride through to the semifinals.

he team now must focus on closing out the NSWL season strong to secure a home match in the playoffs, but it won’t be easy on the road against Washington today or at home in the finale against Seattle.

We hope you enjoy these images from the Pride’s historic first Concacaf W Champions Cup campaign and first-ever meeting with CF Pachuca.

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