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Orlando City B

Orlando City B vs. New York City FC II: Final Score 4-1 as Young Lions Suffer Another Lopsided Loss

Things continued to spiral badly for Orlando City B, as the Young Lions were embarrassed at home by New York City FC II.

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Image courtesy of Orlando City B

Two preventable early goals in the first half were too much to overcome as Orlando City B (7-10-3, 26 points) fell 4-1 to New York City FC II (7-8-5, 28 points) at Osceola County Stadium. The Young Lions finally scored a goal, but their downward spiral out of the playoff places continued with another subpar performance. Shak Mohammed helped OCB avoid another shutout, but it hardly put any window dressing on a terrible performance marked by two of the more embarrassing goals conceded this season.

Evan Lim, Uriel Zeitz, and Julien Lacher scored for New York City FC II, which got another tally on an own goal from Jackson Platts. However, the Platts own goal wasn’t the worst one the Young Lions conceded on the evening.

OCB Head Coach Manuel Goldberg’s starting lineup included Carlos Mercado in goal behind a back line of Tahir Reid-Brown, Platts, Hayden Sargis, and Riyon Tori. Colin Guske and Bernardo Rhein started in central midfield behind an attacking line of Mohammed, Justin Ellis, and Favian Loyola, with Thalles up top.

OCB started brightly, getting forward in the opening minutes of the match. Ellis fired the game’s first shot in the fourth minute, finding space near the left corner of the box and sending a drive on target but straight at goalkeeper Mac Learned at the near post. Three minutes later, a nice pass from Tori found Mohammed, who fired in off of Learned but the flag came up, nullifying the goal.

The Young Lions paid for the missed Mohammed opportunity in the 14th minute. OCB won a throw-in but promptly turned it over in its own defensive third, ultimately conceding a corner. There were two opportunities to clear the set piece, but OCB failed on both. On an ensuing simple ball right in front of goal, Mercado appeared to have plenty of time to come out and punch or catch it inside the six. Instead, he retreated back toward his goal. Lim beat Platts and Sargis, heading it in to make it 1-0 to the visitors.

Ellis tried to pull the goal back in the 18th minute, blasting a shot toward the near post again from the left, but Learned fought it off and pounced on the rebound before an attacker could get there.

The visitors doubled the lead on an embarrassing play for OCB in the 21st minute. The Young Lions were caught out of shape, sending too many defenders to their left side. NYCFC II quickly sent a back-post ball to Leo Guarino, who shot a ball that hit off of Platts’ face and went in to make it 2-0. It was initially ruled an own goal but was changed to Guarino’s. Either way, it was the perfect microcosm of OCB’s play the last three matches. Thankfully, the MLS NEXT Pro account did not post a video of the goal for us to embed in this recap.

Orlando City B got forward a minute later with an excellent chance to pull the goal right back. Ellis found Thalles in the box, but the Brazilian’s shot was deflected wide. Platts headed the ensuing corner kick cross well over the crossbar to end the attack.

Ellis shot from the top of the box deflected just wide of the right post in the 31st minute, as the Young Lions continued to search for a way back into the match.

Ellis found Mohammed in front in the 36th minute, but his shot was blocked. Moments later, Loyola fired a curling shot that looked like it might go over, but Learned made sure, tipping it over and conceding a corner. The corner kick pinged around a bit and ended up with Ellis, who had another shot blocked out for a corner. Sargis headed wide on the second set piece.

Loyola did well to find Mohammed on the left in the 44th minute, but the shot was saved and out for another corner. The Young Lions could do nothing with the set piece. Mohammed carried the ball forward on the break with numbers in the second minute of first-half stoppage, but he sent his shot right at Learned when he perhaps had better options, as OCB attackers outnumbered New York defenders on the transition chance. Moments later, the Young Lions broke again but the ref halted play to book Christopher Tian-Long Tiao for pulling Loyola back despite OCB having advantage on the counterattack.

Tori did well to get forward and receive a pass in the box, turning and finding Ellis in the fourth added minute, but the ball skipped up on Ellis, who sent his shot over the bar. That was the final look at goal in another disappointing half for OCB, which trailed 2-0 at the break.

At halftime, OCB held the advantage in shots (12-5), shots on goal (5-1), and corners (5-2). NYCFC was the more accurate passing side (89.3%-84.8%) and had the game’s only two goals. The Young Lions controlled more of the first half, but with a two-goal lead, the visitors didn’t have to take any risks and were comfortable staying organized on the defensive end, blocking five of OCB’s first-half shots.

OCB wasted a good transition opportunity in the 47th minute when Ellis found Mohammed on the left. The winger tried to pick out Thalles on the other side but sent his pass badly off line and out for a goal kick, ending the threat without even an attempt at goal.

Orlando nearly scored on a corner kick in the 52nd. Playing it short, Loyola took it into the box and squared a pass to the top of the six. Reid-Brown couldn’t dig it out of his feet on what would have been a tap-in, and Sargis followed by having his shot blocked.

Loyola took a drop pass from Tori in the 58th minute and blasted a shot on target, but Learned fought it off as the OCB winger left his shot too close to the keeper. The ball popped up in the air and Thalles tried to head it in, but he was offside on the initial shot.

The visitors came close to making it 3-0 in the 63rd minute after some prolonged possession in the attacking third. Sebastiano Musu turned and fired a blast on target that Mercado saved. He was able to jump on the rebound before an opponent arrived.

OCB went the other way and Ellis got a decent look at goal just inside the top of the box in the 64th minute. He unleashed a blast, but Learned again saved it, and once more Thalles was offside on the shot, so the whistle blew when he got to the rebound.

Mohammed fired wide in the 73rd minute, as the lack of lethality in front of goal continued for OCB. Second-half sub Justin Hylton worked a nice give-and-go with Mohammed in the 81st minute, with Hylton firing a shot that Learned saved. The defense knocked the rebound out of play off a charging Mohammed for a goal kick.

Perhaps OCB’s worst goal conceded all season came in the 86th minute off the Young Lions’ own free kick in their defensive penalty area. Mercado put the ball in play by sending it short to Platts, who fired the ball off Zeitz and into the empty net to make it 3-0. If the second NYCFC II goal wasn’t already the perfect metaphor for OCB’s recent form, the third certainly was.

It was an unfortunate mistake, as Mohammed scored off his own rebound in the 87th minute to end an OCB scoreless drought at 272 minutes dating back to July 13 against Carolina Core. If OCB had not so egregiously given a goal away seconds earlier, the Young Lions would have been right back in the game.

Mohammed had a half chance to pull OCB within a goal in the 90th minute, but he missed the target from a tight angle on the right. A minute later, Reid-Brown had his shot in front partially blocked before committing a foul trying to get to the rebound.

The embarressment was capped by a fourth goal in the fourth minute of stoppage time from second-half sub Lacher, who did nothing fancy; he merely breezed past Tori and Platts and slotted home to cap another awful night for OCB.

Despite getting blown out, OCB finished well statistically, finishing the match with the edge in shots (23-11), shots on target (11-4), and corners (11-2). NYCFC held a slight advantage in passing accuracy (84.8%-84.3%).

OCB has lost its last three games, getting outscored 11-1 over that span since the 3-1 win over Carolina Core on July 13. It’s now just one win in eight matches for Orlando City B, which has now slipped to 10th in the Eastern Conference standings.


The Young Lions will stay home for a match Saturday night against Chattanooga FC.

Orlando City B

Orlando City B Announces Schedule for 2026 MLS NEXT Pro Season

Find out where, when, and who the Young Lions of OCB will play in 2026.

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Image courtesy of Orlando City B

The 2026 MLS NEXT Pro schedule was released today, telling us where, when, and who Orlando City B will play in the team’s fifth year in the league. The addition of Connecticut United FC sees the league expand to 30 teams, with 27 MLS reserve sides and three independent clubs.

The schedule remains at 28 games, with Orlando City B playing 14 at home and 14 away. OCB’s home games will once again take place at Osceola County Stadium in Kissimmee.

OCB will start the 2026 season with a pair of home games, facing Huntsville City FC on Monday, March 2, and Chicago Fire FC II on Sunday, March 8. The first away game of the season is slated for Saturday, March 14, when the Young Lions face Carolina Core FC in High Point, NC.

The Young Lions will also end the upcoming season with a two-game homestand. They face Toronto FC II on Sunday, Sept. 13, and Atlanta United 2 on Sunday, Sept. 20. All Decision Day games in the Eastern Conference will start at 2 p.m., and the Western Conference game times have yet to be announced.

The Young Lions will compete in the 16-team Eastern Conference as part of the Southeast Division. Connecticut joins the Northeast Division, and Chicago moves to the Southeast Division. As a result, OCB’s division will consist of Atlanta, Carolina Core FC, Chattanooga FC, Chicago, Crown Legacy FC, Huntsville City FC, and Inter Miami II.

Once again, teams will only face those from their own conference, and OCB will play each team in its division three times. The Young Lions will face Atlanta, Chattanooga, and Chicago once at home and twice away. They’ll play Carolina, Crown Legacy, Huntsville, and Miami twice at home and once away.

The longest homestand this year is only two games, scheduled to happen four times, including the opening and closing matches of the season. OCB will spend the majority of July and August on the road with two three-game road trips, separated by an Aug. 19 home game against Huntsville City. 

Unlike MLS and the NWSL, MLS NEXT Pro will play through the 2026 FIFA World Cup. That spreads the games out a little more evenly than the other leagues. The busiest month is August, when OCB will play six games. The Young Lions are scheduled to play four games in March, May, June, and July, while only playing three times each in April and September.

Unsurprisingly, the most common day of the week the Young Lions will play is Sunday (18 times). They’ll play six times on Friday, twice on Wednesday, and once each on Monday and Friday. The most common kickoff time is 7 p.m. The Young Lions will play 20 games at that time, twice each at 2 p.m. and 4 p.m., and once at 3 p.m., 5 p.m., 6 p.m., and 8 p.m.

OCB is scheduled to play six times on the same day as either Orlando City or the Pride. On March 14, the Young Lions travel to Carolina at 3 p.m. while the senior Lions host CF Montreal at 7:30 p.m. They host Miami at 7 p.m. on May 24 — the same time the Pride face San Diego Wave FC in California. On July 18, OCB will face Chattanooga FC at 7 p.m. in Tennessee while the Pride play in Utah at 8:45 p.m. The Young Lions face Connecticut away at 7 p.m. on Aug. 1 while City plays the New York Red Bulls in New Jersey at 7:30 p.m. On Aug. 19, OCB hosts Chattanooga FC at 7 p.m., while Orlando City hosts Chicago at 7:30 p.m. Finally, on Aug. 22, the Young Lions will face Atlanta away at 7 p.m. while City hosts Real Salt Lake at 7:30 p.m.


Orlando City B’s 2026 Schedule

  • Monday, March 2 — vs Huntsville City FC, 7 p.m.
  • Sunday, March 8 — vs Chicago Fire FC II, 7 p.m.
  • Saturday, March 14 — at Carolina Core FC, 3 p.m.
  • Sunday, March 22 — vs Inter Miami CF II, 7 p.m.
  • Saturday, April 11 — at Chattanooga FC, 7 p.m.
  • Sunday, April 19 — vs Carolina Core FC, 7 p.m.
  • Sunday, April 26 — at Chicago Fire FC II, 4 p.m.
  • Sunday, May 3 — vs Crown Legacy FC, 7 p.m.
  • Sunday, May 10 — at Atlanta United 2, 7 p.m.
  • Sunday, May 17 — at New England Revolution II, 2 p.m.
  • Sunday, May 24 — vs Inter Miami CF II, 7 p.m.
  • Sunday, June 7 — vs Carolina Core FC, 7 p.m.
  • Saturday, June 13 — at Huntsville City FC, 8 p.m.
  • Sunday, June 21 — vs Philadelphia Union II, 7 p.m.
  • Sunday, June 28 — vs Columbus Crew 2, 7 p.m.
  • Sunday, July 5 — at Crown Legacy FC, 7 p.m.
  • Sunday, July 12 — at FC Cincinnati 2, 6 p.m.
  • Saturday, July 18 — at Chattanooga FC, 7 p.m.
  • Sunday, July 26 — vs Huntsville City FC, 7 p.m.
  • Saturday, Aug. 1 — at Connecticut United FC, 7 p.m.
  • Wednesday, Aug. 12 — at New York City FC II, 5 p.m.
  • Sunday, Aug. 16 — at Chicago Fire FC II, 4 p.m.
  • Wednesday, Aug. 19 — vs Chattanooga FC, 7 p.m.
  • Saturday, Aug. 22 — at Atlanta United 2, 7 p.m.
  • Sunday, Aug. 30 — vs Crown Legacy FC, 7 p.m.
  • Friday, Sept. 4 — at Inter Miami CF II, 7 p.m.
  • Sunday, Sept. 13 — vs Toronto FC II, 7 p.m.
  • Sunday, Sept. 20 — vs Atlanta United 2, 2 p.m.
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Orlando City

Four OCB Players Who Could Make MLS Debuts In 2026

Who are the most likely OCB players to make their first team-debuts during the 2026 season?

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Image courtesy of Orlando City B / Mark Thor

Orlando City has invested significantly in youth development since Luiz Muzzi and Ricardo Moreira arrived prior to the 2019 season. After signing just four players in the first five years after the club’s expansion announcement, Orlando City has signed 14 academy products to first-team deals in the last seven years.

While Muzzi departed the club this off-season, Moreira took over the role, so the emphasis developing homegrown talent is unlikely to change.

This past season alone, the club saw Colin Guske, Gustavo Caraballo, and Zakaria Taifi make their first-team debuts. Additionally, Tahir Reid-Brown, despite not getting on the field, was on the senior side’s bench for four games.

With that in mind, let’s take a look at the most likely OCB players to join the first team for the 2026 season.

Tahir Reid-Brown, 19, Defender

The most likely player to make his first team debut in 2026 is 19-year-old fullback Reid-Brown. He’s already on an MLS contract and plays left back, a position currently of need for the Lions. The defender has been with the Young Lions for the last four years, making 56 appearances with 36 starts.

Reid-Brown initially played opposite Alex Freeman on the OCB back line before Freeman made the jump to the MLS squad and was replaced by Taifi, who also ended the 2025 campaign with the first team. 

Adding to the likelihood that Reid-Brown might see playing time is the uncertainty at left back. Adrian Marin is the current projected starting left back, but the Spaniard was less than impressive in his first season with Orlando City. Unless the club signs more depth at that position before the season begins, you can exepct to see Reid-Brown get some MLS playing time before long.

Jackson Platts, 18, Defender

Another player who could see his first team debut in 2026 is center back Jackson Platts. The 18-year-old was a regular OCB starter alongside Thomas Williams in 2024 before being relegated to the bench in 2025. However, the starter alongside Williams last season was Hayden Sargis, who didn’t come from the academy and is currently out of contract.

Like all defensive positions, the Lions have a lack of depth that could provide opportunities for young players. The only center backs are Robin Jansson and David Brekalo, forcing the need for a backup. The club also traded Williams, opening more room.

Platts is also a versatile option. While his natural position is center back, he’s also spent time as an outside back and in the midfield. That versatility could result in him seeing MLS action this year.

Justin Hylton, 18, Forward

The OCB player that took the biggest leap in 2025 was unquestionably Justin Hylton. The teenager was a star for the U-17 team before making his professional debut for the Young Lions. Originally a backup, he soon became a focal point of the attack and created problems for opposing defenses.

Hylton made his OCB debut on June 1 and didn’t start until Aug. 23. But he was in the starting lineup for the final six games of the season and was a crucial part of the team’s late successes. He ended the season with 11 appearances, starting six games, and recording two assists.

The only issue for Hylton is that his position is currently not the most in need. Whether the club sees him up top or in the attacking midfield, there are players in front of him. However, we could see him make his debut in an Open Cup or Leagues Cup game, if not as a late substitute in the regular season.

Dylan Judelson, 17, Midfielder

Judelson is another player who joined OCB from the academy in 2025. He started the season on an academy contract but signed to the club’s second team on Aug. 5. The defensive midfielder was a key part of the team from day one, starting the first four games of the season.

In all, Judelson made 20 appearances in 2025 with nine starts. He was in and out of the lineup with Guske, Riyon Tori, and Jhon Solis also seeing time in the role. But the Canadian youth international was very solid when on the field.

Although the departure of Cesar Araujo works in Judelson’s favor, he’s still behind veterans Eduard Atuesta, Braian Ojeda, and Wilder Cartagena, as well as Guske and MLS U22 Initiative signing Luis Otavio, while Joran Gerbet is also under contract but will miss the first part of the season recovering from a knee injury.

It’s a crowded field in front of Judelson in his position group, meaning he’ll have the biggest uphill climb of the players mentioned in this column to make his first-team debut. However, we could see the teenager with the first team for the first time this year if his development continues and there are injuries and suspensions ahead of him on the depth chart.


After years of the academy failing to produce talent for the first team, Orlando City has become one of the league’s standard bearers. That’s likely to continue this season, and it might be the start of a successful professional career at the senior level for these young players.

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Orlando City B

Orlando City Exercises Contract Option on OCB Head Coach Manuel Goldberg

Manuel Goldberg is back to lead the Young Lions of OCB in 2026 after the club exercised his contract option.

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Image of OCB Head Coach Manuel Goldberg holding up an OCB scarf.
Image courtesy of Orlando City B / Mark Thor

Orlando City announced today that the club has exercised the option on Orlando City B Head Coach Manuel Goldberg’s contract, keeping him in purple through 2026. The Young Lions’ boss enters his third season in the position in 2026 and his fifth overall with the team.

“Since taking over the role as head coach of OCB, Manu has done a tremendous job connecting with our MLS NEXT Pro players, developing their skillsets and preparing them for opportunities with the first team and beyond,” Orlando City General Manager & Sporting Director Ricardo Moreira said in a club press release. “His deep understanding of our player pathway and internal processes has been invaluable. The continuity Manu provides is critical for the career development of both our players and staff.”

Goldberg initially joined the club in 2022 as an assistant to Martin Perelman. When Perelman was promoted to first-team assistant, Orlando City announced Goldberg as his successor on March 11, 2024. At 30 years old, Goldberg became the youngest head coach in the short history of MLS NEXT Pro.

In his first season in the position, Goldberg led his team to a record of 11-9-9 (28 points), finishing fifth in MLS NEXT Pro’s Eastern Conference. The Young Lions took fourth-seeded Chicago Fire FC II to penalties in the first round of the playoffs away from home, where they fell 5-4 to end their season.

The 2025 campaign was particularly disappointing, as the Young Lions failed to qualify for the postseason for the first time since 2022. They finished the year with 28 points (9-13-6) and tumbled to 11th in the Eastern Conference after a promising start.

Overall, Goldberg has a record of 18-21-16 in 55 games leading the Young Lions. His draw in Chicago in 2024 (and subsequent penalty shootout loss) was his only playoff appearance. Meanwhile, his teams have been 9-7 in penalty shootouts over the past two seasons.

However, Goldberg has been successful in his primary objective of producing players for the first team. Since becoming head coach of OCB, three players — Colin Guske, Gustavo Caraballo, and Zakaria Taifi — have signed Homegrown Player contracts, while Justin Ellis is seemingly on the brink of signing one as well. He’s also coached backup goalkeeper Javier Otero and, most notably, starting right back Alex Freeman, helping them develop into first-team contributors.

Goldberg began his coaching career at Israeli side Hapoel Katamon in 2015 following a three-year playing career in the country. He then joined Club Nautico Hacoaj in Buenos Aires, Argentina as an assistant coach from 2017 to 2019 before becoming a competitive program coach at Barça Academy PRO Miami. After two years in South Florida, he was hired by Orlando City as Perelman’s assistant with OCB.

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