Orlando Pride
Replacing Barbra Banda Requires New Band Leaders
The statistical impact of Barbra Banda’s loss and what the Pride will need to do to replace her production.
They say it never rains in southern California, but I was in San Diego when the news dropped that Barbra Banda will be out for the rest of the season, and I definitely felt a cold November rain in August. The article I linked to in the previous sentence covers both Banda’s injury and what it means for Orlando, but I am going to add a little more here on the statistical impact of Banda’s loss, because she unequivocally was the leader of the offensive band up until her injury.
Thus far this season the Pride have “scored” 22 goals, but I used quotes there because four of those 22 goals were own goals. They count on the scoreboard, and the Pride did put the defense under pressure to cause the own goal, but own goals always contain an element of luck to them that cannot be expected to continue at a similar rate in the future. That leaves 18 goals scored by Pride players, which ties them with three other teams for second from the bottom in true goals scored. This is not where a team with championship aspirations wants to be, and it is worse when you look at these 18 goals and you see the following (all data from fbref.com)
| Goal Category | Count |
|---|---|
| Goals Scored by Banda | 8 |
| Goals Secondary Assisted by Banda | 2* |
| Goals Directly Assisted by Banda | 1 |
| Goals Due to a Foul on Banda | 1 |
| Total Goal Involvements | 12 |
I included an asterisk on the two in that table because Marta scored a penalty kick against Gotham FC after a foul was committed on Angelina in the box, but it was Banda who played the ball to Angelina before she was fouled. I know it was not an actual secondary assist, but I included it more for illustrative purposes. We can quibble about 11 versus 12 if you like, but considering that Pride players have only scored 18 goals, it means that Banda was heavily involved in either 61% or 67% of the Pride’s true goals scored this season. I am a math major, and both of those are consequential percentages.
Both of those percentages are big numbers, but a bigger and scarier number is 100%, which comes into play here, because Banda was on the field for all 18 of the goals scored by Pride players and all four of the own goals the Pride’s opponents put into their own net.
Banda is not the only player for whom this is true, it is also true for Haley McCutcheon, Anna Moorhouse, and Emily Sams, but as a goalkeeper and a back line player, Moorhouse and Sams rarely threaten offensively. McCutcheon has been McClutcheon offensively at times in the past, in particular during the 2024 playoffs, but as a defensive midfielder, goal scoring is not her primary focus on the field. And yet…she is the Pride’s third-leading goal scorer in 2025, which is another reminder of how offensively challenged this year’s team has been. McCutcheon being the third-leading goal scorer, with two goals, 17 games into the season is another reminder on top of that additional reminder. We are getting into Inception-level reminders of how poorly the Pride’s offense has performed. Where is our totem to get us back to reality?
Oh wait, this is reality, and the Pride are going to need a real solution to their goal-scoring woes if they want to make a run in the NWSL playoffs and Concacaf W Champions Cup. Signing Jacqui Ovalle will definitely help, as she is an incredible player, which is why she is nicknamed “La Maga” (the magician) and was signed for a world-record transfer fee. The Pride need to create more shots, and on paper the M&M combination of La Maga and Marta looks like a good solution to what has been an issue for the Pride this season.
| Offensive Category | 2024 | 2025 |
|---|---|---|
| Shots per 90 mins | 15.7 | 12.7 |
| Shots on Target (SoT) % | 37% | 38% |
| Goal Conversion per SoT | 25% | 20% |
The Pride are taking 19% fewer shots per 90 minutes this season, and while they are putting a similar percentage on target, they are converting those shots at only a 20% conversion rate, which ranks second to last in the NWSL, and is, coincidentally, a 20% reduction from their 25% conversion rate in 2024. These dual drops are a double whammy, as they are taking fewer shots and converting the ones they take at a lower rate. With Banda’s departure the stats are even more grim. Here are the same numbers, with Banda’s production removed:
| Offensive Category | 2024 (non-Banda) | 2025 (non-Banda) |
|---|---|---|
| Shots per 90 mins | 11.8 | 8.5 |
| Shots on Target (SoT) % | 34% | 32% |
| Goal Conversion per SoT | 24% | 17% |
Even with the Pride’s opponents keying a lot of their defensive gameplans around stopping Banda this season, the rest of the team has seen a drop in shots taken and shot conversion rate as well, to the tune of a 28% reduction in non-Banda shots and a 27% reduction in non-Banda goal conversion. The Pride have been buoyed by opposition own goals this season, benefitting from a league-leading four, but if they are going to succeed in the upcoming months they are going to need to start getting more shots off and converting them at a higher rate.
The arrival of Ovalle and her magic tricks will almost certainly change the Pride’s offensive gameplan, as she is an elite wing player who will likely play on the left side and threaten by cutting back into the middle, which will allow the left-footed Marta some freedom to get open into that vacated left side channel — similar to how Martín Ojeda does for Orlando City — and use her stronger foot to shoot or cross back into the middle. The big question is who will be there to finish those crosses, and Seb Hines and the rest of the coaching staff have surely been discussing that ad nauseum since they received the news of Banda’s season-ending injury.
I believe the Pride have the talent on their roster to overcome this injury and have a successful final few months, and in some ways having the extra Concacaf W Champions Cup games actually helps Orlando, because the club can try some different player combinations to see what works. Their group contains two teams that the Pride should comfortably beat — Alajuelense and Chorrillo — and while they cannot assume victory, they will be favored by several goals and may use those games to experiment a little bit with the attacking lineup. Their games against América and Pachuca will be more difficult, but they are not for another month (Sept. 30 and Oct. 15) and by then Ovalle, presumably, will have a few games under her belt, and they likely will have figured out a striker plan to replace Banda’s minutes. They do not need one like-for-like replacement, but in order to win some more hardware, they will need at least league-average-level play for 90 minutes every game from everyone playing at striker.
Losing a superstar is never a good thing, but I am confident that the coaching staff can figure out some ideas to replace Banda (perhaps we can call these players Bandaids?) and I still believe the Pride will…wait for it…band together and make beautiful music during deep runs in both the Concacaf W Champions Cup and NWSL playoffs.
Vamos Pride!
Orlando Pride
Orlando Pride Announce 2026 NWSL Schedule
We now know who, when, and where the Pride will play during the 2026 NWSL regular season.
The National Women’s Soccer League schedule was announced this morning, telling us who, where, and when the Orlando Pride will play this year. The 2026 season will once again feature a balanced schedule with all teams playing the other 15 teams once at home and once on the road. The addition of Boston Legacy FC and Denver Summit FC will see each team play 30 games, making it the longest regular season in league history.
The Pride will begin the season at home, facing the Seattle Reign on March 15. This season begins with a two-game homestand, ending with the club’s first-ever match against the Summit and the return of Ally Watt. The first road game will occur on March 25 when the Pride face Chicago Stars FC in Evanston, IL.
The Pride’s home schedule will end on Oct. 25 when they face NJ/NY Gotham FC. They’ll then travel west to face Seattle on Decision Day in the return game on Nov. 1, concluding the team’s 11th season in existence.
Orlando’s games this year are well distributed among the league’s various broadcast partners. The Pride will play nine times on Victory+ — the league’s new free streaming partner. Additionally, they’ll play six times on Prime Video, five times on Ion, twice on CBS Sports Network, once on ESPN, and once on ESPN2. The remaining games will be available on NWSL+.
Should the Pride qualify for the playoffs for the third consecutive year, the quarterfinals will take play Nov. 6-8, followed by the semifinals on Nov. 14-15. The championship game will take place on Nov. 21 at a location yet to be determined.
The longest homestand this year is two games and will occur three times. As previously mentioned, the Pride begin with a pair of home games against Seattle and Denver on March 15 and March 20, respectively. They’ll host the Washington Spirit and North Carolina Courage on May 2 and May 8, respectively; the Kansas City Current and Boston on July 10 and July 15, respectively; and Utah Royals FC and the Houston Dash on Aug. 29 and Sept. 6, respectively.
The longest road trip this year is a three-game swing in May. Orlando will face Boston at Gillette Stadium on May 12, Denver on May 16, and San Diego Wave FC on May 24.
The league will take a month-long break during June as the country hosts the 2026 FIFA World Cup. The Pride’s final game before the break is on May 29 at home against Bay FC and they will return to action on July 3 against Angel City FC in Los Angeles.
The busiest months of the season will be May and July, when the Pride will play six times in each month. They’ll play four times in March, August, and September, three times in October, twice in April, and once in November.
Here’s a month-by-month breakdown of the regular season:
- March — 4
- April — 2
- May — 6
- June — 0
- July — 6
- August — 4
- September — 4
- October — 3
- November — 1
The most common day the Pride will play this year will be Friday (11 times), the same as last year. They’ll play nine games on Sunday, seven on Saturday, two on Wednesday, and one rare Tuesday match.
Here’s the Pride’s breakdown by day for the regular season:
- Monday — 0
- Tuesday — 1
- Wednesday — 2
- Thursday — 0
- Friday — 11
- Saturday — 7
- Sunday — 9
For fans that follow Orlando City and the Pride, the teams will play on the same day five times. However, two of the days won’t see the games overlap. On May 2, the Pride hosts the Spirit at 4 p.m. and the Lions face Inter Miami away at 7 p.m. On Sept. 19, the Pride host the Portland Thorns at 4 p.m while City plays at the New England Revolution at 7:30 p.m.
The teams’ games will overlap on three occasions, but they never start at the same time. On May 16, Orlando City hosts Atlanta United at 7:30 p.m. before the Pride play in Denver at 8:45 p.m. On Aug. 15, Orlando City hosts FC Cincinnati at 7:30 p.m. and the Pride play in Portland at 8:45 p.m. On Aug. 29, the Pride host the Royals at 7 p.m. and Orlando City faces Minnesota United FC away at 8:30 p.m.
2026 Orlando Pride Schedule (All Times Eastern)
- Sunday, March 15 — vs. Seattle Reign FC, 4 p.m. (Victory+)
- Friday, March 20 — vs. Denver Summit FC, 8 p.m. (Victory+)
- Wednesday, March 25 — at Chicago Stars FC 8 p.m. (Victory+)
- Sunday, March 29 — at NJ/NY Gotham FC, 7 p.m. (Victory+)
- Friday, April 3 — vs. Angel City FC, 8 p.m. (Prime Video)
- Friday, April 24 — at Racing Louisville FC, 5:30 p.m. (Victory+)
- Saturday, May 2 — vs. Washington Spirit, 4 p.m. (ION)
- Friday, May 8 — vs. North Carolina Courage, 8 p.m. (Prime Video)
- Tuesday, May 12 — at Boston Legacy FC, 8 p.m. (Victory+)
- Saturday, May 16 — at Denver Summit FC, 8:45 p.m. (ION)
- Sunday, May 24 — at San Diego Wave FC, 7 p.m. (Victory+)
- Friday, May 29 — vs. Bay FC, 7 p.m. (NWSL+)
- Friday, July 3 — at Angel City FC, 10 p.m. (Prime Video)
- Friday, July 10 — vs. Kansas City Current, 8 p.m. (Prime Video)
- Wednesday, July 15 — vs. Boston Legacy FC, 7 p.m. (NWSL+)
- Saturday, July 18 — at Utah Royals FC, 8:45 p.m. (ION)
- Friday, July 24 — vs. Chicago Stars FC, 8 p.m. (Victory+)
- Friday, July 31 — at North Carolina Courage, 8 p.m. (Prime Video)
- Saturday, Aug. 8 — vs. Racing Louisville FC, 7 p.m. (NWSL+)
- Saturday, Aug. 15 — at Portland Thorns, 8:45 p.m. (ION)
- Sunday, Aug. 23 — at Washington Spirit, 4 p.m. (ESPN2)
- Saturday, Aug. 29 — vs. Utah Royals FC, 7 p.m. (NWSL+)
- Sunday, Sept. 6 — vs. Houston Dash, 7 p.m. (Victory+)
- Friday, Sept. 11 — at Kansas City Current, 8 p.m. (Prime Video)
- Saturday, Sept. 19 — vs. Portland Thorns, 4 p.m. (ION)
- Sunday, Sept. 27 — at Bay FC, 5 p.m. (ESPN)
- Friday, Oct. 2 — vs. San Diego Wave FC, 8 p.m. (Prime Video)
- Sunday, Oct. 18 — at Houston Dash, 1 p.m. (CBSSN)
- Sunday, Oct. 25 — vs. NJ/NY Gotham FC, 3 p.m. (CBSSN)
- Sunday, Nov. 1 — at Seattle Reign FC, 5 p.m. (TBD)
Orlando Pride
How the Orlando Pride Can Return to the Mountaintop
What needs to happen for the Pride to win hardware in 2026?
A fall-off after winning the double in 2024 was probably inevitable, yet the Orlando Pride still managed to come within minutes of playing in a second straight NWSL championship match. Many of the pieces are still there, and there are resources to get more. However, there have been some big changes in personnel on and off the pitch.
What needs to happen for the Pride to challenge for another double in 2026?
Reinvigorate the Attack
The return of Barbra Banda is the balm to soothe the worries of Orlando Pride fans. Even when the Pride struggled before she was injured, Banda scored plenty of goals. The biggest problem is she was left on an island as the team tried lobbing the ball up the field to her, hoping she’d do it all herself. Jacquie Ovalle didn’t take the NWSL by storm as we hoped, but it sometimes takes time for a player to adjust to a new league and club. If they had been able to work together, it’s likely the Orlando attack wouldn’t have faltered. Ovalle’s ability to deliver the ball into the box, combined with Banda’s ability to put the ball in the net, is a dangerous combo.
Of course, the Pride will need more than the two of them if the club is to win some trophies in 2026. I made this point several times last season, but Marta needs to find her form from 2024. With Banda and Ovalle in the attack, it should allow Marta the freedom she needs to be creative without having to carry the offense. Additionally, the Pride need other attackers to also find their 2024 form. I’m looking at Julie Doyle and Summer Yates in particular.
Fill the Roster
Haley Carter didn’t leave the cupboard bare when she departed for the wicked Washington Spirit. As such, Seb Hines and new Pride Vice President of Soccer Operations and General Manager Caitlin Carducci don’t have too much to do. But, the transfer of Emily Sams did create a need at center back. Fortunately, the Orlando Pride received $650,000 in intraleague transfer funds for Sams. That kind of cash can go a long way to filling the gaps in the roster.
With Kylie Nadaner on maternity leave and Rafaelle seemingly always on the verge of injury, finding a replacement for Sams is a priority. Some might point to Zara Chavoshi, but unless she levels up quickly, Carducci will need to look elsewhere. Offensively, as important as Banda is, adding another striker is necessary for quality depth. The departures of Ally Watt and Prisca Chilufya mean there’s a spot for an even better backup striker. I’m also not opposed to a quality left back.
Find the Grit
In 2024, the entire Pride team was personally offended if the opposition scored a goal. The level of defending up and down the pitch was a big factor in breaking records and winning hardware. The players need to pick up the chip and put it back on their metaphorical shoulders. I somewhat addressed this with the need to replace Sams, but there’s more to it than that. The Pride wore teams down over the course of a match, meaning it wasn’t necessary to score tons of goals. Of course, it’s not just the back line that needs to be better, but the entire team. Fortunately, Hines knows a thing or two about defenses. The Pride still have Marta to motivate them, and that — while not everything — is not a small advantage.
Those are the things I will be looking for in 2026. Let me know your thoughts or ideas in the comments below. Vamos Orlando!
Orlando Pride
Orlando Pride Name Caitlin Carducci Vice President of Soccer Operations and General Manager
Caitlin Carducci leaves the Kansas City Current to become the Pride’s new vice president of soccer operations and general manager.
The Orlando Pride have found their replacement for Haley Carter, naming former Kansas City Current general manager Caitlin Carducci as the club’s new vice president of soccer operations and general manager. Carducci arrives in Orlando after helping assemble the Current squad that broke some of the Pride’s league records set in 2024, moving from the 2025 NWSL Shield winners to the 2024 NWSL Shield Winners.
“Caitlin is a proven leader whose experience across every level of women’s soccer and history of building championship-caliber rosters set her apart,” Orlando Pride Owner and Chairman Mark Wilf said in a club press release. “She emerged as the clear choice in our search with her deep expertise, strong reputation, and a vision that aligns with our culture. Caitlin is the ideal person to elevate the strong foundation we have established and position the Pride for sustained success.”
The Pride used Bloom Sports Partners to assist in the club’s search for Carter’s replacement. Carter left behind a team that won the double in 2024, capturing both the NWSL Shield and NWSL Championship, and came tantalizingly close to a second straight appearance in the NWSL final last season. Carducci, who helped architect the team that won another trophy in 2024 — the 2024 NWSL x Liga MX Femenil Summer Cup — now inherits the club Carter left behind on Nov. 18 of last year to take a job with the Washington Spirit.
“I’m incredibly honored and excited to take on this role and help elevate the strong foundation that the club’s players, staff, and supporters have already created,” Carducci said in the club’s release. “The chance to work with the Wilf family, whose leadership and investment reflect their commitment to a world-class organization, along with a championship-level roster and technical staff, made this an easy decision. I’m eager to begin this next chapter, strengthen the inclusive and ambitious culture that defines this club, and help push the Pride toward new heights.”
Carducci spent the last three seasons with Kansas City, serving multiple roles, most recently as the Current’s general manager. She joined Kansas City in 2023 as director of soccer operations, becoming interim general manager in May of 2024. Carducci became the club’s GM later that season. Her key accomplishments include bringing in the final piece of the Current’s puzzle — Brazilian international goalkeeper Lorena, who broke Pride goalkeeper Anna Moorhouse’s short-lived NWSL single-season record for shutouts. Carducci also acquired Ally Sentnor during the 2025 season from the Utah Royals. She was also instrumental in the Current re-signing star players Debinha, Temwa Chawinga, Michelle Cooper, and Lo’eau Labonta.
That Current team set new league single-season records for most wins (21), points (65), and shutouts (16), and won the NWSL Shield faster than any previous winner in NWSL history.
During her playing days, Carducci played at Ashland University. The Central Ohio native later served as an assistant coach at Ohio Northern University while completing her law degree.
Like Carter, Carducci has a varied background and numerous skillsets that will serve her well in her new position. She served as a compliance officer at Xavier University and as manager of member programs for U.S. Soccer, overseeing professional player registration and FIFA compliance and acting as the primary point of contact for organization members, including state associations and professional leagues. She returned to U.S. Soccer in 2022, where she became vice president of member programs and stakeholder engagement.
What It Means for Orlando
In the short term, hiring a general manager should help fill out a roster that came close to a second consecutive NWSL final, despite being without star striker Barbra Banda for the final weeks of the season and all of the postseason. That roster needs immediate help at center back after Emily Sams recently requested and received a trade to Angel City. There aren’t a lot of holes in the Pride roster, but the center back group needs help and more production and depth are needed in the attack.
Overall, this seems on the surface to be an addition that mirrors the Pride bringing Carter to Orlando in 2023. She brings a variety of experiences that will help the club in multiple ways. From her law degree to her compliance background to evaluating talent and luring those players to non-marquee market teams, Carducci seems to check all the boxes. It’s easy to understand how the club arrived at this decision. Ultimately, how Carducci’s tenure in Orlando goes will depend on what the club does on the field and how well it develops talent.
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