Orlando Pride
The Pride Still Have Time For A Strong Final Act
The Pride’s season before and after the summer break and how they can succeed with their remaining schedule.
I recently wrote about Barbra Banda’s injury forcing the Pride to find new band leaders, and my belief that they would do so. Since that article was published, the Pride have earned a disappointing one point from a possible 12 and have been outscored by six goals. That is bad, and some might even say it is super bad — not to be confused with the film Superbad, which was actually super good.
Before you go and place all the blame on me for the Pride’s run of bad form, I want to make two points:
- The Pride have won two games in September, although both were in the Concacaf W Champions Cup and against weak competition.
- The Pride’s issues date back to before Banda’s injury; it really has been almost like two seasons (an Apertura and a Clausura) with how the 2025 NWSL season is structured, and the Pride were strong in season one (pre-summer break) and have been — and continue to be — awful in season two (post-summer break).
Appropriating the Dickensian line and changing it to “it was a tale of two seasons” makes sense for the Pride this year, as the pre-summer break and post-summer break numbers are starkly different (all data from Opta’s tracking on fbref.com, and on a per game basis):
| Metric | Pre-Summer Break | Post-Summer Break |
|---|---|---|
| Points Earned | 1.92 | 0.50 |
| Goals Scored | 1.54 | 0.63 |
| Goals Allowed | 0.77 | 1.50 |
| Shots on Target | 5.31 | 3.63 |
| Goal Conversion Ratio (per shot) | 1 out of 10 | 1 out of 25 |
| Passing Completion % | 80.3% | 76.9% |
| Completed Passes | 392 | 331 |
| Progressive Plays | 60.0 | 56.5 |
I said those numbers were starkly different, and they are kind of like Ned Stark-ly different, with the numbers during the pre-summer break time being like when he was the Warden of the North (hopefully you read and/or watched Game of Thrones) and then the numbers in the post-summer break time being like when he, spoiler alert, got his head chopped off.
The Pride still have their heads, but they are holding on for dear life to a playoff spot, and if they lose at San Diego on Friday, they could find themselves in a tie for the eighth and final playoff spot by the end of the weekend.
Unlike in MLS, where even with only a few weeks to go in the season there are some teams who have played as many as three games more/fewer than other teams, every team in the NWSL has exactly five games left to play, which makes evaluating the strength of schedule remaining for every team relatively simple. I looked at every team’s final five games and calculated their opponents’ average points earned at home and away thus far this season, and came up with the following rankings for the remaining schedules, based on where teams are playing one another in the upcoming weeks:
| Team | Average Remaining Opponent Points per Game |
|---|---|
| Houston | 1.72 |
| Gotham | 1.63 |
| North Carolina | 1.54 |
| Washington | 1.46 |
| San Diego | 1.44 |
| Utah | 1.44 |
| Angel City | 1.38 |
| Kansas City | 1.38 |
| Chicago | 1.26 |
| Orlando | 1.25 |
| Portland | 1.23 |
| Bay | 1.22 |
| Seattle | 1.01 |
| Louisville | 1.00 |
After a lot of discouraging news and results for the Pride, it was nice to finally see some good news, as while the Pride’s final games are all against teams squarely in the playoff hunt, they did get somewhat lucky with the locations of those games:
- Sept. 26 at San Diego: the Wave average 1.09 points per game at home.
- Oct. 3 at Houston: the Dash average 1.09 points per game at home.
- Oct. 10 at home vs. Portland: the Thorns average 1.20 points per game on the road.
- Oct. 18 at Washington: the Spirit average 1.5 points per game at home.
- Nov. 1 at home vs. Seattle: the Reign average 1.37 points per game on the road.
It is not ideal to have three away games and only two home games, and the Pride also have to travel to Mexico City on Sept. 30 to play Club América and play Pachuca at home on Oct. 15 in Concacaf W Champions Cup play. However, they have the fifth-easiest remaining schedule, and despite sitting in seventh place in the standings and being at risk of missing the playoffs, they also are only two points behind the team in third place and could quickly find themselves back in the mix to be hosting at least one playoff game at Inter&Co Stadium.
Considering how poorly they have played since the summer break ended, it is rather shocking that the Pride could still be a top-four seed, and with a winning streak could even jump all the way up to second before the playoffs start. The Mane Land’s Michael Citro shared in the most recent SkoPurp Soccer podcast that the Pride’s nine-game winless streak ties the club’s longest single-season winless streak in league play, which was previously set when the team opened the 2019 season with seven losses and two draws. The 2025 team’s streak is not quite as dire, with four draws and five losses, but it is really high time they put that streak to bed and go out and get a win in NWSL play.
Perhaps I am an eternal optimist, seeing the world through my purple-tinted glasses, but I still believe this Pride team can make a run. The great thing about the NWSL playoffs is that it is single-elimination, and the Pride just need to get into the playoffs, and then they can beat anyone.
Seb Hines still does not have a clear first-choice lineup, but big summer acquisition Jacquie Ovalle looks settled in her role and is starting to create shots for her teammates — something that has been desperately missing for much of the season. Carson Pickett and Summer Yates recently have found some goal-scoring form, and if Marta can dig down and recreate the way she played for Brazil in July and for the Pride in the 2024 playoffs, I do not think any team will be happy to see the Pride in their bracket once the playoffs begin.
A lot that has gone wrong recently will have to go right, but the Pride did not accidentally have a strong opening half of the season. There is talent on this team and in the coaching staff, and I think they just need to get that one league win — those three points in the standings — and then they can get a run going all the way through November and deep into the playoffs.
And that is something that we all would be (Mc)lovin.
Orlando Pride
Haley Carter Departs the Orlando Pride
The mastermind behind the Orlando Pride’s success is leaving the club to pursue other opportunities.
In a surprising move, the Orlando Pride announced today that Vice President of Soccer Operations and Sporting Director Haley Carter is leaving the club to pursue new opportunities. Carter was an integral part of the club’s success during her three-year tenure, architecting the 2024 NWSL Shield and NWSL Championship and bringing in star players like Barbra Banda and Jacquie Ovalle, two of the four largest transfers in league history.
The former Houston Dash goalkeeper joined the Pride as vice president and general manager on Jan. 30, 2023, becoming the first person to hold that position and following Ian Fleming as GM. She signed a new contract that was supposed to keep her in Orlando through 2026 with an option year for 2027 just over a year ago on Aug. 30, 2024.
Carter became an accomplished business executive, coach, licensed attorney, and former U.S. Marine officer following her playing career. She is a certified professional football scout, holding Level I and II Talent Identification certification through the Professional Football Scouts Association. Carter brought a level of professionalism and experience to a Pride club that needed to turn things around, and that is exactly what she did, helping create a new club culture.
With the NWSL’s mandatory 28-day minimum break period starting, Carter and the club did not want the players hearing about the decision from anyone else and held a team call to let them know.
“We’d like to extend our gratitude to Haley for her contributions to the Pride over the past three years,” Orlando Pride Owner and Chairman Mark Wilf said in a club press release. “Haley played a key leadership role with our club, positioning the Pride among the NWSL’s and world’s elite clubs. Our family is incredibly excited about the future of the Pride and we look forward to continuing our commitment to invest in world-class players and building teams that continually compete for championships and positively represent Orlando and our supporters.”
“I’m beyond thankful to Mark Wilf and the entire ownership group for giving me the opportunity to be part of this club and for their unwavering support throughout my time here,” Carter said in the club’s release. “The Wilf family’s continued investment in this team, both on and off the field, is a reflection of their genuine belief in the Pride’s potential and in the future of women’s soccer. Their commitment to leading a world-class club is the foundation for continued success.
In her time here, Carter also made it a habit to lock down players to new contracts before those contracts ended to keep the team’s core together, maintaining continuity and building a leadership group. Obviously, her biggest accomplishment was building the team that won the NWSL double in 2024.
“We have begun a diligent and methodical search for a new soccer leader who will have the opportunity to work with a championship-caliber roster and coaching staff,” Wilf said in the club’s release. “Combined with our clear vision for the future and positive club culture, I am confident that the Pride is well positioned to continue its trajectory of success.”
Per the club, Carter will work with management to ensure a seamless transition.
What it means for Orlando
The phrase “to pursue new opportunities” in the club’s press release leads one to believe Carter already has her next gig lined up. If that’s within the NWSL, it’ll be a hard pill to swallow for Pride fans. We’ll have to wait for news on that.
Losing Carter is obviously a blow to the club, and it won’t be easy to find a replacement. Whoever comes in will need to maintain and build on the solid foundation Carter leaves behind. The Pride went from being a bottom-of-the-table team for whom players didn’t want to play to one of the more attractive destinations in the NWSL. While average players used to seek trades away from Orlando, now the club can, and has, make record transfers to the Pride happen.
Along with ownership, Head Coach Seb Hines and his staff, and the front office, she created a culture that values the players while remaining focused on winning.
It now falls to President of Business Operations Jarrod Dillon, his staff, and ownership to find the person to take the Pride back to the promised land. The organization is in a better place now than when Carter arrived. This is a position that needs to be filled, but bringing in the right person — even if it takes a little longer — is more important than filling it quickly. That said, the off-season will require some new pieces be brought in and some contract decisions that still need to be made, and someone will need to make those — likely before Carter’s replacement arrives.
Orlando Pride
2025 Orlando Pride Season in Review: Cosette Morché
The backup goalkeeper joined the Pride in the summer and appeared in a couple of Concacaf W Champions Cup matches.
The Orlando Pride signed goalkeeper Cosette Morché on Aug. 6 to a multi-year contract through the 2027 season with a mutual option year for 2028. Morché had spent the previous season with Fort Lauderdale United FC in the USL Super League, but her signing was necessary as a third goalkeeper after Kat Asman was loaned to Lexington FC in the USL Super League on July 2. It was a surprisingly long contract for the former Seattle Reign goalkeeper, considering Asman is under contract with the Pride through 2026.
The Texas A&M product appeared only a couple of times with the Pride in Concacaf W Champions Cup competition in her first year in Orlando.
Let’s look back at Morché’s first season in the City Beautiful.
Statistical Breakdown
Morché did not appear in an NWSL regular-season match or a playoff game. She made her Pride debut on Sept. 16 in Orlando’s 5-0 win at Chorrillo FC, as the Pride won their first game on foreign soil. Morché started two matches in the Concacaf W Champions Cup, going the full 90 in both for 180 total minutes and backstopping the club to a 1-0-1 record in her two starts in the competition. The native of Lawrenceville, GA allowed one goal across the two contests for a stellar 0.50 goals-against average. She faced a total of 27 shots from her opponents with eight of those on target. Morché made seven saves on those eight shots on frame, giving her a save percentage of 87.5%. She passed at a solid 90% rate on 70 attempts but did not attempt a long ball. in her two matches.
Best Game
It would be easy to take her lone win and shutout, but the truth is Morché had a lot more to do in the 1-1 draw against Pachuca on Oct. 15, facing twice as many shots (18) as she faced against Chorrillo (9) and…hahaha, I’m just kidding, I’m going with the shutout. Morché made four of her seven saves on the season in that match, and I felt she could have done a bit better on the shot that got past her against Pachuca — a goal that ultimately knocked the Pride out of the Concacaf W Champions Cup.
Against Chorrillo, Morché stopped all four shots on target that she faced on nine total attempts by the hosts. It was also a road match in international competition, which is a difficult environment for anyone making their first start for their club. She completed 32 of her 35 passes (91%) that night in Panama to effectively distribute the ball as well. It was a small sample size, so I’ve got to go with the shutout and the game with more saves and a better passing accuracy.
2025 Final Grade
Morché fell well short of the required 400 minutes across all competitions to qualify for a season grade after her first season in Orlando. Therefore, The Mane Land staff has no choice but to give an incomplete grade for the 2025 season.
2026 Outlook
With a contract through 2027, Morché doesn’t figure to be going anywhere unless a transfer is arranged, she is sent out on loan, or the player and club mutually agree to terminate the contract. The Pride have Morché, Asman, McKinley Crone, and Anna Moorhouse all under contract in 2026, which more or less settles the goalkeeper situation. It appears the club is happy with Moorhouse as the starter and Crone as the primary backup, although Morché may get a chance to win the backup job in camp. Barring injuries, Morché won’t likely see the pitch much in 2026 unless she is loaned out, but she’ll provide depth at a critical position.
Previous Season in Review Articles (Date Posted)
- Luana (11/17/25)
Orlando Pride
2025 Orlando Pride Season in Review: Luana
Luana returned from cancer treatment and recovery to make an emotional impact in 2025, culminating in her first goal for the Pride.
The Orlando Pride signed Brazilian international midfielder Luana on Dec. 14, 2023, inking her to a two-year deal with an additional option year. Along with fellow Brazilian international Angelina, the Pride had high hopes for a solid central midfield that could not only break up opposition play, but also break lines with quick, incisive passes to transition quickly from defense to attack.
Unfortunately, after only three matches in 2024, Luana was forced off the pitch by a health crisis after being diagnosed with Hodgkin’s lymphoma. The club made the announcement public on April 29 after Luana had a string of excused absences, placing the midfielder on the Season-Ending Injury (SEI) list as she began treatment.
Luana made it through treatment and spent a lot of time recovering and regaining her strength, returning to the pitch in early September of this year, capping an emotional time for both her and her teammates. She was rewarded for her perseverance and her play with a new one-year contract for 2026 with a mutual option year for 2027 just four days ago.
Let’s look back at Luana’s abbreviated second season in Orlando.
Statistical Breakdown
In NWSL play, Luana appeared in four regular-season games (all off the bench), totaling just 38 minutes. She did not contribute to a goal or attempt a shot in the regular season, completing 18 of her 24 passes for a 75% success rate, but she did not misplace a single pass in her final two outings of the regular season, going 12/12. She created one scoring chance in her limited playing time with one key pass, and she had one successful cross on three attempts and three complete long balls on five attempts (60%). On the defensive end, Luana contributed two tackles, two interceptions, and one clearance. She committed two fouls, drew one on her opponents, and she was booked once, receiving a yellow card against Portland late in the season.
In the playoffs, Luana appeared in one of Orlando’s two matches, coming off the bench against the Seattle Reign in the quarterfinals. The Brazilian played only seven minutes, but she made an impact. Luana scored her first Pride goal from the penalty spot deep in stoppage time to put the match out of reach as Orlando won 2-0. The goal was Luana’s only shot attempt, so she put her one shot on target for her lone goal contribution of the season. She completed two of her three passes (66.7%) without a key pass or a cross attempt, hitting one of her two long balls (50%). On the defensive end, Luana contributed a tackle and a clearance to Orlando’s winning effort, and she did not commit or draw a foul and she was not booked.
Luana appeared in four Concacaf W Champions Cup matches with the Pride this year, starting three and playing 171 minutes. She did not register a goal contribution in the tournament and neither of her two shots were on target. Luana completed 74.1% of her 85 passes, contributed three tackles, and committed eight fouls without drawing one on an opponent. She was booked once, receiving a yellow card against Club America.
Best Game
There aren’t many matches to choose from, as Luana made only nine appearances. However, two stand out and they were both in the Concacaf W Champions Cup. Luana came off the bench and played 20 strong minutes in her 2025 debut against Alajuelense. However, I’ll go with her 45 minutes as a starter in the team’s next game in the competition, a 5-0 win over Chorrillo on the road on Sept. 16. It equaled her second-longest outing of the year. Luana did not record a goal contribution or put her only shot attempt on target, but she was a stabilizing force in the middle for the Pride. She completed 76% of her 25 passes, recorded a tackle, and provided plenty of grit in Orlando’s midfield, breaking up play and committing three fouls without picking up one of the Pride’s three yellow cards on the night. The 32-year-old made way for Ally Lemos at halftime but turned in a good performance on the night.
2025 Final Grade
Luana fell 22 minutes shy of earning the minimum 400 total minutes to earn a rating from The Mane Land this season. This comes after she also received an incomplete rating for 2024 after missing the bulk of the season for her treatment and recovery. It’s safe to say that due to her unfortunate diagnosis last year, we still haven’t really seen what Luana can bring to the club. Hopefully that will change next season.
2026 Outlook
Luana signed a new contract through 2026 just days ago, and her new deal includes a mutual option year for 2027. While she will have an opportunity to earn a starting spot in preseason training camp, it will be difficult to unseat either member of the current central midfield pairing of Haley McCutcheon and Angelina. One would expect her to be a key backup, however, if she can continue to work her way back to the form she had prior to her Hodgkins lymphoma treatment in 2025. There is precedence for athletes returning to their previous form after such treatment — most notably NHL legend Mario Lemieux.
With a full off-season to continue getting stronger and working her way back, Luana may have an opportunity to make an incredible comeback and become an impact player in 2026. This would be a boost for an Orlando team that needs to improve to get back to the top and could use Luana’s bite in the midfield, her great vision, and her ability to unlock opposing defenses and break lines.
This is the first of our 2025 Orlando Pride Season in Review articles. Every player who played minutes this past season and who finished the year on the club roster (i.e., not Ally Watt, who is technically on loan from Denver) will be reviewed.
Players who logged more than 400 minutes (combined regular season plus playoffs and Concacaf W Champions Cup) will receive a composite score between 1 and 10 as determined by a panel of The Mane Land writers, while those who did not reach that threshold will receive an incomplete grade.
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