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Orlando City B

Orlando City B vs. Carolina Core FC: Final Score 3-3 (4-2) as Young Lions Keep Playoff Hopes Alive

OCB drew at Carolina Core FC and won on penalties to claim two points, keeping their playoff hopes barely alive.

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Image courtesy of Orlando City B

Orlando City B (9-12-6, 37 points) gathered a huge two points away from home by drawing Carolina Core FC (8-9-10, 39 points) 3-3 at Truist Point in High Point, NC, and winning the ensuing penalty shootout 4-2. Paul Leonardi gave the hosts a 2-0 lead with goals in the 36th and 40th minutes, with Shak Mohammed pulling one back just before halftime. Gustavo Caraballo equalized four minutes after the break, but the Young Lions quickly conceded a third to Daniel Chica. A Justin Hylton shot off the crossbar bounced off the back of goalkeeper Alex Sutton for the equalizer.

The Young Lions then took care of business from the penalty spot to claim a second point from the match.

OCB Head Coach Manuel Goldberg made two changes from the team that lost 1-0 to Huntsville City FC Sunday night. Titus Sandy, Jr. and Gustavo Caraballo entered the starting lineup for Favian Loyola and Thalles.

The back line in front of goalkeeper and birthday boy Carlos Mercado was Tahir Reid-Brown, Thomas Williams, Hayden Sargis, and Riyon Tori. Colin Guske and Hylton were in the defensive midfield behind Caraballo, Justin Ellis, and Sandy, with Mohammed up top.

This was a wild game from start to finish with bad giveaways in the back, desperate defending, and some excellent goals. The hosts dominated most of the first half and it looked like they’d run away with the three points when they went up 2-0. But the Young Lions showed a lot of fight to come back, evening the game at 2-2 in the 49th minute. Even when they quickly gave the lead back, OCB continued to push, finding an equalizer, and could’ve found a late winner.

Carolina started the game on the front foot. The first shot of the game came in the seventh minute when Antonio Pineda took a shot from the right side of the box. There wasn’t much room for the attempt and Williams was there to block it.

Ellis played a great diagonal ball to Caraballo on the left side in the 16th minute. Sandy was making a back-post run and Caraballo played the ball across the face of goal. Unfortunately, the pass was a bit too far in front of Sandy.

Leonardi spent the early part of the game attempting to set up his teammates, but he went for goal himself in the 22nd minute. Taking Reid-Brown one-on-one, the right back created enough space to get a shot off but sent his attempt high and wide of the target.

Carolina kept the ball in the OCB third, resulting in Jathan Juarez receiving it at the top left corner of the box. Sandy let the midfielder reach the middle of the field, where Juarez shot between Guske and Hylton. It was the game’s first shot on target, but Mercado was there to guide it away.

Facundo Canete played a ball to the right in the 28th minute with Pineda making a run. Pineda laid the ball off for Leonardi entering the box but Williams got in the way of a first-touch shot.

Reid-Brown went down in the OCB box in the 30th minute. After an evaluation, he was unable to continue and was replaced by Jackson Platts. It’s the second time in three games that Reid-Brown had to depart early, suffering an injury in the 19th minute at Inter Miami CF II on Sept. 14.

Ellis sent Mohammed behind the Carolina back line in the 34th minute. The striker chased down the ball before it went out of play. He aimed to slip the ball inside the far post but shot wide.

On the other end, Leonardi continued to cause problems. He sent a dangerous cross into the six-yard box in the 35th minute that went just over Anthony Sumo, Jr.’s head. The ball ended up with Juarez near the top of the box, but Tori deflected his shot out of play for a corner kick. The ensuing set piece was cleared by Mohammed and collected by Juarez. The midfielder passed to his right to Leonardi, who dribbled around Mohammed and Ellis before beating Mercado to his near post to give the hosts a 1-0 lead.

Three minutes later, Leonardi doubled the Carolina advantage. Juarez received the ball on the left in the 40th minute and sent a cross into the box that Sargis headed away. However, Leonardi was there to chest it down and hit it past Mercado to make it 2-0 Core FC.

While he played most of the half on the right, Leonardi nearly created a third goal for Carolina from the left in the 42nd minute. The outside back drew a pair of defenders while Sumo made a run to the top of the six-yard box. It was a good pass to the striker, but Sargis cleared it away just in time.

OCB took advantage of a Carolina mistake in the 45th minute to get back into the game. Juarez threw the ball in to Alenga Charles, who was careless and lost it to Tori. Charles went in with a hard challenge on the right back, but Tori got his pass away just in time. Ellis turned and played Mohammed into the box, setting the striker up for his 11th goal of the season.

Mohammed nearly matched Leonardi’s brace in the fourth minute of stoppage time when an excellent ball to the back post found the striker making a run. Mohammed got his head to the cross, but he couldn’t get over the ball, sending it over the crossbar.

The final chance of the half came in the seventh minute of stoppage time, when Charles took Guske down in the Carolina third of the field. Ellis took the set piece, sending the ball curling towards the back post, where Guske was making a run. Unfortunately, it was just beyond the reach of the midfielder and out of play.

Carolina ended the first 45 minutes with more shots (9-3), shots on target (3-1), and crosses (5-2). OCB had better passing accuracy (84.9%-82%) and each team won one corner kick.

The Young Lions got the second half off to a great start, scoring in the 49th minute. Sutton received a pass and sent it wide right for Kai Thomas. The right back looked to clear the ball up the field, but Caraballo closed him down, blocking the clearance and creating a counterattack. Sutton came out to cut down Caraballo’s angle, but the teenager slipped it underneath to even the game at 2-2.

Unfortunately, the Young Lions quickly gave the lead back to the hosts in the 51st minute. Williams was called for a questionable foul on Sumo at the top of the box. Rodriguez and Canete stood over the ball, with Canete taking the set piece. Mercado blocked the shot, but none of his defenders responded, allowing Chica to give Carolina the 3-2 lead.

Sumo received a pass on the right in the 55th minute and dribbled inside with Guske on his hip. However, the attacker was able to create enough space for a shot. Sumo aimed for the top corner but sent the attempt off target.

A minute later, Caraballo tried to create another equalizer when he sent a dangerous cross in from the left side. Mohammed was making a run into the six-yard box and looked to have position, but Rodriguez did well to get to the ball first, clearing it away.

The Young Lions found their second equalizer of the night in the 64th minute when Mohammed played the ball to Caraballo making a run on the left. The midfielder cut inside to lose a pair of defenders before finding enough space to shoot. Sutton did well to get down and block the attempt away. The ball went back to Caraballo in front of goal, but Aryeh Miller blocked his second shot . This time it went to Hylton, who sent his shot off the crossbar. But the ball carmoned off the woodwork, bounced off Sutton’s back, and went in, tying the game at 3-3.

The Young Lions were looking for their first lead of the game in the 70th minute when Ellis took possession off a turnover in the Carolina third. The attacker played it near the penalty spot to Mohammed, who immediately laid it off for Hylton. Unfortunately, the shot deflected over the crossbar. The ensuing set piece was punched away by Sutton, ending the threat.

Pineda sent a long ball across the box for Leonardi in the 73rd minute that the French defender volleyed on goal. It was heading wide, but Mercado decided to stop it anyway. Unfortunately, he fumbled the ball, forcing his defender to clear it out of play for a Carolina throw-in. The ensuing throw-in found Pineda just inside the box, and the attacker turned his two defenders to create space for a shot on goal. Tori got in front to block the shot. The ball got through the defender, but it was easy for Mercado to pick up.

OCB won a corner kick in the 78th minute. However, before the set piece could be taken, Hylton went down just outside the Carolina box, requiring attention. Goldberg used the stoppage to replace Hylton and Sandy with Dylan Judelson and Loyola.

It looked like the Young Lions might take the lead in the 83rd minute when Caraballo played Mohammed behind the back line. There were no defenders behind Mohammed and the striker went down after some contact. A foul would’ve been a red card, but the referee allowed play to continue. Loyola took over and dribbled into the box before losing possession.

Ellis sent Mohammed behind the back line again in the 86th minute — this time without any contact. The striker was in a foot race with Rodriguez, who put enough pressure on Mohammed to force the shot wide of the near post.

Ellis made a long run in the 88th minute and decided to the shot himself. The attacker sent the ball towards the back post, however, Sutton did well to get down and block it. Mohammed followed up, but the offside flag went up.

In the 90th minute, Ellis cut inside to lose his defender, sending his shot off the crossbar. The ball was headed away, but Ellis regained possession, sending it wide for Caraballo. The midfielder sent a cross into the box that Sutton easily collected. A minute later, Loyola tried to make something happen from long distance. The second-half substitute fired from the right side, but it was a relatively weak shot that caused little trouble for Sutton.

Glory Nzingo took a shot from just outside the box in the third minute of stoppage time that Sargis deflected out for a corner. Leonardi took the set piece, playing it to Jacob Evans, who lifted it into the box. The ball bounced dangerously around the six before Williams desperately cleared it away.

The Young Lions got one last chance in the fifth minute of stoppage time when Chica took down Ellis 22 yards out from goal. Loyola was the only one standing over the ball. He went for goal but sent his shot over the crossbar.

At full time, Carolina had more shots (15-13), shots on target (6-5), crosses (9-3), and corner kicks (5-4). OCB had better passing accuracy (87.6%-82.5%), but converted three times to earn a crucial draw.

Per MLS NEXT Pro rules, draws go to a shootout to see who gets the extra point.

Mercado came up big for the Young Lions, saving Evans’ opening penalty and the fourth penalty by Ibrahim Covi. Meanwhile, Ellis, Judelson, Mohammed, and Guske all converted to ensure OCB took home two points.

With these two points, Goldberg now has 77 in the regular season since taking over as head coach last year, tying Anthony Pulis’ total in 2016 and 2017. However, Pulis didn’t have the opportunity to claim extra points in penalty shootouts, unlike Goldberg, who has done so eight times. As a result, Pulis reached 77 points in 62 games while Goldberg has done so in 53 games.

Regardless of the result, OCB would’ve finished this game in ninth and below the playoff line due to their -14 goal difference. However, claiming two points keeps their hopes alive for another week. They now sit one point behind Toronto FC II and two points behind Carolina with one game remaining for all three teams.

That doesn’t mean they’ll finish in this position. NYCFC II and FC Cincinnati 2 are two points back, and Atlanta United 2 is three points back. All three have one game in hand and can jump the Young Lions in the coming days.


The next game for OCB is Decision Day on Sunday, Oct. 5. They welcome FC Cincinnati 2 to Osceola County Stadium at 1 p.m. with a chance to make the playoffs for the third straight year.

Orlando City B

Four Young Lions To Fall For This Valentine’s Day

A look at four players poised to make the leap from OCB to Orlando City, possibly as soon as this season.

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Dan MacDonald, The Mane Land

In the spirit of Sunday’s Daytona 500, just a short drive down I-4 from my location here in Oviedo, let me also say “start your engines” to the 2026 MLS season, as we are now finally just one week away from Orlando City’s season opener on Feb. 21. The final preseason game is today, and you can expect a lot of coverage on our site and on The Mane Land PawedCast next week in advance of Red Bull New York, a.k.a. the New York Red Bulls, a.k.a. the team that used to be called the MetroStars, coming to Inter&Co Stadium to get the season started.

Orlando City B’s season will start a few weeks later, on March 2. Just like with the senior club, we do not yet have a full and final roster for the Young Lions, but we can celebrate Valentine’s Day today by looking at a few OCB players who deserve some love this year, as they have overperformed their age level and, if they stay with the club, will be pushing for minutes with Orlando City as early as this season.

In early January our Sean Rollins wrote about four OCB players who might make their Orlando City debuts this season, and here in mid-February I still agree with his thought that Tahir Reid-Brown is the OCB player most likely to make his senior debut, as Orlando City has not signed any new outside backs, so the depth chart, even with some experimentation with Iván Angulo moving the to back line, remains thin on both the right and left.

That depth chart is especially thin due to the departure of former OCB standout Alex Freeman, who was transferred to Villarreal in Spain a few weeks ago, so while Óscar Pareja may go with a back line using veterans Adrián Marín on the left and Angulo on the right to start the season, Zakaria Taifi will be battling with Angulo to fill Freeman’s shoes on the right. If Taifi is able to wrest away the starting position from Angulo, then he would be closely following Freeman’s path, as when Freeman moved up to the senior team in 2025 it was Taifi who took over at right back with OCB. Now, with Freeman departing Orlando City to wear Villarreal yellow, Taifi is again in line to replace him, wearing Orlando City’s new yellow gold ‘Sunken Treasure’ kit (at least when away from home).

Freeman and Taifi both played with OCB for three seasons, primarily at right back, and going into this year they had ranked third (Freeman) and 14th (Taifi) in minutes played in that club’s history. Taifi is almost exactly one year younger than Freeman, and while he was solid for OCB and made nine appearances for the senior club in 2025, he did not play as many minutes or perform as well as Freeman did while in MLS NEXT Pro (all data from fotmob.com, because the MLS NEXT Pro website, for some reason, does not have any data for the 2022 season):

SeasonAge on July 1Minutes PlayedAvg. FotMob Rating
Alex Freeman: 202217.91,3926.98
Alex Freeman: 202318.91,9447.02
Alex Freeman: 202419.92,3327.64
Zakaria Taifi: 202317.71,1226.58
Zakaria Taifi: 202418.75136.48
Zakaria Taifi: 202519.71,3266.84

A player’s FotMob rating is not the be-all, end-all of ranking methodology, but to the site’s credit, FotMob tracks thousands of games and uses the same formula to create its rankings, so you can easily compare the ratings of two players at the same position in the same league. In the comparison above, Freeman’s final OCB season outperformed Taifi’s by a wide margin. Freeman finished as the top-ranked fullback that season, while Taifi finished 33rd in 2025, though in fairness to Taifi, he often dressed for Orlando City and probably practiced with the first team a lot as well, so he may not have had been able to develop the same chemistry with the OCB team in 2025 that Freeman did in 2024.

While Taifi may not have the same trajectory as Freeman, he still ranked 33rd among fullbacks, and among the 32 who ranked ahead of him 25 were at least one year older, including more than 10 who were at least three years older. Age and performance level are huge in “minor” leagues like MLS NEXT Pro, the NBA G League, and Minor League Baseball, and during the last four years the top 25 players in FotMob Rating each year have an average age of 21.9 with an average rating of 7.58. Taifi is still two years younger than those players, and while 6.84 is a bit shy of 7.58, he would be expected to improve during each of the next two years. If he were to improve by only 3% each year, for example, he would go from 6.84 to 7.26, which would have put him sixth among MLS NEXT Pro fullbacks.

I do not think he will be in MLS NEXT Pro for two more years, or maybe even that frequently this season, and two other players who also are knocking on the door of a permanent move to the senior Lions are midfielder Colin Guske and attacker Justin Ellis. I wrote about Ellis in July of 2025, and while he cooled off a little bit in the second half of the season, he still ended up as the third-ranked attacking midfielder in MLS NEXT Pro, finishing only behind players who are two and six years older than he is (18, turning 19 in May).

His season-ending FotMob rating of 7.43 was the fourth highest of any Young Lion during OCB’s four-season history, and if we applied that same 3% growth for his next three seasons (taking him to 21 years old), he would see his rating go all the way up to 8.12, which would match Jacen Russell-Rowe (then of Columbus Crew 2, now of Toulouse in France) for the highest rating in league history. Ellis also continues to get called up to play with the U.S. Youth National Teams, so while I think in the beginning of 2025 he will be behind quite a few attacking players on Orlando City’s senior roster — and therefore playing frequently with OCB — by the second half of the season he may well force his way into consideration for minutes at the MLS level, especially if he keeps improving like he has recently.

The other 2025 OCB standout who is worthy of your love and attention is Guske, who, like Taifi, often was on the bench during MLS games last season, especially after Joran Gerbet went down with a season ending injury. The young midfielder did not rack up a lot of minutes during the regular season, but in the playoff game he was the one who got the call to come off the bench for the final 15 minutes with Orlando City desperately trying to make a comeback.

Guske just turned 19 at the end of January, yet he already has two seasons as a starter under his belt with OCB and has already played more than 40 games and 3,500 minutes at the MLS NEXT Pro level. The story is similar for the Jacksonville native as it was for Taifi and Ellis — a young player who performed well (a combined 6.90 FotMob rating during his two seasons) at an age that is a few years younger than the average age of a player in MLS NEXT Pro.

Like Ellis, but not Taifi, however, is that Guske plays at a position that is now quite deep at the senior level, as the Lions acquired Braian Ojeda and Luis Otávio in the off-season, and Wilder Cartagena returned from injury as well. Those three, plus Eduard Atuesta, are all likely ahead of Guske on the depth chart at the moment. Gerbet may be able to return from injury later in the season, adding another player into the mix, so even though Guske also has played well enough to get called up to play for U.S. youth teams recently, he is likely going to be blocked from MLS minutes initially.

The jury is out on Otávio, as he has yet to play, but as an MLS U22 Initiative player, he probably will get a serious look at whether he is ready to play and stay mostly with the senior team. Heine Gikling Bruseth also was signed as an MLS U22 Initiative player and he never saw the field, so it is not guaranteed that Otávio is ahead of Guske on the depth chart, but all the other established players likely are, so Guske will probably mostly be with OCB to start this season with increased responsibility to run the team from the central midfield. I think Guske will see some time this year with Orlando City, especially if there are injuries, but this will be a big year for him with OCB and then he will aggressively compete for minutes next season.

That brings me to the last OCB player who deserves your love and attention, and that is Gustavo Caraballo, one of the biggest wild cards on Orlando City’s roster. Caraballo is only 17 years old (he will turn 18 in August), but last season he played in six games for the Lions and scored two goals, while also playing more than 1,000 minutes for OCB (7.04 FotMob rating) and leading Orlando City’s academy team to a win at the U-18 Generation Adidas Cup. He also scored a goal in the MLS NEXT All-Star Game, played for the Venezuela in the FIFA U-17 World Cup, and was called up to camp with the senior Venezuela team in the fall. Sounds just about like what I had accomplished by the time I turned 18.

Caraballo primarily played out on the right last season, but with Marco Pašalić ahead of him, it is unlikely he has a path into the starting lineup on the right wing. Pašalić rarely played full matches last season, however, so there are minutes to be filled behind him. The Venezuelan may be much younger than everyone else on the roster, but he is preternaturally gifted and is clearly one of the most exciting young players to ever play for the Lions.

I am interested to see if he is permanently with Orlando City this season or if they think he still needs time with OCB, but I expect that he will mostly be with the senior Lions. And, if the rumors are true that Pašalić has teams interested in him in Europe, the Croatian may depart after the World Cup, leaving a spot on the right up for grabs. Not every young player with talent can be called (insert club name here)’s Lamine Yamal, but Caraballo fits that bill on many levels.

Last season’s OCB season did go as well as anyone hoped, but that was not due to a lack of talent on the roster. One year later, many of its top players are back and pushing to move up to Orlando City, and even those who start the season with OCB I am sure will be playing with that metaphorical chip on their shoulder to show that they belong on the field at Inter&Co Stadium.

As you celebrate your Valentine’s Day weekend, make sure to give some love to OCB by taking a look at the Young Lions’ schedule and finding a game or two that you can attend or watch from home. When you see the skill level of some of the young players in the Orlando City pipeline you will be glad you made the time, and who knows…you might find a new favorite Va-lion-tine.

Vamos Orlando!

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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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