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Orlando City vs. D.C. United: Preview, How to Watch, TV Info, Live Stream, Lineups, Match Thread, and More

Lions head to Audi Field looking to break a poor run of results against United.

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Image courtesy of Orlando City SC

Welcome to your match thread for a Saturday night match-up between Orlando City and D.C. United at Exploria Stadium (7:30 p.m., MLS Season Pass on Apple TV+). This is the first of two scheduled MLS matches this season between the Lions (1-0-1, 4 points) and the Black and Red (1-1-0, 3 points). United will make the return trip to Orlando on Saturday, April 22.

Here’s what you need to know ahead of the match.

History

The Lions are 6-8-1 against D.C. in the all-time league series since the club joined MLS, and 6-8-2 in all competitions. Orlando is just 2-5-0 in league road games against D.C. and 2-5-1 in all competitions in the greater District of Columbia metropolitan area.

D.C. swept the season series in 2022, despite being a terrible team that “won” the league’s Wooden Spoon by no small margin. The last meeting saw Orlando City dominate the first half but miss multiple glorious chances to put the game away early. The Lions were wasteful and took only a 1-0 lead into stoppage time, thanks to Junior Urso’s first-half goal, only to fall 2-1 on goals in the 91st and 95th minutes by Chris Durkin and Taxi Fountas, respectively.

The teams also met on Independence Day at Exploria Stadium, with D.C. putting together a performance out of nowhere in a 5-3 road win. Fountas netted his first MLS hat trick and Kimarni Smith and Nigel Robertha added their first goals of the season. Facundo Torres, Ercan Kara, and Alexandre Pato scored for Orlando, threatening to bring the Lions back, but Orlando could never get on level terms.

The teams met at Exploria Stadium on Oct. 2, 2021, with Daryl Dike scoring a dramatic, late winner in the 97th minute to lift the Lions to a 2-1 home victory. Robin Jansson scored a first-half goal off a corner kick scramble to offset an early Julian Gressel strike. The first match of 2021 took place on May 16 in D.C., with the Lions winning 1-0 on a seventh-minute Mauricio Pereyra goal. That win snapped United’s 3-0-1 streak in the series in league play and 3-0-2 in all competitions dating back to City’s previously most recent win over D.C. back in 2017.

The teams did not meet in what was an odd 2020 season.

D.C. United swept the season series in 2019, winning 1-0 at Audi Field back on June 26, 2019. Wayne Rooney’s wondergoal from his own half of the pitch caught Brian Rowe napping and served as the only scoring in that match. The Lions fell 2-1 at home on March 31, 2019, with set pieces ruining the night for Orlando. You might recall that controversy surrounded the winning goal, with then-coach James O’Connor visibly upset after the match. Steve Birnbaum scored the first on a set piece and Rooney scored the second on a free kick that he took from wherever the hell he wanted rather than where the foul occurred. Frederic Brillant bulldozed Rowe on the play as the ball sailed into the net.

D.C. was 1-0-2 in three total meetings (two in league play) in 2018. The two teams met on opening day 2018 and the Lions posted a dramatic late 1-1 draw on Stefano Pinho’s 93rd-minute goal. Orlando went down to 10 men 41 minutes into the match when Brazilian defender PC was sent off. The teams met in U.S. Open Cup action on June 20 of that year at the Maryland SoccerPlex and again drew 1-1, but the Lions advanced to the quarterfinals thanks to a 4-2 penalty shootout win. Luciano Acosta put the hosts ahead but Justin Meram equalized on a rainy night and that was it for the scoring until the shootout. United won that game at Audi Field on Aug. 12, 2018 by a 3-2 score. Cristian Higuita was sent off after video review with 40 minutes remaining. Two other controversial video reviews went D.C.’s way that night as well, and Orlando had a player pulled down while trying to break out in transition late in the game, only to see the play turn around for the winning goal.

Orlando swept the two league meetings in 2017, the teams split two lopsided games in 2016 — with each team winning at home — and the Black and Red went 2-1-0 in the first three meetings back in 2015.

Match Overview

Orlando City is coming off a 0-0 draw at Tigres on Tuesday night in Concacaf Champions League. The Lions got back Wednesday evening and had a quick turnaround against a rested D.C. side. The Lions have yet to score a goal in the run of play in a competitive match in 2023, but did manage a season-high three shots on target in Mexico on Tuesday. That was Orlando City’s first match away from Exploria Stadium this season, so tonight’s game will be the Lions’ first road MLS contest in 2023.

United is 1-0-0 at home after opening the season with a 3-2 win over Toronto FC at Audi Field, but D.C. is coming off a 2-0 loss in its most recent match last weekend in Columbus. And, of course, D.C.’s win turned around a 2-1 deficit to Toronto late, with Christian Benteke equalizing in the 90th minute and Theodore Ku-Dipietro finding a winner in the 98th minute.

The Lions will need to be aware of where Benteke is at all times. The former Crystal Palace, Liverpool, and Aston Villa man has one goal and is the team’s co-leader in shots (4) on the young season. Polish international Mateusz Klich is another D.C. player that Orlando City will need to keep an eye on. Klich also has a goal and four shots on the year. Joining those two Designated Players on the scoresheet this season is Homegrown midfielder Ku-Dipietro, who has a goal and an assist. Iraqi international fullback Mohanad Jeahze has provided danger on the flank with two assists this season, so Mikey Halliday, Kyle Smith, or whoever plays right back tonight will need to be attentive.

“The approach we have is that we want to go to D.C. and get the three points. That’s the first thing we have in our minds and then we have Tigres [again] after that,” Jansson said ahead of the match. “But, the first main objective is to get three points against D.C. on the road. Right now we’re traveling a lot and have a tight schedule, so managing the squad and having everyone ready to be the next man up is very important and we need everyone to get in there and give everything.”

The only player on Orlando City’s availability report heading into the weekend is Homegrown Player Favian Loyola (thigh). Antonio Carlos returned to full training this week and could get his first start of the season, or at least come off the bench. The latter seems more likely as Oscar Pareja would probably like to get him some minutes but also keep him fresh for the second leg against Tigres on Wednesday.

D.C. lists Brendan Hines-Ike (foot), Martin Rodriguez (knee), and Fountas (thigh) as out for tonight.

Mandatory Match Content


Official Lineups

Orlando City (3-4-3)

Goalkeeper: Pedro Gallese.

Defenders: Abdi Salim, Rodrigo Schlegel, Kyle Smith.

Defensive Midfielders/Wingbacks: Rafael Santos, Wilder Cartagena, Mauricio Pereyra, Ivan Angulo.

Forwards: Dagur Dan Thorhallsson, Duncan McGuire, Facundo Torres.

Bench: Mason Stajduhar, Michael Halliday, Antonio Carlos, Robin Jansson, Cesar Araujo, Felipe, Gaston Gonzalez, Martin Ojeda, Ercan Kara.

D.C. United (4-4-2)

Goalkeeper: Tyler Miller.

Defenders: Mohanad Jeahze, Steven Birnbaum, Derrick Williams, Ruan.

Midfielders: Pedro Santos, Mateusz Klich, Russell Canouse, Chris Durkin.

Forwards: Christian Benteke, Theodore Ku-DiPietro.

Bench: Alex Bono, Donovan Pines, Jacob Greene, Hayden Sargis, Matai Akinmboni, Yamil Asad, Victor Palsson, Jackson Hopkins, Kristian Fletcher.

Referees

Ref: Jon Freemon.

AR1: Kyle Atkins.

AR2: Meghan Mullen.

4th: Adam Wienckowski.

VAR: Jorge Gonzalez.

AVAR: Claudiu Badea.


How to Watch

Match Time: 7:30 p.m.

Venue: Audi Stadium — Washington, D.C.

TV/Streaming: MLS Season Pass on Apple TV+.

Radio: Real Radio 104.1 FM (English), Acción 97.9 FM, 810 AM (Spanish).

Twitter: For rapid reaction and live updates, follow along at @TheManeLand, as well as Orlando City’s official Twitter feed (@OrlandoCitySC).


Enjoy the match. Go City!

Lion Links

Lion Links: 11/26/24

Pride celebrate NWSL title, previewing the MLS conference finals, Alyssa Naeher retires from USWNT, and more.

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Image courtesy of Orlando Pride / Mark Thor

Happy Tuesday, and what a Tuesday it is! The Orlando Pride are NWSL Champions and Orlando City will play in the Eastern Conference final for the very first time. If this isn’t the best weekend that Orlando soccer has ever had, then I sure as hell don’t know what is. We’ve got a lot to talk about this morning though, so let’s get into today’s links!

Orlando Pride Celebrate NWSL Title

The Orlando Pride celebrated the team’s first ever NWSL Championship in style on Monday, with a victory parade down Orange Avenue followed by a celebration at City Hall.

Plenty of people came out and lined the parade route, Marta and the team were presented with a key to the city, and Nov. 25, 2024 was declared “Orlando Pride Day” by Orange County. Congratulations to the Pride!

Examining the MLS Conference Finals

Just three matches remain in the MLS Cup playoffs, so it’s time to turn our attention to the conference finals and what each team needs to do to advance. For Orlando City, it’ll be important to win second balls and for Cesar Araujo and Wilder Cartagena to set the tone in the midfield. On the flip side of things, the New York Red Bulls need Emil Forsberg to show up and make his mark on the game. The Red Bulls haven’t had much of the ball in their last five games, so they need to make the most of their touches when they do have it. Out west, the LA Galaxy need to make sure Gabriel Pec gets on the ball in the final third, while the Seattle Sounders need to stay organized and compact in defense. That’ll be easier said than done against a Galaxy side with a stunning amount of firepower, but the Sounders are here for a reason.

Alyssa Naeher Announces International Retirement

Alyssa Naeher announced on Monday that she will be retiring from international play following the United States Women’s National Team’s upcoming matches. Naeher is one of the all-time great USWNT goalkeepers, and the only women’s soccer goalkeeper to ever keep a clean sheet in both an Olympic gold medal game and a World Cup final. She received her first national team cap almost 10 years ago on Dec. 18, 2014 and has gone on to make 113 appearances for the team. She’ll still play for the Chicago Red Stars during the 2025 season and possibly afterward, but her final game for the USWNT will come on Dec. 3 against the Netherlands in The Hague.

Vanni Sartini Out in Vancouver

After spending five years with the Vancouver Whitecaps in various roles, including a little over three as head coach, Vanni Sartini has left that position by mutual agreement with the club. The Italian led the Whitecaps to an improbable playoff berth in 2021 after taking over as head coach, and the team also qualified for the playoffs in 2023 and 2024, notching a 3-0 upset of top seed LAFC in Game 2 of the first round of the playoffs this year. Despite that, Sporting Director and Chief Executive Officer Axel Schuster felt that the team needed someone different in charge, and the team has begun the search for its next head coach.

Free Kicks

  • Take in some of the scenes from the final whistle of Orlando City’s playoff win against Atlanta United.
  • Former Lion and U.S. Open Cup shootout hero Adam Grinwis has announced his retirement.

That’s all I have for you this morning. Vamos Orlando!

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Orlando City vs. Atlanta United FC: Player Grades and Man of the Match

How did your favorite Lions perform in Orlando City’s 1-0 win over Atlanta United?

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Dan MacDonald, The Mane Land

It was a historic day at Inter&Co Stadium as Orlando City defeated Atlanta United 1-0 to advance to the Eastern Conference final of the MLS Cup playoffs for the first time in club history. A 39th-minute goal by Ramiro Enrique held up while the Lions defended several opposing chances in the second half. Upsets earlier in the playoffs and Minnesota United’s elimination Sunday night mean the Lions will play at home one more time this season.

Let’s take a look at how the players did individually in this memorable win.

Starters

GK, Pedro Gallese, 6.5 — Atlanta didn’t put any of its eight shots on target in this game, so there wasn’t any shot stopping for Gallese. However, he made a crucial play in the 75th minute when Saba Lobjanidze played the ball into the box for a wide open Xande Silva, who had beaten Dagur Dan Thorhallsson. Gallese came off his line to intercept the pass, saving an almost certain equalizer. In addition to that key interception, Gallese completed 63.2% of his 19 passes, including seven of his 14 long balls on the way to his third clean sheet of the playoffs.

D, Rafael Santos, 7 (MotM) — Santos had a team-high 83 touches in this game and completed 90% of his team-high 60 passes with two key passes. He completed two of his four crosses and six of his seven long balls. Defensively, the left back recorded a tackle, an interception, and four clearances. It was one of Santos’ best performances before he was replaced by David Brekalo in the 90th minute, and he gets my Man of the Match.

D, Robin Jansson, 7 — Making his 200th appearance for Orlando City, the club captain had 59 touches and completed 88.5% of his 52 passes, including four of his five long balls. He had a team-high three interceptions, three clearances, one block, and an aerial duel won. The center back was a major reason why Gallese didn’t have to make any saves.

D, Rodrigo Schlegel, 7 — Schlegel was also terrific in this game, touching the ball 64 times while completing 92.6% of his 54 passes and four of his five long balls. He recorded a team-high six clearances, blocked a shot, and won two aerial duels.

D, Dagur Dan Thorhallsson, 5.5 — Thorhallsson was the least involved of the four defenders, touching the ball 38 times and completing 81% of his 21 passes. He didn’t convert either of his two crosses and only one of his four long balls. The right back recorded two tackles, an interception, and two clearances, while his only shot missed the target. He was lucky not to be at fault for an equalizer when he was beaten into the box by Silva in the 75th minute. Fortunately, Gallese made an excellent play. It was the last play by Thorhallsson, as Kyle Smith replaced him in the 79th minute.

MF, Wilder Cartagena, 6.5 — It was a little surprising that Cartagena stayed out of the book in the final game against Charlotte, making him eligible for this one. The defensive midfielder didn’t disappoint, touching the ball 55 times and completing 91.1% of his 45 passes, including three of his four long balls. His one shot forced Brad Guzan into a save and he was active defensively, recording a tackle and five clearances.

MF, Cesar Araujo, 6.5 — The other half of the defensive midfield was also solid in this game, touching the ball 66 times and completing 92.3% of his 52 passes, including six of his eight long balls. His only shot was off target, but he won three tackles.

MF, Ivan Angulo, 6 — Angulo touched the ball 40 times on the left wing and completed 83.3% of his 24 passes including a key pass. However, he didn’t connect on either of his two crosses. He put one of his two shots on target, and he helped defensively with two tackles and a clearance. The midfielder was replaced by Nico Lodeiro in a 79th-minute defensive change. 

MF, Martin Ojeda, 6 — Ojeda also touched the ball 40 times, but only completed 76.9% of his 26 passes. However, he had three key passes, connecting on three of his seven crosses and three of his five long balls. His only shot was off target and he didn’t record any defensive statistics before being replaced by Duncan McGuire in the 69th minute.

MF, Facundo Torres, 6.5 — Torres was the most involved of the attacking midfielders, touching the ball 66 times. He completed 87.3% of his 55 passes, including three key passes. While he didn’t connect on either of his two crosses, he completed five of his six long balls. His only shot was off target and he recorded a clearance.

F, Ramiro Enrique, 6.5 — Enrique touched the ball 22 times while completing 88.9% of his nine passes, including a key pass. His shining moment came in the 39th minute, when a corner kick was knocked down and he was the first to react, putting it past Guzan for the winning goal. He took five shots in the game and put two on target before being replaced by Luis Muriel in the 69th minute.

Substitutes

F, Duncan McGuire (69’), 5.5 — McGuire came on for Ojeda in the 69th minute and struggled in his appearance. He touched the ball 17 times, completing 75% of his 12 passes, including a key pass. He was dispossessed once and had two unsuccessful touches in his 21 minutes, though he did win an aerial duel.

F, Luis Muriel (69’), 6 — Muriel was the better of the two attacking substitutions in the 69th minute, coming on for Enrique. The Colombian touched the ball 28 times and completed 76.2% of his 21 touches, including three of his four long balls, recording one key pass. His lone shot was off target (blocked), and he won a pair of aerial duels.

D, Kyle Smith (79’), 6 — Smith came on for Thorhallsson in the 79th minute in a defensive change. He touched the ball nine times while completing 87.5% of his eight passes, including one of his two long balls. He came on for his defensive skills and recorded a clearance in the late moments of the game.

MF, Nico Lodeiro (79’), 6 — Entering with Smith, Lodeiro replaced Angulo in another defensive change. The veteran touched the ball 12 times and completed eight of his 10 passes (80%), including his only long ball. His purpose on the field was to help the team see out the game and he recorded a tackle in that effort.

D, David Brekalo (90’), N/A — Brekalo came on in the 90th minute for Santos to add some more defense in the team. He touched the ball four times and completed two of his three passes (66.7%) while recording a clearance defensively.


That’s how I saw Orlando City’s 1-0 win over Atlanta United in the Eastern Conference semifinals. Let us know what you thought of the game in the comments below and don’t forget to vote on the Man of the Match.

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Orlando City vs. Atlanta United: Five Takeaways

Here’s what we learned from Orlando City’s Eastern Conference semifinal win over Atlanta United.

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Image courtesy of Orlando City SC / Mark Thor

Orlando City exorcised its Decision Day demons on Sunday by beating Atlanta United 1-0 to advance to the Eastern Conference final. The promise of a rivalry match in an Eastern Conference semifinal fully lived up to the billing, as the atmosphere in the stadium was top-notch, and my vocal chords are a ragged shell of their normal selves. What follows are my five big thoughts on OCSC’s victory over Atlanta.

A Defensive Affair

Sometimes a scoreline can be deceiving, and a game that finishes 1-0 might have had a boatload of golden chances that one or both teams simply refused to take. That wasn’t the case Sunday, as there were probably only two really good chances aside from Ramiro Enrique’s goal — Dagur Dan Thorhallsson hitting the post (which may have proven to be offside anyway), and Duncan McGuire’s near-post flick that went just wide. Other than that, both teams did a pretty good job of muting each other in attack, although had the Lions been just a bit tidier with the ball they almost certainly could have bagged another as the game wound down and spaces opened up while Atlanta poured numbers forward.

Set Piece Supremacy

In the end it took a set piece for OCSC to find the game’s only goal. The Five Stripes got this far in part by being solid defensively, but set pieces were a problem all year as they gave up 13 goals from them during the regular season. So it was again on Sunday, as Martin Ojeda’s corner pinballed around, Ramiro Enrique was the first to react, and he slotted the ball underneath an onrushing Brad Guzan. The Lions have been less wasteful from dead ball situations this season than in years past, and Enrique’s goal was another example of making set pieces count. With Atlanta coming out happy to bunker and play for a smash-and-grab result, it was even more important to make the most of set piece opportunities, and that’s exactly what Orlando did.

A Timely Goal

As nice as it would have been for Facundo Torres or Thorhallsson to score just minutes into the game, the timing of Enrique’s goal wasn’t half bad either. The longer the match went on tied, the more likely the visitors were to pose a threat. Going into halftime with things level certainly wouldn’t have been the end of the world, but taking a lead into the break gave the Lions a tiny bit of breathing room, while forcing Atlanta to come out and open things up in the second half. Ultimately, OCSC couldn’t take advantage of the opportunities that were available on the counterattack, but the Lions’ lives were made much easier by being able to play with a lead. We saw how difficult a bunkered Atlanta team can be to deal with on Decision Day, but the 39th-minute goal turned the game into a completely different affair.

Cartagena Makes His Mark

In his Three Keys to Victory piece, David Rohe identified Wilder Cartagena having a good match as an essential ingredient to Orlando’s success. After all, he’d missed both regular-season matches against the Five Stripes, and Orlando City had lost both games. Sometimes correlation does equal causation, and so it was on Sunday, as the Peruvian midfielder put in a typically assured showing, and the Lions came away with the win. He contributed one tackle, five clearances, one shot (on target), three long balls, and 91% passing accuracy. He and Cesar Araujo helped lock down Aleksey Miranchuk, and Oscar Pareja specifically praised his efforts after the game. OCSC is simply a different team when he’s on the field, and that absolutely proved to be the case here.

Toeing the Line

It was important for OCSC to play with intensity and physicality, but not cross the line and take things too far, which is something that we’ve seen in the past. Last year’s eliminations from Leagues Cup and the MLS Cup playoffs came in part due to red cards that left the 10 men remaining on the field with an almost impossible task. Lessons from those games seemed to have been learned well on Sunday afternoon though, because while the Lions weren’t afraid to put in physical challenges and throw their bodies around a bit, they kept their heads cool and never went past the point of no return. They committed two more fouls than Atlanta (seven to five), but didn’t receive any bookings. It was exactly the sort of intense-yet-professional display that the playoffs require, and it was nice to see the team looking right at home.


There you have it folks. It may not have been the prettiest win we’ve ever seen, but sometimes a team has to be able to win ugly and Orlando City was able to do just that. The Lions will now advance to the Eastern Conference final for the first time, and it’ll be played right here at home on Saturday at 7:30 p.m. Be there, be loud, and let’s ride this thing as far as we can. Vamos Orlando!

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