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Orlando Pride vs. NJ/NY Gotham FC: Preview, How to Watch, TV Info, Live Stream, Lineups, Match Thread, and More

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Welcome to your match thread as the Orlando Pride host NJ/NY Gotham FC in their first game of the 2022 NWSL regular season. The Pride are coming off a tough Challenge Cup that saw the team finish in last in the East Division. Now they look to start the first regular season game of a new era. This is the first of two scheduled meetings between the teams in 2022, with the Pride making the return trip to Red Bull Arena on Aug. 20.

Here’s what you need to know about tonight’s game.

History

The Pride and Gotham have been playing since 2016 — the Pride’s first season in existence. The only year the two teams didn’t meet was in 2020, when the global pandemic resulted in the cancelation of the NWSL season. In 17 meetings, the Pride have a 6-6-5 record against Gotham, which changed its name from Sky Blue FC last year.

The two teams have already met twice this year in the Challenge Cup. The first meeting was on March 30 at Exploria Stadium. The Pride had a strong defensive effort but Ellie Jean sent Midge Purce through, allowing the latter to score the game’s only goal in a 1-0 result. The teams met again last week at Red Bull Arena in the final game of the preseason tournament. Gunny Jonsdottir gave the Pride a 10th-minute lead, but Kristie Mewis converted a penalty just before the half. Neither team found the back of the net in the second 45 minutes and the game ended in a 1-1 draw.

The Pride and Gotham also met in the Challenge Cup last year but they only played once. The April 14 meeting in Orlando saw Paige Monaghan score the game’s only goal in the 79th minute. It ended up as the Pride’s only loss in the 2021 Challenge Cup.

The two teams played three times in the regular season following that Challenge Cup match. On June 20, Caprice Dydasco scored a first-half goal to give Gotham the lead in Orlando. But Courtney Petersen equalized in the 90th minute, allowing the Pride to claim a point. The second meeting came on Aug. 29 at Red Bull Arena. The difference was a long-range strike by Erika Tymrak early in the second half as the Pride won 1-0. The final game last year came on Oct. 9 in Orlando. The visitors took a 3-0 lead inside 50 minutes before the Pride began their comeback. Tymrak scored the first in the 84th minute and Marta converted a penalty in the 85th. Unfortunately, it was too little too late as Gotham went away with a 3-2 win.

Since the teams didn’t play in 2020, the most recent match-up prior to the 2021 season was in 2019. The first game came on June 20 and Chioma Ubogagu gave the Pride an early lead. But Sarah Killion of Gotham — then known as Sky Blue FC and playing at Rutgers University — equalized in the 67th minute. It looked to be headed for a draw but Gina Lewandowski scored an own goal in the 81st minute and the Pride ended their 15-game winless streak with a 2-1 win. The teams met again on July 20 in Orlando. Marisa Viggiano’s first professional goal was enough to see the Pride win 1-0. The third and final meeting came on Sept. 29 in New Jersey. Shelina Zadorsky gave the Pride the lead, but Carli Lloyd struck late to pull out a 1-1 draw.

The Pride and Sky Blue played three times during the 2018 season. On June 16, Sydney Leroux’s brace kept the Pride in the game, allowing Rachel Hill to score a late goal in a 3-2 win. They met again on Aug. 5 in Orlando. Marta and Dani Weatherholt were the Pride goal scorers in that one as the game ended in a 2-2 draw. The final meeting in 2018 came on Sept. 8.  The teams combined for nine goals in the two previous games, but Lloyd’s 74th-minute goal was the only scoring in the last meeting as Sky Blue won 1-0.

The two teams played three times in a season for the first time in 2017. On May 27 in New Jersey, Jasmyne Spencer gave the Pride an early lead in the 18th minute. However, Sam Kerr and Maya Hayes responded and Sky Blue won 2-1. After dropping the first meeting, the Pride took the final two. On June 28, they came back from a 2-1 deficit with goals by Marta and Hill, winning 3-2. They followed that up on Aug. 12 with a 5-0 win, lifted by braces from Alex Morgan and Marta.

The first two meetings between the teams came in 2016. Unusual scheduling saw the two games occurring within three days of each other. On Sept. 7 in New Jersey, Morgan and Kerr scored in a 1-1 draw. Then on Sept. 10, Kristen Edmonds gave the Pride a 1-0 lead in Orlando, but Kerr and Hayes scored shortly after, claiming a 2-1 Sky Blue win.

Overview

Tonight begins the 2022 NWSL regular season for the Pride. The team comes off a tough Challenge Cup performance that saw the team go 0-4-2 for two points, finishing last in the division — four points behind third-place Gotham FC.

Pride Head Coach Amanda Cromwell spoke frequently during the Challenge Cup about defending as a team and the Pride did that well early. In the first three games, the team only conceded three times. However, they were unable to score in any of those matches.

By the time the offense got its first goal, the defense was spent. Orlando gave up eight goals in the following two games, a 4-1 loss to the Washington Spirit and a 4-2 loss to the North Carolina Courage. The team showed its early defensive strength in the final game, ending the tournament with a 1-1 draw against Gotham in New Jersey.

While the team struggled in the Challenge Cup, much of it was Cromwell looking at different lineups. In the six games, the Pride had 21 different players start. All three goalkeepers started at least one game, and the back line was the same only once in back-to-back games.

The biggest problem for the Pride in this year’s Challenge Cup was a series of injuries. During the tournament, the Pride suffered injuries to Marta, Erin McLeod, Leroux, Carrie Lawrence, Tymrak, Amy Turner, and Meggie Dougherty Howard. While most of the injuries were relatively minor, the team lost its captain, Marta, for the season with a torn ACL.

Gotham didn’t do a whole lot better during the Challenge Cup, going 1-2-3 in its six games. The lone win for Gotham came in the team’s March 30 victory over the Pride in Orlando.

“A familiar opponent,” Cromwell said about Gotham FC. “Of course, just having seen them and already played them twice, so we’ve been working on how to be better from what we did last game. We have players back from injury, so that’s going to be exciting to get some players back on the field. We’re just really looking forward to getting the regular season kicked off.” 

While the Pride still have multiple players out, the team’s injury report excludes McLeod, Leroux, and Tymrak, who are all eligible for selection. Those listed as out for this game include Caitlin Cosme (D45), Marta (SEI), Parker Roberts (right ankle), Meggie Dougherty Howard (right hip), and Anna Moorhouse (left shoulder). Those out for Gotham include Sabrina Flores (right knee), Hensley Hancuff (right knee), and Allie Long (maternity leave).


Official Lineups

Orlando Pride (4-2-3-1)

Goalkeeper: Erin McLeod.

Defenders: Courtney Petersen, Toni Pressley, Megan Montefusco, Celia.

Defensive Midfielders: Angharad James, Mikayla Cluff.

Midfielders: Darian Jenkins, Gunny Jonsdottir, Kerry Abello.

Forwards: Leah Pruitt.

Bench: Kaylie Collins, Abi Kim, Julie Doyle, Viviana Villacorta, Carrie Lawrence, Erika Tymrak, Kylie Strom, Amy Turner, Sydney Leroux.

NJ/NY Gotham FC (4-3-3)

Goalkeeper: Ashlyn Harris.

Defenders: Ali Krieger, Estelle Johnson, Imani Dorsey, Caprice Dydasco.

Midfielders: Kristie Mewis, McCall Zerboni, Midge Purce.

Forwards: Paige Monaghan, Ifeoma Onumonu, Nahomi Kawasumi.

Bench: Michelle Betos, Cam Tucker, Jen Cudjoe, Gina Lewandowski, Kumi Yokoyama, Delanie Sheehan, Domi Richardson, Ellie Jean, Mandy Freeman.

Referees

REF: Natalie Simon.

AR1: Melissa Gonzalez.

AR2: Ben Pilgrim.

4TH: Jasmine Peralta.


How to Watch

Match Time: 7 p.m.

Venue: Exploria Stadium — Orlando.

TV: None.

Streaming: Paramount+ (U.S.), Twitch (International).

Twitter: For rapid reaction and live updates, follow along @TheManeLand and the Orlando Pride’s official Twitter feed (@ORLPride).


Enjoy the match. Go Pride!

Orlando Pride

Barba Banda’s Goal Contribution Percentage Pace Among the Highest in NWSL History

A dive into Banda’s numbers as a percentage of the Pride’s goal contributions.

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Image courtesy of Orlando Pride / Jeremy Reper

The NWSL took a collective break, as early June is scheduled as a FIFA international match window, so the league did not schedule any games. Several Pride players were called up to their national teams, including all three Zambian players: Barbra Banda, Grace Chanda, and Prisca Chilufya. Zambia drew Botswana 1-1 and lost to South Africa 2-0 during its two matches during the window, and in a what I am sure will be a complete surprise to everyone, it was Banda who scored Zambia’s one goal in the two games.

In Zambia’s last two major tournaments, the 2024 Olympics and the 2023 World Cup, Banda scored five of the team’s nine goals and assisted on two others for a total of seven goal contributions, and when I was looking to see Zambia’s results over this window, I started thinking about the criticality of Banda’s goal contributions to her country’s performances, and I wondered about how that stacked up to when she plays for the Pride.

The 2025 NWSL season is only 10 games in, so one game — say, a game in which Banda had the Pride’s first ever hat trick — skews the data more than it would after a full season’s worth of games, but here is what I found when looking at the players who had the highest percentage of goal contributions as a percentage of their team’s goals in NWSL history (I removed penalty kicks and opponents’ own goals from the count of a team’s goals scored):

PlayerSeasonGoal Contributions*% of Team’s Goals*
Lauren Holiday20132067%
Crystal Dunn20151864%
Barbra Banda2025862%
Esther González2025660%
Abby Wambach20131759%
Diana Matheson2013758%
Sam Kerr20172158%
Sam Kerr20192358%
Adriana Leon20171257%
Sam Kerr20182057%
Barbra Banda**20241950%
  1. * Excluding own goals and penalty kicks
  2. ** Banda’s 2024 season was actually 19th all time, but I included it for comparison purposes and because I wanted to.

First of all, let’s get this out of the way: Sam Kerr was an absolute terror when she played in the NWSL. Despite leaving the league for Chelsea after the 2019 season, she still has the second (18) , third (17) and fourth (16) most goals scored in a season, with only Temwa Chaŵinga’s 2025 season (20) surpassing her. Kerr is one of the great strikers of the century, but even during her time on Chicago and Sky Blue (now Gotham) she was not as critical to the goal-scoring output as the top two on this list, Lauren Holiday and Crystal Dunn.

Back in 2013, Holiday was involved in an astounding two-thirds of the goals her team put into the net in all manners except penalty kicks, and two years later, Crystal Dunn —yes, the same player who started at left back for the U.S. Women’s National Team Saturday — gave her a run for her money by being involved in 64% of her team’s non-penalty goals when she was playing for the Washington Spirit.

During the 2024 season, Banda ended up contributing to exactly half of the Pride’s 38 non-penalty goals, and early returns indicate that this season is on pace for something similar. There is more than half of the season still left to play, but through 10 games Banda sits third on the all-time list with her eight goal contributions of the Pride’s 13 non-penalty goals. The Pride have scored 18 goals when you look at the league standings, but three of those came from own goals and the other two were penalty kicks, which of course were taken by Marta, because GOAT.

Whether it is actually a good thing that a player plays such an outsized role in the goal-contribution percentage is an unanswerable question, because so much of that is tied into offensive game plans and every team sets up differently. The Pride won the shield and the cup last season with Banda as the clear focal point of the offense, and despite a slightly rockier start this season, they are still in third place through 10 games.

I wrote a few weeks ago about how teams are defending the Pride, and Banda in particular, this season, and I expect that teams will continue to try to aggressively deny her the ball in areas where she can build up a head of steam and try to force her wide, preventing her from getting into the box and unleashing one of the league’s most powerful shots. It is all well and good to try that, but Banda is one of the world’s best strikers, and while most NWSL teams have excellent defenders, few are world class.

The Pride should, and do, look to exploit this advantage frequently, which plays a major role in why Banda ranks so high in her percentage of goal contributions. Her incredible talent and skill, in conjunction with the Pride’s focus on finding ways to get her the ball in the attacking third of the field, make it likely that she stays near the top of the all-time rankings as the 2025 season continues. By the end of the season I believe that she will dip below 60%, especially with several of her more attack-minded teammates like Julie Doyle and Summer Yates returning to full health, but I think she ends up above last season’s 50%.

The good news for Pride fans is that if Banda’s percentage decreases, it means that other players are contributing goals, and if it increases, it means that she is contributing goals, so we come out ahead either way. And if she continues to contribute to three out of every five goals and the Pride score handfuls and handfuls of goals, then we come out ahead that way as well. I like all these positive outcomes!

In their next match the Pride will host a Houston team which is in the bottom three in the standings and the bottom four in terms of goals allowed, so the team should have ample opportunities to score. If the Pride score three goals and Banda is involved in all three, she will move to the top of the chart, and while that would be pretty cool, the three that the Pride will care most about in that game is three points.

But as hosts Michael Citro and Dave Rohe often say on the SkoPurp PawedCast, por qué no los dos? And while I am working in a Spanish phrase, three more Banda goal contributions and three points sounds as sweet as tres leches, no?

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Orlando Pride vs. Houston Dash: Three Keys to Victory

What do the Pride need to do to secure a victory against Houston at home?

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Image courtesy of Orlando Pride / Jeremy Reper

The Orlando Pride are back in action against the Houston Dash Saturday at Inter&Co Stadium. If you don’t listen to SkoPurp Soccer: An Orlando Pride PawedCast you may not have heard that I will be there in person to enjoy the match with all of you. The NWSL returns from the international break as do several Pride players. We’ve already seen that every team is bringing its best when it plays Orlando, so what do the Pride need to do to take all three points from Houston at home?

Open the Offense

Barbra Banda scored a hat trick against the Utah Royals in the team’s last match. It was the first in Orlando Pride history, but hopefully it won’t be the last. I’m not expecting another hat trick from anyone this weekend, but there’s no reason to think that the Pride can’t score three goals in total. Of course, if Banda or another Pride player wants to do so, I won’t object.

Houston has allowed 16 goals this season and has a -6 goal differential. How difficult the team is to break down is still a question. I’m not certain if Houston will continue with Abby Smith in goal or if longtime keeper Jane Campbell will make her return to the starting lineup. Smith has started the last three matches, allowing six goals (an average of two per match) and has 10 saves. Campbell started the first seven matches, allowing 10 goals (an average of 1.43 per match) and has 22 saves. I’d be good not having to worry about Campbell, even if the dropoff in quality to Smith isn’t that great.

Limit the Gaffes

Looking to the other goal, I want to see Anna Moorhouse clean things up. She’s not been bad this season, but there have been more errors than last season. We know she can step it up as we saw last season, but if the Pride are to win this match — and others against better teams — I need her to get back to 2024 levels.

Of course, she’s not the only one in the defense that needs to re-adjust. Kylie Nadaner had her best season in 2024 but has reverted just a bit so far in 2025. I’m hoping the international break allowed her and the rest of the Pride to reset. Houston has only scored 10 goals this season, but the Dash have Messiah Bright. The former Pride striker only has one goal this year, but former Pride players always seem to play well against their former team, so I want the defense focused on getting a clean sheet.

Marta and the Midfield

I will probably keep asking for this until I get it or I’m proven it’s not the best strategy. I want Marta to drop back in the attack just a bit. She doesn’t need to be the one trying to keep up with Banda every time the team pushes forward. Ally Watt is a better partner up top. What Marta can do well is facilitate the attack and be the late runner to clean up any loose balls in the box.

If Marta drops to the more traditional 10 spot, that will allow Angelina to also drop back just a bit. I think she is also better in that traditional eight spot. Allow Angelina to be the one who is linking the play through the midfield, where she can either take it herself, or connect with Marta to set up the attacks. This is something I feel has largely been missing so far this season. A match against a team like Houston is the right time to get that fixed.


That’s what I’ll be looking for on Saturday when I’m actually in the stadium. Where do you think the game will be won or lost? Let us know in the comments section.

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Orlando Pride Sign Forward Simone Jackson Through 2028

The Orlando Pride have signed 22-year-old forward Simone Jackson through the 2028 NWSL season.

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Image courtesy of Orlando Pride / Jeremy Reper

The Orlando Pride announced the signing of former University of Southern California forward Simone Jackson today. The 22-year-old’s deal is through the 2028 season.

“We are thrilled to welcome Simone Jackson to the Orlando Pride family through 2028. Her versatility, technical ability, and quickness immediately impressed our technical staff, but it’s her character and personality that truly make her a perfect fit for our culture,” Pride Vice President of Soccer Operations and Sporting Director Haley Carter said in a club press release. “Simone represents exactly the kind of player and person we want to invest in as we build the future of this club. Her signing reflects our commitment to bringing in talent that will help us compete at the highest level while embodying the values that make the Pride special.”

While Jackson is a new signing, the attacker isn’t new to the Pride. She was with the team during preseason as a non-roster invitee, playing well enough to earn a spot on the roster.

“I’m incredibly excited and honored to join the Orlando Pride. From the moment I arrived, I felt the special culture this club has built and knew this was where I wanted to be,” Jackson said in the club’s release. “The vision the coaching staff shared with me aligns perfectly with my goals as a player, and I can’t wait to contribute on the field and connect with our amazing fans. Orlando has such a rich soccer community, and I’m thrilled to call this city home for the next chapter of my career. I’m ready to put in the work every day to help bring championships to this club and make an impact both on and off the field.”

Prior to joining the Pride for preseason, Jackson spent four years at the University of Southern California. She played in 75 games for the Trojans, scoring 22 goals and adding 13 assists. Her best season was her senior year, where she accumulated 1,304 minutes and scored six goals, second most on the team.

The Redondo Beach, CA native was a member of the All-Big Ten third team in 2024, first-team All-Pac-12 in 2022, third-team All-Pac-12 in 2023 and 2021, and a Pac 12 All-Freshman Team honoree in 2021.

Internationally, Jackson represented the United States at multiple youth levels, including at the 2022 FIFA U-20 Women’s World Cup. She scored her team’s lone goal in a 3-1 loss to Japan in that tournament. Jackson participated at every youth level for the U.S., starting at U-14.

What It Means For Orlando

Having successfully put a strong starting lineup together, Carter and Pride Head Coach Seb Hines now work on the team’s depth. And that’s where Jackson comes in. The forward will be behind starter Barbra Banda and Ally Watt on the depth chart. However, Banda could depart at times for international duty with Zambia, giving Jackson a spot on the bench.

At 22 years old, the young attacker has plenty of time to develop. She’ll be playing with seasoned professionals in the same position, providing valuable role models. Barring injuries, she probably won’t get much playing time this year but could be a key player for the Pride in the future.

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