2022 Orlando City SC season

Last updated

Orlando City SC
2022 season
Orlando City SC wordmark purple.svg
Manager Óscar Pareja
Stadium Exploria Stadium
MLS:Conference: 7th
Overall: 13th
MLS Cup Playoffs First round
U.S. Open Cup Winners
Top goalscorerLeague:
Ercan Kara (11)

All:
Facundo Torres (13)
Highest home attendance25,527
(September 7 vs. Sacramento Republic, U.S. Open Cup Final)
Lowest home attendanceLeague:
14,483
(August 31 vs. Seattle Sounders FC)
All:
7,601
(May 10 vs. Philadelphia Union, U.S. Open Cup fourth round)
Average home league attendance17,283
Biggest winORL 5–1 NYRB (Jul. 27)
ORL 4–0 TOR (Sep. 17)
Biggest defeat PHI 5–1 ORL (Sep. 10)
  2021
2023  

The 2022 Orlando City SC season was the club's 12th season of existence in Orlando and eighth season as a Major League Soccer franchise, the top-flight league in the United States soccer league system. The season was highlighted by a first trophy since joining MLS, winning the 2022 U.S. Open Cup with a 3–0 home victory over USL Championship team Sacramento Republic FC. Orlando City also reached the 2022 MLS Cup Playoffs but were eliminated in the first round by CF Montréal.

Contents

Season review

Pre-season

After an evaluation of club structure following their acquisition of the club during the 2021 season, the Wilf family announced the hiring of Jarrod Dillon as president of business operations, a newly created position, on November 30, 2021. [1]

On December 1, 2021, Orlando City announced the club had exercised 11 contract options and declined the contract options of seven players, most notably captain and Designated Player Nani after three seasons. Four players including Orlando's only other DP, Mauricio Pereyra, were out of contract at the end of the 2021 season with all but club-record appearance maker Chris Mueller, who had already agreed a pre-contract with Hibernian in July 2021, in discussions to return. [2] Pereyra re-signed on a one-year deal on December 17 with Pato also later re-signing on a one-year contract on January 15. [3] [4]

On December 6, 2021, it was announced Orlando City's reserve affiliate team Orlando City B would be returning from hiatus for the inaugural 21-team MLS Next Pro season starting in 2022. [5]

With the addition of Charlotte FC in 2022, MLS held an Expansion Draft on December 14, 2021. Orlando was exempt having had Kamal Miller selected in the previous year's expansion draft. [6]

On January 1, Orlando finalized the permanent transfer of Daryl Dike, the club's top goalscorer during the previous season, to English EFL Championship team West Bromwich Albion. [7] The fee was reportedly an initial club-record $9,500,000 plus performance bonuses and a 20% sell-on clause. [8] Six days later, Orlando made their first signing of the season, acquiring Uruguayan midfielder César Araújo from Montevideo Wanderers for a reported $2,000,000. [9] [10] The move was the first Orlando had made under the new MLS U22 initiative launched the previous April which allowed clubs to sign three young players to lucrative contracts at a reduced budget charge. [11]

On January 11, Orlando made three selections in the 2021 MLS SuperDraft, one in each of the three rounds. [12] Only Jack Lynn was signed to a first team contract. Nick Taylor signed with Orlando City B.

On January 24, Orlando made another purchase from Uruguay, this time for new designated player Facundo Torres from Peñarol on a four-year contract. [13] He joined for a reported club record $9,000,000 fee. It broke the previous record of $3,000,000 set by the purchase of Josué Colmán in January 2018. [14] Three days later, Orlando signed another DP: Austrian striker Ercan Kara from Rapid Wien for a reported $800,000. [15] Orlando had acquired an international roster spot from CF Montréal earlier in the week in exchange for $200,000 in 2022 General Allocation Money and the natural third-round pick in the 2023 MLS SuperDraft. [16] Orlando's only other signing in the offseason was 17 year old academy product Alex Freeman. [17]

February

Having ended the 2021 regular season with a 2–0 victory away at CF Montréal, Orlando opened the 2022 regular season with a 2–0 home victory against the same opposition. Alexandre Pato, who missed the majority of his first season in Orlando with an injury sustained on opening weekend, marked his first start since that day by scoring Orlando's first goal of the season and his first as a Lion early in the second half. Fourth-year homegrown Benji Michel added a second in the 59th minute before Montreal's Romell Quioto was sent off for punching Robin Jansson in the chest in the 66th minute with the Swede also receiving a yellow card for his part in the altercation. Both sides finished the game down to 10 players when Jansson later received a second yellow in the 81st minute for shoulder checking Joaquín Torres on the counter. The result preserved Orlando's opening day unbeaten streak since joining MLS in 2015 (2W 6D 0L). [18]

March

Orlando's first road game of the season was away to Chicago Fire FC at Soldier Field on March 5. After a goalless first half, Orlando thought they had taken the lead through a long-range Júnior Urso strike in the 73rd minute. As Chicago were about to restart the game, VAR intervened and asked the referee to consult the monitor. After a lengthy 3 minute 40 second stoppage, the referee adjudged Ercan Kara to have controlled the ball with his arm instead of his chest in the build up and disallowed the goal. After the game, head coach Óscar Pareja disputed the clear and obvious nature of the review given it took so long for the video assistant to scrutinize a play the referee was so close to in real time and none of the Chicago players initially appealed, questioning how something as significant as a goal can be overturned without a conclusive angle. The Professional Referee Organization later stated in an analysis of the incident: "PRO does not feel there was enough evidence for the VAR to intervene and would have preferred for the on-field decision to stand." [19] Meanwhile, Urso lamented the physicality of the opposition, claiming they were more interested in fighting than playing after committing 21 fouls and receiving five yellow cards. [20] With another shutout, Pedro Gallese tied Joe Bendik's club-record 13 all-time in 49 appearances compared to Bendik's 92. He also became the first Orlando City goalkeeper to keep three successive clean sheets in regular season play dating back to the final game of the previous season. [21] On March 12, Orlando welcomed the visit of FC Cincinnati, a team on a 14-game losing streak stretching back to September 15, 2021, and without a goal through the opening two games. Brandon Vazquez gave the visitors an early 13th-minute lead having been played in on goal by Luciano Acosta. Having had a goal disallowed the previous week, Júnior Urso scored his first goal of the season, heading home a Facundo Torres cross to level the scores before the break. Despite outshooting the opposition 18 to 9, Orlando were dealt their first defeat of the season as Vazquez scored the only goal of the second half when Dominique Badji shrugged off Ruan before firing in a cross for Vazquez to glance past Gallese. Cincinnati goalkeeper Alec Kann recorded five saves. [22] Roles reversed in the next match as Orlando traveled to LA Galaxy and were forced to soak up pressure, conceding 63% possession and 20 shots although only three were on target. The Lions made Galaxy's wastefulness pay, taking all three points as Facundo Torres scored his first goal for Orlando, finishing off a swift 9th minute attack, one of six shots Orlando had in the game. [23] A third clean sheet in the opening four games meant Pedro Gallese moved past Bendik outright for the club's clean sheet record. It also marked the team's first win in California at the seventh attempt since joining MLS in 2015. [24] Orlando ended March with a second consecutive weekend playing out west, this time against Portland Timbers. It was the first meeting between the teams since the MLS is Back Tournament Final. Short-handed through the loss of Pedro Gallese, Sebas Méndez and Facundo Torres during a FIFA international window, the game saw Mason Stajduhar deputize in goal. After an even but goalless first half with few clear cut chances, Orlando struck early in the second half as Alexandre Pato lifted to ball into the Portland penalty area for Urso to take a touch and pick his spot. Having picked up a yellow card for wrestling Pato the floor five minutes earlier, Josecarlos Van Rankin was dismissed in the 76th minute for a second yellow on Pato after cynically tugging the Brazilian back. Despite the man advantage, Orlando quickly found themselves level just four minutes after the sending off when substitute Andrés Perea tripped Cristhian Paredes in the box; the Paraguayan calmly rolling the resultant penalty kick down the middle past Stajduhar. Although both teams carved out good chances in the closing minutes, neither found a winner as the game finished 1–1. [25]

April

Orlando began April by hosting Los Angeles FC. Having lost starting central defender Antônio Carlos to injury in the 18th minute, the Lions' defense struggled to hold up, conceding two first half goals from two Ruan lapses. However, the teams went into the break level as Orlando hit back twice: first through a volley from Pato who had earlier had a goal narrowly called offside before João Moutinho, who had been drafted by LAFC in 2018 and notably scored his only other Orlando City goal against his former club in 2020, was picked out alone in the box and found the bottom corner. A dart from the top of the box by Ilie Sánchez gave LAFC their third lead of the evening early in the second half and, despite having had their goal peppered by shots forcing Maxime Crépeau into some acrobatic saves, made the points safe in stoppage time when Kwadwo Opoku eventually scrambled the ball home as the visitors hit with numbers on the counter. [26] It was announced on April 7 that Antônio Carlos would be ruled out for 12 to 16 weeks with the hamstring injury he had sustained during the match although he did not need surgery. [27] The Lions remained at home the following week for the visit of the as yet undefeated Chicago Fire FC on April 9. The teams had already met five weeks earlier to play out a goalless draw in Chicago. The home side benefited from a numerical advantage as Brian Gutiérrez, the teenage replacement for the injured Xherdan Shaqiri, was sent off for two first-half yellows: one for cynically blocking the taking of a freekick in the fifth minute, something Fire head coach Ezra Hendrickson later called "inexcusable" and "a learning moment," before being dismissed after stepping across Araújo to prevent a breakaway in the 43rd minute. A man up, Orlando dominated possession and ended the game with 21 shots in total but were largely wasteful, only running out 1–0 winners as offseason DP signing Ercan Kara scored his first goal for the club. It came just before the hour mark from a well worked freekick as Pato peeled away to the back post, heading the ball back across goal and into the path of the waiting Austrian. [28] Orlando earned a second consecutive shutout victory, the first time the team had won back to back games without conceding since June 2015, on the road at Columbus Crew the following weekend. Columbus looked dangerous in the first half hour as Derrick Etienne saw a close range effort blocked by Kyle Smith and Lucas Zelarayán hit the crossbar from a freekick but Orlando grew into the game and eventually found the lead as Rodrigo Schlegel scored his first goal for the club, finishing from inside the six-yard box on a recycled set piece in the 37th minute. Orlando's second came in the 51st minute as Pereyra, Torres and Kara strung a tiki-taka passing sequence together to pick their way through the Crew defense culminating in Kara powerfully striking past Eloy Room on the swivel. With a two-goal lead, the Lions largely controlled the second half to see out the game. Thomas Williams made his debut in stoppage time. At 17 years, 245 days old, he broke the previous youngest first-team appearance record of 18 years, 127 days set by Michael Halliday in the previous season. [29] With the return of the U.S. Open Cup for the first time since 2019, Orlando entered in the third round and were drawn against rivals Tampa Bay Rowdies of the USL Championship. The Lions had won all six previous competitive meetings as a USL Pro franchise: once in the 2013 Walt Disney World Pro Soccer Classic, once in the 2014 Open Cup third round, and four times in the two-legged preseason I-4 Derby tournament. [30] Pareja fielded a fairly strong lineup but took the opportunity to hand starts to the likes of Stajduhar, Smith, Williams, Perea and van der Water who had started the season as backups. After a lackluster first half, Orlando made three halftime changes including Pereyra who played Michel in behind the Tampa defense to see Aarón Guillén drag him down for a penalty. Pato converted to give Orlando a 52nd-minute lead which was doubled when Pereyra's chipped pass fell to Urso six yards out ten minutes later. The Rowdies retaliated immediately and scrambled a goal back through Lucky Mkosana but struggled to trouble the Orlando goal again as they pushed for an equalizer and saw head coach Neill Collins, who received a yellow card in the first half for dissent, sent off in stoppage time for running on to the pitch to retrieve the ball and had to watch the last moments of his team's 2022 cup run from the stands. [31] The fourth round draw was conducted the following day, pairing Orlando with Philadelphia Union who were a new entrant for the fourth round as one of the eight highest seeded MLS teams from the previous season. Orlando returned to MLS play on April 24 and were beaten by a club-record equalling three goal margin at home for only the fourth time as New York Red Bulls dominated in a 3–0 victory for the visitors. [32] Orlando closed out April hosting new expansion team Charlotte FC. The Lions took a two-goal lead into halftime with Ruan breaking the deadlock in the 16th minute having made a late run at the back post to meet a Michel pull back before wheeling off to the sideline to celebrate by donning a Flash mask in recognition of his nickname. He showed the speed that earned him the nickname for the second goal in first half stoppage time, sprinting away on the counter before unselfishly playing in Torres for a tap in, his second goal of the season. The visitors pulled one back on the hour mark via a Christian Fuchs penalty after Alan Franco split the defense and was brought down but Orlando held on for all three points. [33]

May

On May 5, Orlando acquired a natural first round pick in the 2023 MLS SuperDraft, $500,000 in General Allocation Money, Discovery Priority to an unnamed player from Chicago Fire FC as well as a potential additional $150,000 in General Allocation Money for performance-based conditions and a percentage of any future transfer fee in exchange for the MLS priority to former Lions forward Chris Mueller who was returning to MLS as a free agent after four months with Hibernian. [34] Later that day, Orlando acquired Jake Mulraney in a trade with Atlanta United FC in exchange for $200,000 in General Allocation Money with a potential further $75,000 in GAM pending performance-based conditions. [35] The club also announced the signing of Gastón González from Unión Santa Fe as an U22 initiative player on a three-year contract although he was immediately placed on the Season Ending Injury list having torn his ACL in what was scheduled to be his final appearance for Unión on April 19. [36] The team's first match in May was a bruising 4–1 defeat to CF Montréal who jumped Orlando to move third in the conference. The hosts dominated the first half but only held a one-goal lead through Joel Waterman before doubling it through Djordje Mihailovic on the counter shortly after the restart. Orlando pulled one back when Moutinho headed home a corner but Montreal piled on two late goals in the closing stages through man of the match Joaquín Torres and Zachary Brault-Guillard. [37] Three days later, the Lions returned to US Open Cup action, hosting Philadelphia Union, one of eight MLS teams to begin at this stage. The deadlock wasn't broken until the 54th minute when Kara pounced on a loose ball in the box before Andrés Perea's 30-yard laser three minutes later doubled the lead. The Union found a consolation goal from a recycled freekick but Orlando held out to progress to the round of 16. [38] Returning to Canada for a consecutive weekend, Orlando stole all three points from Toronto FC as a game high in chances (Orlando outshot Toronto 17–8) was goalless until second-half stoppage time when Kyle Smith glance home the winner from a corner. [39] On May 22, Orlando played 2021 expansion franchise Austin FC for the first time having not met the previous season. The Lions took an early lead at Q2 Stadium when goalkeeper Brad Stuver gifted Orlando possession and Ercan Kara capitalized with a simple tap in before Ruan doubled the lead in the 22nd minute. The game changed when referee Joseph Dickerson intervened, first showing two yellow cards to Schlegel within minutes of each other for handballs with the second gifting Austin a penalty which was scored by Sebastián Driussi. Dickerson then went to VAR to send off Araújo for kicking out at Alexander Ring in the 69th minute. Despite the numerical disadvantage, Orlando held on to the lead until stoppage time when Dickerson inexplicably awarded Austin a corner which Moussa Djitté found a 90+5th-minute equalizer from. After the game, Óscar Pareja called the officiating "unbelievable," claiming Dickerson had given Austin the game with the questionable awarding of a penalty and sending off of Schlegel, and the decision to incorrectly give Austin the corner the equalizer came from. [40] Off the back of an emotional draw, Orlando hosted Inter Miami in the US Open Cup Round of 16 three days later. Goalless in regulation, Miami took the lead in extra-time but were immediately pegged back by Facundo Torres. Level after 120 minutes, Orlando prevailed in the penalty shootout as all four Lions scored while Mason Stajduhar made a stop on Bryce Duke and DeAndre Yedlin shot over the bar. [41] Orlando played their sixth and final game of a busy month on May 28 as Pareja's former club, FC Dallas, came to town. Kara headed Orlando in to the lead in first half stoppage time, connecting with a Pereyra freekick. Dallas mounted a comeback led by Paul Arriola, scoring three unanswered goals in the second half to take the victory. Both teams wore Adidas x Parley for the Oceans jerseys made from recycled materials which also included remembrance patches to honor the victims of the Robb Elementary School shooting which had happened in Uvalde, Texas earlier that week. [42]

June

After a two-week international FIFA break, Orlando returned to action on June 15 away at New England Revolution. Goalkeeper Gallese notably started the match despite playing in Peru's World Cup qualification playoff shootout defeat to Australia two days earlier in Qatar. The game finished 1–1 as both teams scored in the first half: Carles Gil gave New England the lead, curling a shot from outside the box past Gallese in the 22nd minute before Jansson struck back, recycling a cleared corner and firing low between the legs of Djordje Petrović in the 35th minute. [43] Orlando returned home three days later to host Houston Dynamo, claiming a 2–1 victory off the back of a Kara brace. The opener saw all three designated players combine when Pereyra played in Torres to cut back to Kara who slid the ball in to the goal. The Lions doubled their lead in the second half when a fierce Pereyra shot deflected off the heels of Kara to wrong-foot Steve Clark. Houston halved the deficit less than two minutes later, Sebastián Ferreira cushioned a header in to the bottom corner. Both teams hit the woodwork before Kara and Michel missed gilt-edged chances. Houston piled on the pressure looking for an equalizer, momentarily thinking they found one in the final minute of stoppage time via a Darwin Quintero bicycle kick but the linesman quickly flagged for offside, denying Houston a late point. [44] All MLS teams wore commemorative Juneteenth jersey numbers during the weekend's games. [45] On June 24, Orlando played away at FC Cincinnati without key players such Pereyra as well as three starting defenders; Carlos (long-term injury), Jansson (yellow card accumulation) and Moutinho (injured in warm-up). Defensively unsettled, Gallese made a spectacular eight saves, earning him a place as a substitute in the MLS team of the week despite the Lions succumbing to a 1–0 defeat as Brenner capitalized on a rebound after Gallese saved a Luciano Acosta shot. [46] Three days later, Orlando returned to U.S. Open Cup play to finish off June at home to Nashville SC in the quarter-finals. A slow first half gave way to a chaotic second: Hany Mukhtar gave the visitors the lead in the 52nd minute with a far post tap in as Schlegel was too busy playing the man to deal with a seemingly harmless Alex Muyl cross. Schlegel turned hero in second half stoppage time, instinctively swinging his foot at a knock down from a freekick, sending the game in to extra-time. Referee Mark Allatin brandished 13 yellow cards to players, 10 of which went to Nashville, with all but one coming after halftime. The flurry of cards ultimately led to the dismissal of Sean Davis who earned a second yellow in the opening minute of extra-time for dragging down Torres on the counter. Despite the numerical advantage, Orlando could not break the deadlock and the game was decided by a penalty shoot-out. Muyl shot over and Perea had his saved by Elliot Panicco as the kicks went to two rounds of sudden death before Gallese made the stop on Eric Miller to secure the Lions' progress. [47]

July

After going the full 120 minutes in the Open Cup, Orlando had four days rest before returning to MLS action on the Fourth of July, hosting D.C. United. The game tied the club record for highest scoring game as Orlando lost 5–3. Taxiarchis Fountas scored a brace inside the opening 10 minutes, twice taking advantage of a disjointed Orlando defence failing to pick him up in the penalty box. He secured his hat-trick early in the second half off a freekick fired low to Gallese's right through the wall. Orlando battled back to within a goal first through substitute Torres who then got the assist as Kara rose to meet his freekick. D.C.'s two-goal lead was briefly restored by a breaking Kimarni Smith before Pato pulled the Lions back to within a goal from the penalty spot. Despite forcing Rafael Romo into some impressive saves, Orlando could not equalize before D.C. secured the win in stoppage time through Nigel Robertha. [48] Five days later, the Lions hosted intra-state rivals Inter Miami CF, taking the victory on a 90+2-minute own goal from Damion Lowe, the first time a one-goal game had been decided by a stoppage time own goal in MLS history. [49] Next on the slate was two road trips in the space of five days, away to Colorado Rapids on July 13 and Atlanta United FC on July 23. Orlando drew both games 1–1 having held the lead in both at half-time as the team struggled to build on leads and see out games defensively. [50] Gallese was named to MLS team of the week for his six-save performance against Colorado before making a further three in Atlanta including a spectacular leaping stop on former-Lion Dom Dwyer. [51] [52] Three days later, Orlando hosted a friendly against English Premier League team Arsenal who were taking part in the 2022 Florida Cup as part of their preseason tour. Having conceded early to Gabriel Martinelli, a largely full strength Orlando held Arsenal 1–1 at the break before eventually falling 3–1. [53] With three first-team departures; selling Silvester van der Water to Cambuur, Matheus Aias to Racing Santander and most notably, trading Ecuador international Sebas Méndez to Los Angeles FC; [54] On July 20, Orlando completed the free transfer Nicholas Gioacchini, a forward with eight caps for the United States who had most recently spent the 2021–22 season in France with first division Montpellier, on loan from Caen. [55] On July 23, Orlando hosted Philadelphia Union in league play. The visitors won 1–0, scoring with their only shot on goal. [56] On the end of a flick on from a corner, Dániel Gazdag had originally been called offside. But despite no definitive angle to overturn the decision, referee Alex Chilowicz decided to award the goal after consulting VAR in the 39th minute. Despite a barrage of crosses, Philadelphia hang on and were relieved to once again be on the right side of refereeing controversy when, in second half stoppage time, Gazdag appeared to pull down Antônio Carlos by his shirt in the penalty area, preventing him from reaching a header on a corner. Chilowicz was sent to the monitor but, after consulting the replays, opted against awarding Orlando a penalty and instead motioned that Carlos had dived. However, when questioned later by reporters, he instead claimed he had determined Carlos had pulled on Gazdag's shirt and awarded a foul. Coach Paeja called the decision "incredible... It frustrated us all." [57] With only one win in their last seven matches in all competitions, Orlando entered July 27's U.S. Open Cup semi-final against New York Red Bulls, a team sat 3rd-place in the East, in poor form. The Lions had only reached the semi-final stage once before, in 2019, ending in a 2–0 defeat to Atlanta United. On a rain-soaked night, an even but open first half saw the deadlock broken by the visitors in stoppage-time as Lewis Morgan arrived at the far post to fire a fierce strike past Gallese. Orlando responded immediately, going on the attack and forcing an equalizer on a corner when offseason signing César Araújo reacted to a rebound to score his first ever senior career goal. After a flurry of action to end a tight first half tied at 1–1, Orlando took the lead less than two minutes after the break as Pereyra stabbed Moutinho's pull-back past a helpless Carlos Coronel. Araújo doubed the lead with his second career goal on 62 minutes, again capitalizing on a loose ball from a corner. Growing increasingly dominant, Orlando piled on two more goals through Torres and Michel to run out emphatic 5–1 winners and send the team to its first Open Cup final, to be held at Exploria Stadium in September. [58] Orlando ended July by returning to MLS action on the road at D.C. United, featuring Wayne Rooney on his coaching debut for the team he had scored two goals and three assists for in three appearances against Orlando during his brief MLS stint. The Lions took the lead early through Urso and looked to be seeing out the game before capitulating, conceding twice in second-half stoppage time to fall to a 2–1 defeat. [59]

August

Orlando's run of league games without a win extended to five matches as New England Revolution visited Exploria Stadium on August 6 to inflict a third successive MLS defeat on the Lions as the visitors cruised to a comfortable 3–0 win. The result dropped Orlando below the playoff line for the first time since March 12. [60] The winless streak ended on August 13 when Orlando visited New York Red Bulls. Despite New York creating the majority of the chances, outshooting the visitors 15 to two, it was Torres who scored the only goal of the game, squeezing a shot from a narrow angle underneath Coronel and in off the post. Gallese's eighth clean sheet of the season set a new club single-season record. [61] The team won back to back league games for the first time since April the following week, traveling to Charlotte FC for the first time and winning 2-1. DP striker Kara returned from injury after two games out and opened the scoring after Urso picked him out ghosting in behind the Charlotte defensive line in the 62nd minute only for Charlotte to respond four minutes later through a powerful McKinze Gaines header. Substitute Akindele grabbed his first goal of the season on his 23rd appearance, breaking away on the counter and burying the rebound after his first shot was parried by goalkeeper Kristijan Kahlina to claim all three points as the Lions moved up to 5th place. [62] Akindele again provided late heroics the following week as Orlando beat New York City FC at home 2–1 with a 90+6th-minute winner. Urso had given Orlando an early 7th-minute lead with an emphatic volley after a give and go with Torres. Shortly after VAR had intervened to rescind an Antônio Carlos red card, NYCFC capitalized on a turnover in midfield, slicing open the Orlando back line for Maxi Moralez to run in behind and score. Summer signing Iván Angulo registered his first assist from a corner as the Lions claimed all three points at the death with Akindele flicking a near post header on and past Sean Johnson. [63] Three days later, on August 31, Orlando hosted Western Conference strugglers Seattle Sounders FC. In a game delayed by weather by nearly two hours, Albert Rusnák gave Seattle a halftime lead, perfectly whipping a freekick over the wall, between Gallese and the goalpost. Orlando had the chance to level when Nicholas Gioacchini won a penalty but captain Pereyra was denied by Stefan Frei in the 32nd minute having previously failed to convert his only other non-shootout penalty for Orlando in July 2021. Raúl Ruidíaz doubled the lead early in the second half, as Jordan Morris steamed past Schlegel before crossing with Ruidíaz bumbling the ball past Gallese at the second attempt in the 52nd minute. Orlando responded in 93 seconds courtesy of Torres who was found by Moutinho at the top of the box. The Lions were level by the 68th minute when Morris committed a handball in the box and this time Kara stepped up to convert the penalty, tying the game. Orlando claimed a fourth consecutive MLS victory and third in the final minutes, when Kyle Smith chopped inside off the right and fired a speculative left-footed shot which deflected in off Seattle defender Jackson Ragen. Initially called offside on Kara, referee Alex Chilowicz awarded the goal after consulting VAR and deemed the Austrian to not be active during the play. [64]

September

On September 7, Orlando City won the 2022 U.S. Open Cup, winning 3–0 against USL Championship side Sacramento Republic in the final. It was the first trophy the Lions had won in their MLS era having last won the 2014 Commissioner's Cup and marked the first time a team from outside the top division of American soccer had contested a final since Charleston Battery did so in 2008. Despite controlling the first half and peppering the Sacramento goal, Orlando had to wait until midway through the second half to open the scoring through Torres in the 75th minute when Angulo pressed Dan Casey into turning the ball over. Torres then doubled the lead from the penalty spot five minutes later when Casey slid in and took out Orlando City homegrown Benji Michel who himself added a third in stoppage time, rolling the ball into the bottom corner as Sacramento once again paid for giving up possession in their own half. [65] On the back of the Open Cup win, the Lions traveled to Eastern Conference leaders Philadelphia Union three days later. Pareja made six changes to the lineup including a second MLS appearance of the season for backup goalkeeper Mason Stajduhar. By halftime the Union led Orlando by two goals courtesy of a Moutinho own goal that looped high over Stajduhar and then Mikael Uhre who caught the Lions on the counter. Dániel Gazdag added a third early in the second half from the penalty spot when Stajduhar fumbled a cross and was adjudged to have taken Uhre down trying to recover. Alejandro Bedoya added another with a stooping header before Orlando pulled one back in the 75th minute as Perea found the top corner from the top of the box. The game finished 5–1 after Jack Elliott scored Philadelphia's fifth from a corner in the closing minutes, handing Orlando their biggest loss of the season. [66] A second consecutive defeat followed four days later as Orlando fell to a 1–0 defeat at home to Atlanta United FC. Despite outshooting the visitors 20–10, the Lions' wastefulness was punished when Thiago Almada scored the only goal of the game, playing a give and go off Andrew Gutman before dribbling his way past Carlos to leave himself one on one with Gallese. It marked the first time Atlanta won back to back games in 2022. [67] Although remaining in 5th place after the defeat, Cincinnati's 6–0 victory over San Jose the previous weekend meant the teams were level on 42 points with four games left to play each. After back to back defeats, Orlando registered a first win since the Open Cup final on September 17, beating Toronto FC 4–0 at home to sweep the Canadian side in 2022. The Lions scored early through Torres cutting inside from the right wing and firing past Quentin Westberg from outside the box. The lead was doubled in the 22nd minute when Pereyra played a through ball behind the Toronto defence to find the onrushing Kara. Shortly after the break, Lukas MacNaughton scored an own goal, turning a Moutinho cross into his own net for a third goal and Orlando's largest winning margin of the season was equaled six minutes from time through substitute Akindele. Orlando City became the first team in MLS history to have at least one 10-goal scorer in each of the club's first eight regular seasons with Ercan Kara's 10th goal of the campaign. [68]

October

Orlando entered the final month of the regular season in 6th place, having dropped one point behind FC Cincinnati following Cincy's tie with Seattle Sounders on September 27, level on points with Inter Miami in the final playoff spot, and three points ahead of Columbus Crew and the playoff line. A 2–1 defeat to New York City FC at Red Bull Arena on October 2, inflicted in the 81st minute by Talles Magno strike, clinched a home playoff game for NYCFC and interim head coach Nick Cushing [69] while setting up a win and in scenario against in-state rivals Miami for Orlando with two games remaining. [70] Two days later, Orlando traveled to Fort Lauderdale but had the worst possible start, conceding in 35 seconds when Leonardo Campana outsprinted Carlos and Schlegel to a loose ball and chipped Gallese from 35 yards. Gonzalo Higuaín added one either side of half time and including from the penalty spot when referee Victor Rivas adjudged Ruan to have handballed when the ball flicked up and rolled across his upper arm from close range. Ariel Lassiter added a fourth before Kara netted a consolation in a 4–1 defeat. [71]

Decision Day

All Eastern Conference games kicked off at 2:30 p.m. ET with Orlando City v Columbus Crew selected to be nationally televised on Fox Sports 1 and Fox Deportes. At the start of the day Orlando sat in 8th, one point below the playoff line and decision day opponents Columbus as well as FC Cincinnati. A win would leapfrog the Lions above the Crew and secure a postseason berth while a draw would rely on Cincinnati losing against bottom-of-the-table D.C. United with the Lions holding the tiebreaker between the two. [72] In the first half, both teams were limited to few opportunities but Columbus went into the break with a one-goal lead when Lucas Zelarayán drew four defenders before playing in a free Derrick Etienne who slotted past Gallese. With FC Cincinnati holding a comfortable 4–1 lead at D.C. United at the half, Orlando knew only a win would put the team in the playoffs. Urso got the Lions back level in the 56th minute with a smart turn and shot. The game was decided in the 84th minute when Facundo Torres converted a penalty to secure a 2–1 victory and send Orlando to the postseason. Appeals for the penalty had originally been ignored by referee Alex Chilowicz but, after VAR recommended he go to the monitor, a quick review confirmed Miloš Degenek had blocked a fierce Benji Michel shot with an outstretched arm and the spot kick awarded. [73] Having dropped out of the playoffs, Columbus head coach Caleb Porter was fired after the match. [74]

Playoffs

For the third consecutive season, Orlando qualified for the MLS Cup Playoffs under the stewardship of Óscar Pareja. Entering as the #7 seed, Orlando traveled to #2 CF Montréal in the first round. The Lions bowed out of the 2022 season with a 2–0 defeat. The game lacked any real offensive quality with Orlando failing to register a shot on target while Montreal scored with their only two shots on target. It took until the 68th minute for the hosts to break the deadlock when some neat interplay between Kei Kamara and Djordje Mihailovic opened up space for Ismaël Koné to steal into the box and score. A Moutinho trip on Mihailovic deep in stoppage time gifted Montreal a penalty to seal the win. [75]

Roster

Last updated on September 16, 2022 [76]
No.NationalityNamePosition(s)Date of birth (age)Previous clubNotes
Goalkeepers
1 Flag of Peru.svg Pedro Gallese GK February 23, 1990 (aged 32) Flag of Mexico.svg Veracruz INT
31 Flag of the United States.svg Mason Stajduhar GK December 2, 1997 (aged 24) Flag of the United States.svg Orlando City U-23 HGP
40 Flag of the United States.svg Adam Grinwis GK April 21, 1992 (aged 29) Flag of the United States.svg Sacramento Republic
Defenders
2 Flag of Brazil.svg Ruan RB May 29, 1995 (aged 26) Flag of Brazil.svg Barra da Tijuca INT
4 Flag of Portugal.svg João Moutinho LB January 12, 1998 (aged 24) Flag of the United States.svg Los Angeles FC GA
6 Flag of Sweden.svg Robin Jansson CB November 15, 1991 (aged 30) Flag of Sweden.svg AIK
15 Flag of Argentina.svg Rodrigo Schlegel CB April 3, 1997 (aged 24) Flag of Argentina.svg Racing Club INT
24 Flag of the United States.svg Kyle Smith RB January 9, 1992 (aged 30) Flag of the United States.svg Louisville City
25 Flag of Brazil.svg Antônio Carlos CB March 7, 1993 (aged 28) Flag of Brazil.svg Palmeiras INT
26 Flag of the United States.svg Michael Halliday RB January 22, 2003 (aged 19) Flag of the United States.svg Orlando City B HGP
30 Flag of the United States.svg Alex Freeman RB August 9, 2004 (aged 17) Flag of the United States.svg Orlando City AcademyHGP
68 Flag of the United States.svg Thomas Williams CB August 15, 2004 (aged 17) Flag of the United States.svg Orlando City B HGP
Midfielders
5 Flag of Uruguay.svg César Araújo CM April 2, 2001 (aged 20) Flag of Uruguay.svg Montevideo Wanderers U22, INT
10 Flag of Uruguay.svg Mauricio Pereyra AM March 15, 1990 (aged 31) Flag of Russia.svg FC Krasnodar DP, INT
11 Flag of Brazil.svg Júnior Urso CM March 10, 1989 (aged 32) Flag of Brazil.svg Corinthians INT
16 Flag of Peru.svg Wilder Cartagena DM September 23, 1994 (aged 27) Flag of the United Arab Emirates.svg Al-Ittihad Kalba INT, Loan in
21 Flag of the United States.svg Andrés Perea CM November 14, 2000 (aged 21) Flag of Colombia.svg Atlético Nacional U22
23 Flag of Ireland.svg Jake Mulraney LM April 5, 1996 (aged 25) Flag of the United States.svg Atlanta United FC INT
34 Flag of Jamaica.svg Joey DeZart DM June 9, 1998 (aged 23) Flag of the United States.svg Wake Forest Demon Deacons
Forwards
7 Flag of Brazil.svg Alexandre Pato CF September 2, 1989 (aged 32) Flag of Brazil.svg São Paulo INT
9 Flag of Austria.svg Ercan Kara CF January 3, 1996 (aged 26) Flag of Austria.svg Rapid Wien DP, INT
13 Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Tesho Akindele CF March 31, 1992 (aged 29) Flag of the United States.svg FC Dallas
17 Flag of Uruguay.svg Facundo Torres LW April 13, 2000 (aged 21) Flag of Uruguay.svg Peñarol DP, INT
19 Flag of the United States.svg Benji Michel RW October 23, 1997 (aged 24) Flag of the United States.svg Portland Pilots HGP
20 Flag of the United States.svg Nicholas Gioacchini CF July 25, 2000 (aged 21) Flag of France.svg Caen
22 Flag of Argentina.svg Gastón González LW June 27, 2001 (aged 20) Flag of Argentina.svg Unión Santa Fe INT, Cruz Roja.svg SEI
77 Flag of Colombia.svg Iván Angulo LW March 22, 1999 (aged 22) Flag of Brazil.svg Palmeiras INT, Loan in

Staff

Executive
Majority owner and chairman Flag of the United States.svg Mark Wilf
Majority owner and vice-chair Flag of the United States.svg Zygi Wilf
Majority owner and vice-chair Flag of the United States.svg Leonard Wilf
President of business operations Flag of the United States.svg Jarrod Dillon
General manager Flag of Brazil.svg Luiz Muzzi
Technical director Flag of Brazil.svg Ricardo Moreira
Coaching staff
Head coach Flag of Colombia.svg Óscar Pareja
Assistant coach Flag of Argentina.svg Josema Bazán
Assistant coach Flag of Mexico.svg Diego Torres Ortiz
Strength and conditioning coach Flag of Argentina.svg Fabian Bazán
Goalkeeping coach Flag of Venezuela.svg César Baena

Competitions

Friendlies

Orlando City preseason opened on January 18. Seven friendly matches were scheduled, all to played behind closed doors. The New York City FC scrimmage scheduled for January 23 was later canceled. [77] On January 28, Orlando announced the friendly against Colorado would no longer be played behind closed doors and instead be open to the public. [78] On April 19, it was announced Orlando City would host a game against Premier League side Arsenal on their preseason tour on July 20 as part of the "FC Series" expansion of the Florida Cup. [79]

January 23Preseason Orlando City Canceled [77] New York City FC
Note: Closed-door scrimmage
February 3Preseason Orlando City 4–5 Minnesota United FC Orlando, Florida
2:00 pm
Report
Stadium: Exploria Stadium
Note: Closed-door scrimmage
February 5Preseason Orlando City 0–1 FC Dallas Kissimmee, Florida
11:00 am Report Stadium: Osceola County Stadium
Note: Closed-door scrimmage
February 11Preseason Orlando City 1–1 Colorado Rapids Orlando, Florida
7:00 pm Report
Stadium: Exploria Stadium
February 16Preseason Orlando City 0–0 Miami FC Kissimmee, Florida
2:00 pm Report Stadium: Osceola County Stadium
Note: Closed-door scrimmage
February 18Preseason Orlando City 2–2 FC Cincinnati Orlando, Florida
1:15 pm
Report
Stadium: Exploria Stadium
Note: Closed-door scrimmage
February 19Preseason Orlando City 3–1 Tampa Bay Rowdies Florida
1:00 pm
Report
Stadium: Undisclosed
Note: Closed-door scrimmage
July 20 Florida Cup Orlando City 1–3 Flag of England.svg Arsenal Orlando, Florida
8:30 pm
Report Stadium: Exploria Stadium
Attendance: 19,738
Referee: Kevin Broadley

Major League Soccer

Outside of the club, Charlotte FC joined the league as an expansion franchise, bringing the total number of MLS clubs to 28. Orlando's first meeting with Charlotte will be at home on April 30 with the first away trip on August 21. Orlando will also play 2021 expansion franchise Austin FC for the first time on May 22 on the road, having not met during the previous season. The Lions were not scheduled to face six Western Conference teams during the 2022 regular season: Sporting Kansas City, Minnesota United, Nashville SC, Real Salt Lake, San Jose Earthquakes and Vancouver Whitecaps. The top seven teams from each conference will qualify for the playoffs.

Results summary

OverallHomeAway
PldWDLGFGAGDPtsWDLGFGAGDWDLGFGAGD
34146144453 −9489082628 −25661825 −7

Last updated: October 9.
Source: Match reports

Round12345678910111213141516171819202122232425262728293031323334
StadiumHAHAAHHAHHAAAHAHAHHAAHAHAAHHAHHAAH
ResultWDLWDLWWLWLWDLDWLLWDDLLLWWWWLLWLLW
Position [a] 5485462233443554565555587555555687
Updated to match(es) played on October 9. Source: Match reports
A = Away; H = Home; W = Win; D = Draw; L = Loss
  1. ORL's position at the end of the matchweek, not their match.

Results

February 271 Orlando City 2–0 CF Montréal Orlando, Florida
1:00 pm
Report
Stadium: Exploria Stadium
Attendance: 21,283
Referee: Marcos DeOliveira
March 52 Chicago Fire FC 0–0 Orlando City Chicago, Illinois
6:00 pm
Report
Stadium: Soldier Field
Attendance: 25,477
Referee: Ismir Pekmic
March 123 Orlando City 1–2 FC Cincinnati Orlando, Florida
7:30 pm
Report
Stadium: Exploria Stadium
Attendance: 16,512
Referee: Chris Penso
March 194 LA Galaxy 0–1 Orlando City Carson, California
3:30 pm Report
Stadium: Dignity Health Sports Park
Attendance: 25,174
Referee: Alex Chilowicz
March 275 Portland Timbers 1–1 Orlando City Portland, Oregon
4:00 pm
Report
Stadium: Providence Park
Attendance: 22,948
Referee: Marcos de Oliveira
April 26 Orlando City 2–4 Los Angeles FC Orlando, Florida
7:30 pm
Report
Stadium: Exploria Stadium
Attendance: 16,753
Referee: Joseph Dickerson
April 97 Orlando City 1–0 Chicago Fire FC Orlando, Florida
1:00 pm
Report
Stadium: Exploria Stadium
Attendance: 16,051
Referee: Victor Rivas
April 168 Columbus Crew 0–2 Orlando City Columbus, Ohio
7:30 pm
Report
Stadium: Lower.com Field
Attendance: 18,030
Referee: Drew Fischer
April 249 Orlando City 0–3 New York Red Bulls Orlando, Florida
3:30 pm
Report
Stadium: Exploria Stadium
Attendance: 17,503
Referee: Alex Chilowicz
April 3010 Orlando City 2–1 Charlotte FC Orlando, Florida
7:30 pm
Report
Stadium: Exploria Stadium
Attendance: 17,012
Referee: Fotis Bazakos
May 711 CF Montréal 4–1 Orlando City Montreal, Quebec, Canada
4:00 pm
Report
Stadium: Saputo Stadium
Referee: Guido Gonzales Jr.
May 1412 Toronto FC 0–1 Orlando City Toronto, Ontario, Canada
3:00 pm
Report
Stadium: BMO Field
Attendance: 26,146
Referee: Nima Saghafi
May 2213 Austin FC 2–2 Orlando City Austin, Texas
8:00 pm
Report
Stadium: Q2 Stadium
Attendance: 20,738
Referee: Joseph Dickerson
May 2814 Orlando City 1–3 FC Dallas Orlando, Florida
7:30 pm
Report
Stadium: Exploria Stadium
Attendance: 17,380
Referee: Marcos de Oliveira
June 1515 New England Revolution 1–1 Orlando City Foxborough, Massachusetts
7:30 pm
Report
Stadium: Gillette Stadium
Attendance: 15,308
Referee: Ramy Touchan
June 1816 Orlando City 2–1 Houston Dynamo FC Orlando, Florida
7:30 pm
Report
Stadium: Exploria Stadium
Attendance: 16,333
Referee: Rosendo Mendoza
June 2417 FC Cincinnati 1–0 Orlando City Cincinnati, Ohio
7:30 pm
Report
Stadium: TQL Stadium
Attendance: 24,263
Referee: Guido Gonzales Jr.
July 418 Orlando City 3–5 D.C. United Orlando, Florida
7:00 pm
Report
Stadium: Exploria Stadium
Attendance: 16,631
Referee: Allen Chapman
July 919 Orlando City 1–0 Inter Miami CF Orlando, Florida
8:00 pm
Report
Stadium: Exploria Stadium
Attendance: 20,052
Referee: Nima Saghafi
Note: Kick off delayed 1hr 25mins for inclement weather.
July 1320 Colorado Rapids 1–1 Orlando City Commerce City, Colorado
9:00 pm
Report
Stadium: Dick's Sporting Goods Park
Attendance: 12,538
Referee: Fotis Bazakos
July 1721 Atlanta United FC 1–1 Orlando City Atlanta, Georgia
3:00 pm
Report
Stadium: Mercedes-Benz Stadium
Referee: Victor Rivas
July 2322 Orlando City 0–1 Philadelphia Union Orlando, Florida
7:30 pm
Report
Stadium: Exploria Stadium
Attendance: 16,031
Referee: Alex Chilowicz
July 3123 D.C. United 2–1 Orlando City Washington, D.C.
5:00 pm
Report
Stadium: Audi Field
Attendance: 15,805
Referee: Armando Villarreal
August 624 Orlando City 0–3 New England Revolution Orlando, Florida
7:30 pm
Report
Stadium: Exploria Stadium
Referee: Ramy Touchan
August 1325 New York Red Bulls 0–1 Orlando City Harrison, New Jersey
6:00 pm
Report
Stadium: Red Bull Arena
Referee: Rubiel Vazquez
August 2126 Charlotte FC 1–2 Orlando City Charlotte, North Carolina
7:00 pm
Report
Stadium: Bank of America Stadium
Attendance: 30,855
Referee: Lukasz Szpala
August 2827 Orlando City 2–1 New York City FC Orlando, Florida
7:30 pm
Report
Stadium: Exploria Stadium
Attendance: 16,289
Referee: Chris Penso
August 3128 Orlando City 3–2 Seattle Sounders FC Orlando, Florida
7:30 pm
Report
Stadium: Exploria Stadium
Attendance: 14,483
Referee: Alex Chilowicz
Note: Kick off delayed 1hr 52mins for inclement weather.
September 4 Inter Miami CF v Orlando City Fort Lauderdale, Florida
8:00 pmStadium: DRV PNK Stadium
Note: Rescheduled to October 5 due to Orlando's participation in the 2022 U.S. Open Cup Final. [80]
September 1029 Philadelphia Union 5–1 Orlando City Chester, Pennsylvania
7:30 pm
Report
Stadium: Subaru Park
Attendance: 19,079
Referee: Armando Villarreal
September 1430 Orlando City 0–1 Atlanta United FC Orlando, Florida
6:00 pm
Report
Stadium: Exploria Stadium
Attendance: 15,340
Referee: Rubiel Vazquez
Note: Kick off delayed 55mins for inclement weather.
September 1731 Orlando City 4–0 Toronto FC Orlando, Florida
7:30 pm
Report
Stadium: Exploria Stadium
Attendance: 17,189
Referee: Nima Saghafi
October 232 New York City FC 2–1 Orlando City Harrison, New Jersey
1:00 pm
Report
Stadium: Red Bull Arena
Attendance: 13,169
Referee: Joseph Dickerson
Note: Moved from October 1 at Citi Field due to New York Mets schedule disruption following MLB lockout. [81]
October 533 Inter Miami CF 4–1 Orlando City Fort Lauderdale, Florida
8:00 pm
Report
Stadium: DRV PNK Stadium
Attendance: 15,228
Referee: Victor Rivas
Note: Rescheduled from September 4 due to Orlando's participation in the 2022 U.S. Open Cup Final. [80]
October 934 Orlando City 2–1 Columbus Crew Orlando, Florida
2:30 pm
Report
Stadium: Exploria Stadium
Attendance: 21,693
Referee: Alex Chilowicz

Standings

Eastern Conference table

PosTeamPldWLTGFGAGDPtsQualification
5 FC Cincinnati 34129136456+849Qualification for the first round
6 Inter Miami CF 34141464756948
7 Orlando City SC 34141464453948Qualification for the first round & 2023 CONCACAF Champions League [a]
8 Columbus Crew 34108164641+546
9 Charlotte FC 34131834452842
Source: MLS
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) total wins; 3) total goal differential; 4) total goals scored; 5) fewer disciplinary points; 6) away goal differential; 7) away goals scored; 8) home goals differential; 9) home goals scored; 10) coin toss (2 clubs tied) or drawing of lots (≥3 clubs tied)
Notes:

Overall table

PosTeamPldWLTGFGAGDPtsQualification
11 Minnesota United FC 34141464851348
12 Inter Miami CF 34141464756948
13 Orlando City SC (U)34141464453948Qualification for the 2023 CONCACAF Champions League [a]
14 Real Salt Lake 341211114345247
15 Portland Timbers 341110135353046
Source: MLS
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) total wins; 3) total goal differential; 4) total goals scored; 5) fewer disciplinary points; 6) away goal differential; 7) away goals scored; 8) home goals differential; 9) home goals scored; 10) coin toss (2 clubs tied) or drawing of lots (≥3 clubs tied)
(U) U.S. Open Cup winners
Notes:
  1. As 2022 U.S. Open Cup champions (USA4)

MLS Cup Playoffs

October 16First round #2 CF Montréal 2–0 #7 Orlando City Montreal, Quebec, Canada
8:00 pm
Report
Stadium: Saputo Stadium
Attendance: 19,619
Referee: Ismail Elfath

U.S. Open Cup

Following a two-year hiatus as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, the U.S. Open Cup returned in 2022. Orlando entered in the third round, a round earlier than in previous years, along with all but the eight highest seeded MLS teams from the previous season's regular season standings. All MLS teams were drawn against a lower division team in their allocated regional group for the third round. [82]

April 20Third round Orlando City Flag of Florida.svg 2–1 Flag of Florida.svg Tampa Bay Rowdies Orlando, Florida
7:00 pm
Report
Stadium: Exploria Stadium
Attendance: 8,057
Referee: Daniel Gutierrez
May 10Fourth round Orlando City Flag of Florida.svg 2–1 Flag of Pennsylvania.svg Philadelphia Union Orlando, Florida
7:00 pm
Report
Stadium: Exploria Stadium
Attendance: 7,601
Referee: Elvis Osmanovic
May 25Round of 16 Orlando City Flag of Florida.svg 1–1 (a.e.t.)
(4–2 p)
Flag of Florida.svg Inter Miami CF Orlando, Florida
7:00 pm
Report
Stadium: Exploria Stadium
Attendance: 11,509
Referee: Kevin Broadley
Penalties
June 29Quarter-final Orlando City Flag of Florida.svg 1–1 (a.e.t.)
(6–5 p)
Flag of Tennessee.svg Nashville SC Orlando, Florida
7:00 pm
Report
Stadium: Exploria Stadium
Attendance: 11,940
Referee: Mark Allatin
Penalties
July 27Semi-final Orlando City Flag of Florida.svg 5–1 Flag of New Jersey.svg New York Red Bulls Orlando, Florida
7:30 pm
Report
Stadium: Exploria Stadium
Attendance: 11,612
Referee: Victor Rivas
September 7 Final Orlando City Flag of Florida.svg 3–0 Flag of California.svg Sacramento Republic Orlando, Florida
8:00 pm
Report
Stadium: Exploria Stadium
Attendance: 25,527
Referee: Ramy Touchan

Squad statistics

Appearances

As of match played October 16, 2022

Starting appearances are listed first, followed by substitute appearances after the + symbol where applicable.

No.PosNatPlayerTotalMLSPlayoffsOpen Cup
AppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Goalkeepers
1 GK Flag of Peru (state).svg  PER Pedro Gallese 3603201030
31 GK Flag of the United States.svg  USA Mason Stajduhar 50200030
40 GK Flag of the United States.svg  USA Adam Grinwis 00000000
50 GK Flag of Venezuela (state).svg  VEN Javier Otero 00000000
Defenders
2 DF Flag of Brazil.svg  BRA Ruan 38229+22105+10
4 DF Flag of Portugal.svg  POR João Moutinho 342282102+30
6 DF Flag of Sweden.svg  SWE Robin Jansson 271221004+10
15 DF Flag of Argentina.svg  ARG Rodrigo Schlegel 36223+61105+11
24 DF Flag of the United States.svg  USA Kyle Smith 35214+152004+20
25 DF Flag of Brazil.svg  BRA Antônio Carlos 25018+30102+10
26 DF Flag of the United States.svg  USA Michael Halliday 900+600+101+10
30 DF Flag of the United States.svg  USA Alex Freeman 00000000
35 DF Flag of the United States.svg  USA Brandon Hackenberg 00000000
68 DF Flag of the United States.svg  USA Thomas Williams 502+200010
Midfielders
5 MF Flag of Uruguay.svg  URU César Araújo 38228+30105+12
10 MF Flag of Uruguay.svg  URU Mauricio Pereyra 39231+11103+31
11 MF Flag of Brazil.svg  BRA Júnior Urso 41629+551061
16 MF Flag of Peru (state).svg  PER Wilder Cartagena 904+40000+10
21 MF Flag of the United States.svg  USA Andrés Perea 3027+171002+41
23 MF Flag of Ireland.svg  IRL Jake Mulraney 18010+700+1000
34 MF Flag of Jamaica.svg  JAM Joey DeZart 100+100000
Forwards
7 FW Flag of Brazil.svg  BRA Alexandre Pato 27414+83004+11
9 FW Flag of Austria.svg  AUT Ercan Kara 341222+711103+11
13 FW Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  CAN Tesho Akindele 3234+2330+102+20
17 FW Flag of Uruguay.svg  URU Facundo Torres 401329+49105+14
19 FW Flag of the United States.svg  USA Benji Michel 36314+1710+102+22
20 FW Flag of the United States.svg  USA Nicholas Gioacchini 702+40000+10
22 FW Flag of Argentina.svg  ARG Gastón González 00000000
77 FW Flag of Colombia.svg  COL Iván Angulo 1105+401010
Players away from the club on loan:
22 FW Flag of Ecuador.svg  ECU Alexander Alvarado 00000000
27 FW Flag of the United States.svg  USA Jack Lynn 400+30000+10
32 FW Flag of Puerto Rico.svg  PUR Wilfredo Rivera 00000000
99 FW Flag of Brazil.svg  BRA Matheus Aiás 00000000
Players who appeared for the club but left during the season:
8 MF Flag of Ecuador.svg  ECU Sebas Méndez 1705+80002+20
14 FW Flag of the Netherlands.svg  NED Silvester van der Water 500+400010

Goalscorers

As of match played October 16, 2022
RankNo.Pos.NameMLSPlayoffsOpen CupTotal
117FW Flag of Uruguay.svg Facundo Torres 90413
29FW Flag of Austria.svg Ercan Kara 110112
311MF Flag of Brazil.svg Júnior Urso 5016
47FW Flag of Brazil.svg Alexandre Pato 3014
513FW Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Tesho Akindele 3003
19FW Flag of the United States.svg Benji Michel 1023
72DF Flag of Brazil.svg Ruan 2002
4DF Flag of Portugal.svg João Moutinho 2002
5MF Flag of Uruguay.svg César Araújo 0022
10MF Flag of Uruguay.svg Mauricio Pereyra 1012
15DF Flag of Argentina.svg Rodrigo Schlegel 1012
21MF Flag of the United States.svg Andrés Perea 1012
24DF Flag of the United States.svg Kyle Smith 2002
146DF Flag of Sweden.svg Robin Jansson 1001
Own goal2002
Total4401458

Shutouts

As of match played October 16, 2022
RankNo.Pos.NameMLSPlayoffsOpen CupTotal
11GK Flag of Peru.svg Pedro Gallese 90110
Total90110

Disciplinary record

As of match played October 16, 2022
No.Pos.NameMLSPlayoffsOpen CupTotal
Yellow card.svgYellow card.svg Yellow-red card.svgRed card.svgYellow card.svgYellow card.svg Yellow-red card.svgRed card.svgYellow card.svgYellow card.svg Yellow-red card.svgRed card.svgYellow card.svgYellow card.svg Yellow-red card.svgRed card.svg
1GK Flag of Peru.svg Pedro Gallese 300000000300
2DF Flag of Brazil.svg Ruan 300000100400
4DF Flag of Portugal.svg João Moutinho 800100000900
5CM Flag of Uruguay.svg César Araújo 8010002001001
6DF Flag of Sweden.svg Robin Jansson 9100002001110
7FW Flag of Brazil.svg Alexandre Pato 000000100100
8MF Flag of Ecuador.svg Sebas Méndez 200000200400
9FW Flag of Austria.svg Ercan Kara 200000000200
10MF Flag of Uruguay.svg Mauricio Pereyra 500100300900
11MF Flag of Brazil.svg Júnior Urso 700000000700
15DF Flag of Argentina.svg Rodrigo Schlegel 610000200810
16MF Flag of Peru.svg Wilder Cartagena 200000000200
17FW Flag of Uruguay.svg Facundo Torres 100000000100
19FW Flag of the United States.svg Benji Michel 400000000400
20FW Flag of the United States.svg Nicholas Gioacchini 000000100100
21MF Flag of Brazil.svg Andrés Perea 100000100200
23MF Flag of Ireland.svg Jake Mulraney 200000000200
24DF Flag of the United States.svg Kyle Smith 500000000500
25DF Flag of Brazil.svg Antônio Carlos 600100100800
26DF Flag of the United States.svg Michael Halliday 100000000100
68DF Flag of the United States.svg Thomas Williams 100000000100
77FW Flag of Colombia.svg Iván Angulo 100100000200
Total772140013009421

Player movement

Per Major League Soccer and club policies, terms of the deals do not get disclosed.

MLS SuperDraft picks

Draft picks are not automatically signed to the team roster. The 2022 MLS SuperDraft was held on January 11, 2022. Orlando made three selections.

2022 Orlando City MLS SuperDraft Picks
RoundSelectionPlayerPositionCollegeStatus
118 Flag of the United States.svg Jack Lynn CF Flag of Indiana.svg University of Notre Dame Signed [83]
246 Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Nathan Dossantos CB Flag of West Virginia.svg Marshall University Not signed [84]
374 Flag of Cambodia.svg Nick Taylor LW Flag of Florida.svg University of Central Florida Signed to OCB [85]

Transfers in

No.NamePos.Transferred fromFee/notesDateRef.
5 Flag of Uruguay.svg César Araújo CM Flag of Uruguay.svg Montevideo Wanderers Undisclosed fee, reportedly $2mJanuary 7, 2022 [9] [10]
17 Flag of Uruguay.svg Facundo Torres LW Flag of Uruguay.svg Peñarol Undisclosed fee, reportedly $9mJanuary 24, 2022 [13] [14]
9 Flag of Austria.svg Ercan Kara CF Flag of Austria.svg Rapid Wien Undisclosed fee; reportedly $800kJanuary 27, 2022 [86] [15]
30 Flag of the United States.svg Alex Freeman RB Flag of the United States.svg Orlando City AcademySigned Homegrown contractFebruary 15, 2022 [17]
23 Flag of Ireland.svg Jake Mulraney LM Flag of the United States.svg Atlanta United FC Traded in exchange for $200,000 GAM with a potential $75,000 GAM pending performance-based conditions.May 5, 2022 [35]
22 Flag of Argentina.svg Gastón González LW Flag of Argentina.svg Unión Santa Fe Undisclosed fee [36]
20 Flag of the United States.svg Nicholas Gioacchini CF Flag of France.svg Caen Free transferJuly 20, 2022 [87]

Loans in

No.NamePos.Loaned fromNotesDateRef.
35 Flag of the United States.svg Brandon Hackenberg CB Flag of the United States.svg Orlando City B Short-term loan from MLS Next Pro contract until May 11May 7, 2022 [88]
50 Flag of Venezuela.svg Javier Otero GK Flag of the United States.svg Orlando City B Short-term loan from MLS Next Pro contract until June 16June 15, 2022 [89]
77 Flag of Colombia.svg Iván Angulo LW Flag of Brazil.svg Palmeiras 12-month loan with option for six-month extensionJuly 25, 2022 [90]
16 Flag of Peru.svg Wilder Cartagena DM Flag of the United Arab Emirates.svg Al-Ittihad Kalba Until end of 2022 season with 2023 loan extension optionAugust 2, 2022 [91]

Transfers out

No.NamePos.Transferred toFee/notesDateRef.
3 Flag of Argentina.svg Emmanuel Mas LB Flag of Argentina.svg Estudiantes LP Option declined; signed with Estudiantes on 1/6/22December 1, 2021 [2] [92]
17 Flag of Portugal.svg Nani LW Flag of Italy.svg Venezia Option declined; signed with Venezia on 1/14/22 [2] [93]
28 Flag of the United States.svg Raul Aguilera DM Flag of the United States.svg Indy Eleven Option declined; signed with Indy Eleven on 1/13/22 [2] [94]
29 Flag of the United States.svg Rio Hope-Gund CB Flag of the United States.svg Loudoun United Option declined; signed with Loudoun United on 2/11/22 [2] [95]
30 Flag of the United States.svg David Loera AM Flag of the United States.svg San Antonio FC Option declined; signed with San Antonio FC on 1/11/22 [2] [96]
33 Flag of the United States.svg Jordan Bender AM Flag of South Africa.svg Cape Town City Option declined; signed with Cape Town City on 7/26/22 [2] [97]
35 Flag of the United States.svg Derek Dodson CF Flag of the United States.svg Memphis 901 Option declined; signed with Memphis 901 on 2/18/22 [2] [98]
9 Flag of the United States.svg Chris Mueller RW Flag of Scotland.svg Hibernian Contract expired; agreed pre-contract with Hibernian on 7/21/21 [2] [99]
20 Flag of Spain.svg Uri Rosell DM Flag of the United States.svg Sporting Kansas City Contract expired; signed with Sporting Kansas City on 12/21/21 [2] [100]
18 Flag of the United States.svg Daryl Dike CF Flag of England.svg West Bromwich Albion Undisclosed fee, reportedly $9.5mJanuary 1, 2022 [101] [8]
14 Flag of the Netherlands.svg Silvester van der Water RW Flag of the Netherlands.svg SC Cambuur Undisclosed feeJuly 1, 2022 [102]
99 Flag of Brazil.svg Matheus Aias CF Flag of Spain.svg Racing Santander Undisclosed feeJuly 8, 2022 [103]
8 Flag of Ecuador.svg Sebas Méndez DM Flag of the United States.svg Los Angeles FC Traded in exchange for $300,000 GAM with a potential $450,000 GAM pending performance-based conditions. Orlando retain an undisclosed sell-on percentageJuly 19, 2022 [104]

Loans out

No.NamePos.Loaned toNotesDateRef.
99 Flag of Brazil.svg Matheus Aiás CF Flag of Spain.svg Real Oviedo Continuation of 12-month loan until June 30, 2022July 4, 2021 [105]
22 Flag of Ecuador.svg Alexander Alvarado LW Flag of Ecuador.svg L.D.U. Quito Until December 31, 2022, with option to buyJanuary 19, 2022 [106]
32 Flag of Puerto Rico.svg Wilfredo Rivera LW Flag of the United States.svg Indy Eleven Until December 31, 2022 with right of recallJuly 25, 2022 [107]
27 Flag of the United States.svg Jack Lynn CF Flag of the United States.svg San Antonio FC Until December 31, 2022 with right of recallSeptember 16, 2022 [108]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mauricio Pereyra</span> Uruguayan footballer (born 1990)

Mauricio Ernesto Pereyra Antonini is a Uruguayan professional footballer who plays as an attacking midfielder for Uruguayan Primera División club Nacional.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Dom Dwyer</span> American soccer player

Dominic James Dwyer is a professional soccer player who plays as a forward for the Oakland Roots in the USL Championship. Born in England, he played for the United States national team.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Orlando City SC</span> Soccer club in Major League Soccer

Orlando City Soccer Club, known as Orlando City SC or simply Orlando City, is an American professional soccer club based in Orlando, Florida. The club competes as a member of the Eastern Conference in Major League Soccer (MLS), the top division in the United States soccer league system. Orlando City SC began play in 2015 as the 21st franchise in MLS, succeeding the USL Pro team of the same name. In doing so they became the first MLS team in Florida since Miami Fusion and Tampa Bay Mutiny both folded following the 2001 season. The team plays in Downtown Orlando at Inter&Co Stadium, which it owns and operates.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Pedro Gallese</span> Peruvian footballer (born 1990)

Pedro David Gallese Quiroz is a Peruvian professional footballer who plays as a goalkeeper for Major League Soccer club Orlando City and the Peru national team.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Adam Grinwis</span> American soccer player

Adam Robert Grinwis is an American soccer player who plays as a goalkeeper for USL Championship club Charleston Battery.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2018 Orlando City SC season</span> Orlando City SC 2018 soccer season

The 2018 Orlando City SC season was the club's eighth season of existence in Orlando and fourth season in Major League Soccer, the top-flight league in the United States soccer league system. Alongside Major League Soccer, the club also competed in the U.S. Open Cup. The team played its home games at Orlando City Stadium.

Christopher Matthew Mueller is an American professional soccer player who plays as a winger for Major League Soccer club Chicago Fire.

Rodrigo Adrián Schlegel is an Argentine professional footballer who plays as a centre-back for Major League Soccer club Orlando City.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Robin Jansson</span> Swedish footballer

Per Tony Robin Jansson is a Swedish professional footballer who plays as a centre back for Major League Soccer club Orlando City, whom he captains.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2019 Orlando City SC season</span> Season of American association football team

The 2019 Orlando City SC season was the club's ninth season of existence in Orlando and fifth season in Major League Soccer, the top-flight league in the United States soccer league system. Alongside Major League Soccer, the club also competed in the U.S. Open Cup, reaching the semi-finals for the first time.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Matheus Aiás</span> Brazilian footballer

Matheus Aiás Barrozo Rodrigues, known as Matheus Aiás, is a Brazilian professional footballer who plays as a striker for Armenian Premier League club FC Noah.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2020 Orlando City SC season</span> Season of American association football team

The 2020 Orlando City SC season was the club's 10th season of existence in Orlando and sixth season as a Major League Soccer franchise, the top-flight league in the United States soccer league system. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the U.S. Open Cup was canceled.

Ercan Kara is an Austrian professional footballer who plays as a forward for Süper Lig club Samsunspor and the Austria national team.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Facundo Torres</span> Uruguayan footballer (born 2000)

Facundo Daniel Torres Pérez is a Uruguayan professional footballer who plays as an attacking midfielder or winger for Major League Soccer club Orlando City and the Uruguay national team.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2021 Orlando City SC season</span> Season of American association football team

The 2021 Orlando City SC season was the club's 11th season of existence in Orlando and seventh season as a Major League Soccer franchise, the top-flight league in the United States soccer league system. There was no U.S. Open Cup for the second consecutive year as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic but the team did take part in the Leagues Cup for the first time.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2022 U.S. Open Cup final</span> 2022 final of the Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup

The 2022 Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup Final was a soccer match played on September 7, 2022, at Exploria Stadium in Orlando, Florida, United States. It was played to determine the winner of the 2022 U.S. Open Cup, the 107th edition of the oldest competition in U.S. soccer, which is open to amateur and professional soccer teams affiliated with the United States Soccer Federation.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2023 Orlando City SC season</span> Season of American association football team

The 2023 Orlando City SC season was the club's 13th season of existence in Orlando and ninth season as a Major League Soccer franchise, the top-flight league in the United States soccer league system. Orlando also played in three other competitions: the U.S. Open Cup as defending champions, Leagues Cup, as well as the CONCACAF Champions League for the first time.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Duncan McGuire (soccer)</span> American soccer player (born 2001)

Duncan MacAllister McGuire is an American professional soccer player who plays as a forward for Major League Soccer club Orlando City and the United States national team.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2024 Orlando City SC season</span> Season of American association football team

The 2024 Orlando City SC season is the club's 14th season of existence in Orlando and 10th season as a Major League Soccer franchise, the top-flight league in the United States soccer league system. Orlando will also play in two other competitions: the Leagues Cup and the CONCACAF Champions Cup. As a result of a decision by Major League Soccer, Orlando City did not contest the U.S. Open Cup for the first time in club history.

References

  1. "Orlando City Soccer, Orlando Pride name exec to new position". www.bizjournals.com.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 "Orlando City Exercises Contract Options on 11 Players Following 2021 MLS Season". Orlando City SC.
  3. "Orlando City SC Re-Signs Midfielder Mauricio Pereyra". www.orlandocitysc.com.
  4. "Orlando City Re-Signs Forward Alexandre Pato". www.orlandocitysc.com.
  5. "MLS NEXT Pro Unveils 21 Clubs for Inaugural Season". orlandocitysc.
  6. "2021 Expansion Draft results: Charlotte FC make picks ahead of inaugural season". MLSSoccer.com.
  7. "Albion complete signing of Daryl Dike". West Bromwich Albion.
  8. 1 2 "USMNT forward Daryl Dike signs for West Brom from Orlando City in $9.5m deal". ESPN. January 1, 2022.
  9. 1 2 "Orlando City SC Acquires Uruguayan Midfielder César Araújo". www.orlandocitysc.com.
  10. 1 2 "Wanderers: César Araújo dejó el "bohemio" y es nuevo jugador del Orlando City". futbol.com.uy - Montevideo Portal (in Spanish).
  11. "MLS launches U22 Initiative to support further investment in young players". MLSsoccer.com.
  12. "MLS SuperDraft 2022 presented by adidas". MLSsoccer.com.
  13. 1 2 "Orlando City SC Acquires Uruguayan Forward Facundo Torres". www.orlandocitysc.com.
  14. 1 2 Gramajo, Mike. "Orlando City pays record transfer fee to sign Uruguayan Facundo Torres". orlandosentinel.com.
  15. 1 2 "MLS Eastern Conference roster build status for 2022 season". MLSsoccer.
  16. "Orlando City SC Acquires an International Roster Slot from CF Montréal". www.orlandocitysc.com.
  17. 1 2 "Orlando City SC Signs Defender Alex Freeman as Club's 12th All-Time Homegrown". www.orlandocitysc.com.
  18. "Recap: Orlando City SC 2, CF Montréal 0". MLSSoccer.com.
  19. "The Definitive Angle: MLS Week 2". Professional Referee Organization.
  20. David, Austin. "Orlando City gets scoreless draw in Chicago". Orlando Sentinel.
  21. "Orlando City Split the Points in Scoreless Draw at Chicago Fire FC". www.orlandocitysc.com.
  22. "FC Cincinnati earn first win of 2022 at Orlando City SC". FC Cincinnati.
  23. "Recap: LA Galaxy 0, Orlando City SC 1". MLSsoccer.com.
  24. Taylor, J. T. (March 20, 2022). "Orlando City vs. LA Galaxy: Five Takeaways". The Mane Land.
  25. Clarke, Ryan (March 27, 2022). "Portland Timbers pull off late, dramatic draw against Orlando City SC". oregonlive.
  26. Tracy, Trebor (April 2, 2022). "Fresh squeezed: Orlando City SC 2, LAFC 4". Angels on Parade.
  27. "Orlando City defender Antonio Carlos sidelined with high hamstring injury". www.orlandocitysc.com.
  28. Mikula, Jeremy. "Chicago Fire's defense finally cracks in a 1-0 loss to Orlando City: "We weren't going to go 34 games undefeated"". Chicago Tribune.
  29. "Rodrigo Schlegel, Ercan Kara power Orlando City past Columbus Crew". Orlando Sentinel.
  30. "Storylines: Open Cup Against The Rowdies". www.orlandocitysc.com.
  31. Citro, Michael (April 20, 2022). "Orlando City Knocks Tampa Bay Out of Open Cup, 2-1". The Mane Land.
  32. "Recap: Orlando City SC 0, New York Red Bulls 3". www.mlssoccer.com.
  33. Citro, Michael (April 30, 2022). "Orlando City Beats Charlotte FC 2-1 in First-Ever Meeting". The Mane Land.
  34. "Orlando City SC Acquires 2023 First round draft pick, General Allocation Money and Discovery Priority from Chicago Fire FC". www.orlandocitysc.com.
  35. 1 2 "Orlando City SC Acquires Winger/Midfielder Jake Mulraney from Atlanta United FC". www.orlandocitysc.com.
  36. 1 2 "Orlando City SC Acquires Argentinian Forward Gastón González". www.orlandocitysc.com.
  37. "Recap: CF Montréal 4, Orlando City SC 1". MLSsoccer.com.
  38. Lister, Joe (May 10, 2022). "Philadelphia Union falls to Orlando City SC in U.S. Open Cup". Brotherly Game.
  39. Bashir, Raheem (May 15, 2022). "Kyle Smith scores game-winning goal and extends TFC's losing streak". Last Word On Soccer.
  40. Citro, Michael (May 22, 2022). "9-Man Lions Drop Points at the Death in 2-2 Draw at Austin". The Mane Land.
  41. "2022 US Open Cup round 5: Orlando City edge Inter Miami CF in PKs to reach Quarterfinals". thecup.us.
  42. "Orlando City Falls to FC Dallas, 3-1". www.orlandocitysc.com.
  43. "Robin Jansson Scores First of the Year in Lions' 1-1 Draw at New England". www.orlandocitysc.com.
  44. Rollins, Sean (June 18, 2022). "Orlando City Wins 2-1 Against the Houston Dynamo". The Mane Land.
  45. "MLS Clubs Wear Special Numbers, Pre-Match Jerseys to Mark Juneteenth". SportsLogos News.
  46. Brennan, Pat. "Luciano Acosta, Brenner combine to lift FC Cincinnati past Orlando City SC, 1-0". The Enquirer.
  47. "Orlando City SC Completes 2022 U.S. Open Cup Semifinal Field with Come-From-Behind Shootout Win". www.ussoccer.com.
  48. "Game of the season? DC United-Orlando City bring fireworks in 8-goal thriller". MLSSoccer.com.
  49. "Orlando City gets through weather delay and Inter Miami for 1-0 home victory". Orlando Sentinel.
  50. Citro, Michael (July 14, 2022). "Orlando City Ekes Out 1-1 Draw at Colorado Rapids". The Mane Land.
  51. "Team of the Week presented by Audi: Atlanta, Chicago show signs of life in Week 20". MLSSoccer.com.
  52. Citro, Michael (July 17, 2022). "Orlando City Strikes First But Settles for 1-1 Draw at Atlanta". The Mane Land.
  53. "Match report: Orlando City 1-3 Arsenal". Arsenal.
  54. "LAFC acquire midfielder Sebastian Mendez from Orlando City SC". MLSsoccer.com.
  55. "Orlando City signs USMNT forward Gioacchini". ESPN. July 20, 2022.
  56. "Orlando City SC vs. Philadelphia Union - July 23, 2022 - ESPN". ESPN.
  57. Citro, Michael (July 23, 2022). "Orlando City Falls 1-0 to Philadelphia in Controversial Match". The Mane Land.
  58. "Orlando City SC Reaches 2022 U.S. Open Cup Final with 5-1 Win Against New York Red Bulls". www.ussoccer.com.
  59. "In Wayne Rooney's debut, D.C. United storms back for a stunning win". Washington Post.
  60. Citro, Michael (August 6, 2022). "Orlando City Crushed 3-0 at Home by New England". The Mane Land.
  61. "Orlando City Shuts Out New York Red Bulls in 1-0 Road Victory". www.orlandocitysc.com.
  62. "Charlotte FC suffers heartbreaking loss to Orlando City". Charlotte Observer.
  63. "Tesho Akindele Nets Second-Consecutive Game-Winner as Lions Defeat NYCFC 2-1". www.orlandocitysc.com.
  64. Citro, Michael (September 1, 2022). "Orlando Comes from Behind for 3-2 Win vs. Seattle". The Mane Land.
  65. "US Open Cup final: Orlando City silences Sacramento Republic for maiden trophy". The Guardian. Associated Press. September 7, 2022.
  66. Citro, Michael (September 10, 2022). "Orlando City Sees Win Streak Snapped in 5-1 Loss to Union". The Mane Land.
  67. Roberson, Doug. "Atlanta United tops Orlando for first two-game win streak". The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.
  68. "Orlando City SC Dominates Toronto FC in 4-0 Victory". www.orlandocitysc.com.
  69. Strand, Oliver (October 3, 2022). "Resilient NYCFC defeat Orlando City 2-1, clinch home-field playoff game". Hudson River Blue.
  70. "Inter Miami CF to Host Orlando City SC on Wednesday For a Crucial Matchup". www.intermiamicf.com.
  71. Citro, Michael (October 5, 2022). "Lions Blasted 4-1 by Inter Miami in Fort Lauderdale". The Mane Land.
  72. "Orlando City Looks to Punch Ticket to Audi 2022 MLS Cup Playoffs Against Columbus Crew". www.orlandocitysc.com.
  73. "Facundo Torres leads Orlando City into playoffs: "We're lucky to have him"". www.mlssoccer.com.
  74. "Crew fire Caleb Porter as head coach". SBI Soccer. October 11, 2022.
  75. "CF Montréal advances to semifinals with playoff win against Orlando City". Montreal Gazette.
  76. "Players – Orlando City Soccer Club". orlandocitysc.com. Major League Soccer.
  77. 1 2 "UPDATE: Orlando City's preseason scrimmage vs. NYCFC has been cancelled". Twitter.com. @OrlandoCitySC. Retrieved January 28, 2022.
  78. "Orlando City to Open Feb. 11 Preseason Match to the Public". www.orlandocitysc.com. Retrieved January 28, 2022.
  79. Winehouse, Amitai. "Arsenal and Chelsea to play pre-season match in Orlando". The Athletic.
  80. 1 2 "Orlando City SC game moved in anticipation of 2022 US Open Cup final". MLSSoccer.com.
  81. "New York City Football Club vs. Orlando City Moved to October 2 at Red Bull Arena". New York City FC.
  82. "Record-Setting 103 Teams Confirmed For 2022 Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup, 107th Edition Of U.S. Soccer's National Championship". www.ussoccer.com.
  83. "Orlando City SC Signs 2022 MLS SuperDraft Selection Jack Lynn". www.orlandocitysc.com.
  84. "NCAA title-winner Nathan Dossantos signs with Riverhounds". Pittsburgh Riverhounds SC. February 18, 2022.
  85. "Orlando City B Announces 2022 Roster Ahead of Inaugural MLS NEXT Pro Season". www.orlandocitysc.com.
  86. "Orlando City SC Acquires Austrian Forward Ercan Kara As Designated Player". www.orlandocitysc.com.
  87. "Orlando City SC Acquires American Winger/Forward Nicholas Gioacchini". www.orlandocitysc.com.
  88. "Orlando City SC Acquires Brandon Hackenberg via Short-Term Loan". www.orlandocitysc.com.
  89. "Orlando City SC Signs Javier Otero to Short-Term Contract". www.orlandocitysc.com.
  90. "Orlando City SC Acquires Colombian Winger Iván Angulo". www.orlandocitysc.com.
  91. "Orlando City SC Acquires Peruvian National Team Midfielder Wilder Cartagena". www.orlandocitysc.com.
  92. "Más, el tercer refuerzo". www.estudiantesdelaplata.com (in Spanish).
  93. "Nani joins Venezia FC". www.veneziafc.it.
  94. "Indy Eleven Adds Midfielder Raul Aguilera to Roster". www.indyeleven.com. Archived from the original on January 13, 2022. Retrieved January 13, 2022.
  95. "Loudoun United FC add trio of defensive signings". Loudoun United FC. February 11, 2022.
  96. "San Antonio FC signs midfielder David Loera". San Antonio FC. January 11, 2022. Archived from the original on January 11, 2022. Retrieved January 11, 2022.
  97. "Cape Town City welcomes American midfielder Jordan Bender". www.capetownetc.com.
  98. "Graham Smith Highlights Three Arrivals for 901 FC". Memphis 901 FC.
  99. "Chris Mueller to join Hibs from Orlando City!". Hibernian FC.
  100. "Sporting KC signs free agent midfielder Uri Rosell". Sporting Kansas City.
  101. "West Brom sign American striker Dike". BBC Sport.
  102. "Silvester van der Water voor drie seizoenen naar SC Cambuur". SC Cambuur (in Dutch).
  103. "Orlando City SC Transfers Forward Matheus Aiás to Real Racing Club de Santander". www.orlandocitysc.com.
  104. "LAFC Acquires Midfielder Sebastian Méndez". LAFC.
  105. "Matheus, nuevo jugador del Real Oviedo". Real Oviedo (in Spanish).
  106. "Nuevo Guerrero Albo: Alexander Alvarado – LDU". L.D.U. Quito (in Spanish).
  107. "Orlando City SC Loans Homegrown Wilfredo Rivera to Indy Eleven". www.orlandocitysc.com.
  108. "San Antonio brings aboard Jack Lynn on loan from Orlando City SC". USL Championship. September 16, 2022.