How the Orlando Pride went from ‘butt of many jokes’ to historic NWSL season

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When did the Orlando Pride know? Let’s begin at the players-only meeting. Two dozen determined women gathered at their training facility this past winter; they talked through their shared identity and values, then sketched out their 2024 NWSL season. They went “game by game,” vice-captain Kylie Strom remembers, jotting down predictions on a piece of paper. History suggested they should land right around 30 points — and outside the playoffs, as Orlando had in all but one previous campaign.

Instead, Strom says, “I think we gave ourselves 54 points” — more than they’d earned in 2022 and 2023 combined.

They looked around the meeting room, acknowledging the apparent absurdity — but hung the piece of paper in their locker room anyway.

And seven months later, here they are, winners of the NWSL Shield, with a league-record 57 points, three games away from the NWSL’s first unbeaten season.

And the piece of paper? Still hanging.

“So, yeah,” Strom says, “we believed we had something special from the beginning of this year. And it’s cool to kinda see it come together.”

They know, though, that what they’ve done in 2024 is “kind of insane,” as head coach Seb Hines says. They’ve trampled through a league renowned for its parity. Its 2023 champ lost seven of 22 regular-season games. Its salary cap and dispersion of talent make Pride-like dominance “almost unheard of,” and an unbeaten season “almost impossible,” defender Carson Pickett, a nine-year NWSL veteran, says.

And for nearly a decade, it seemed especially impossible in Orlando. “The Pride,” sporting director Haley Carter concedes, “has been the butt of many jokes for many years.” The club’s brief history was full of futility. It employed stars — Marta, Alex Morgan, Ali Krieger, Sydney Leroux — but often languished in the NWSL’s bottom three. It hadn’t reached the playoffs since 2017, the longest active drought in the league.

Then, suddenly, in 2024, it soared to the top of the table. It stormed to eight straight wins this past spring. Players clawed through 23 matches (and counting) without a loss, rewriting record books as they went. They clinched the NWSL’s regular-season title — and lifted the Shield, their maiden trophy — with a 2-0 victory over second-place Washington on Sunday.

Their run, Carter raves, has been “extraordinary. It’s truly remarkable. I’ve never seen anything like it.”

And perhaps the most remarkable part is that the humans behind it are, for the most part, the same ones who finished seventh just last season.

(Illustration by Grant Thomas/Yahoo Sports)

(Illustration by Grant Thomas/Yahoo Sports)

In soccer, and throughout sports, sudden turnarounds typically feature an overhaul. Visionary leaders arrive; stars follow; together, they reverse fortunes. In MLS, for example, the two 2024 conference winners, the LA Galaxy and Inter Miami, are led by a new general manager and by Lionel Messi. After finishing second-to-last in 2023, each handed over 60% of their 2024 minutes to players who’ve joined since the start of last season.

The Pride, on the other hand, have largely been driven by holdovers. Strom joined in 2021. Marta, their captain, has been around since 2017. Over 76% of their 2024 minutes have been logged by players who also appeared in 2023. (The rest of the NWSL’s 2024 top four, by comparison, are all under 65%.)

Their protagonists aren’t individuals; they are, according to players and coaches, “mentality” and “culture,” “camaraderie” and “togetherness” and “belief.” Cultivating all of that, Carter says, is how she and Hines have built arguably the NWSL’s best-ever team.

“Finding success in my position is much bigger than just going and signing players,” Carter explains. In a league so often plagued in the past by unsafe or unprofessional working conditions, “it really is about leading people, and understanding people, and creating an environment where people can have healthy interactions with each other,” Carter continues. “Where they enjoy coming to work, and enjoy working together.”

“You have to get those things right,” she reiterates. “If you don’t get those things right … it doesn’t matter who you sign.” If you do, on the other hand, “results are going to come.”

The environment had long been lacking in Orlando. Instability and inconsistency had been “hard to navigate,” Strom says. “As a player, you just didn’t know what was expected of you.” In June 2022, Hines became the Pride’s fifth head coach in less than a year, including interims — after the previous head coach, Amanda Cromwell, was placed on administrative leave during an NWSL investigation. Cromwell’s contract was later terminated after the investigation found that she “engaged in retaliation” toward players who, she believed, had made or supported earlier allegations of “verbal abuse and improper favoritism.”

Hines took over, with an interim tag, a few days after a 5-0 loss in Houston. A couple weeks later, his second game in charge ended 6-0 at Portland. Afterward, on the field, he told players: “We need to change something.”

“One thing that needed to change,” he says now, “was the culture.”

Oct 6, 2024; Orlando, Florida, USA; Orlando Pride forward Marta (10) holds the 2024 NWSL Shield awarded to them at the end of their match against Washington Spirit at Inter&Co Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Mike Watters-Imagn ImagesOct 6, 2024; Orlando, Florida, USA; Orlando Pride forward Marta (10) holds the 2024 NWSL Shield awarded to them at the end of their match against Washington Spirit at Inter&Co Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Mike Watters-Imagn Images

Orlando Pride forward Marta lifts the 2024 NWSL Shield, the first trophy in the Orlando Pride’s history. (Mike Watters-Imagn Images)

For weeks and months, with team-bonding exercises and demanding training sessions — with the interim tag and then without it, as of November 2022 — Hines strove to change it. Carter, a former goalkeeper and former Marine with a wide range of assistant coaching experience, joined as the VP of soccer operations in January 2023, and joined the effort. For years, Hines said Sunday, “people didn’t want to come to the club, people had no hope with this club.” Together, he and Carter toiled to transform it into a caring, supporting, collaborative workplace.

And what, exactly, did that entail?

“Small things,” Carter says. Her simple example: “Getting rid of white shorts.”

In her first month on the job, she worked with the club’s merchandise director, Michelle Serowchak, to tweak the team’s secondary kit, swapping white shorts for black, due to period concerns. She called it “a small but extremely impactful change” that would foster comfort, confidence and trust among players.

In general, she and Hines seek input from players and coworkers. “I’m not a dictator,” Hines says. He and Carter involve players in decisions around training load. Some film sessions are “more of a conversation” than a lecture, Strom says.

“I’ve been a part of clubs where whatever the head coach says goes,” the 32-year-old defender explains. Here, in Orlando, Hines’ door and mind are always open.

Carter, meanwhile, focused on investing in the players as humans. She mentions things like housing and food, but also seemingly extraneous offerings like financial literacy and professional networking opportunities. And, with backing from ownership, she beefed up the team’s staff across multiple departments. The players, for example, now have access to a masseuse almost every day. “The amount of massages we get in a week is incredible,” Pickett says.

Carter learned along the way that she was “different than other GMs and sporting directors.” Whereas many prioritize the identification and recruitment of players, “to be honest with you, the time that I spend on roster construction is maybe 20% of what I do,” Carter says.

She did, though, make a few impactful signings in 2024 — and none more so than Zambian striker Barbra Banda, for a transfer fee of $740,000, the second highest in women’s soccer history.

The fee, coupled with a four-year contract worth up to $2.1 million, represented an unprecedented outlay for the Pride. Lead owner Mark Wilf signed off on the deal, but would ask Carter: “Is she gonna be worth it?”

“Mark,” Carter would respond, “I have never been more sure of anything in my life. I am 100% positive that she will be worth it.”

And within a few games — Banda scored four goals in her first three starts — Wilf had seen enough to conclude: “Yeah, she was worth it.”

SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA - SEPTEMBER 20: Barbra Banda #22 of Orlando Pride shoots the ball during a match between Orlando Pride and Bay FC at PayPal Park on September 20, 2024 in San Jose, California. (Photo by Erin Chang/ISI Photos/Getty Images)SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA - SEPTEMBER 20: Barbra Banda #22 of Orlando Pride shoots the ball during a match between Orlando Pride and Bay FC at PayPal Park on September 20, 2024 in San Jose, California. (Photo by Erin Chang/ISI Photos/Getty Images)

Barbra Banda has been instrumental to the Orlando Pride’s turnaroound. (Photo by Erin Chang/ISI Photos/Getty Images)

Banda, with 13 goals, has helped fuel the unbeaten season. But it nearly ended before she even arrived, on the NWSL’s opening weekend. The Pride trailed Louisville 2-0 that day. They rallied to 2-1, but, in the 62nd minute, Strom received a red card.

And that — backs against the proverbial wall, down a goal and down a player — is when they drew on a core piece of their identity, something they’d discussed during preseason.

They fought back to draw 2-2 in Louisville. Six days later, at home against Angel City, Marta rescued a point with an 88th-minute equalizer. And the identity crystallized. Strom describes it with three words: “Whatever it takes.”

They have stormed through the league not because they play exquisite soccer, and not because they’ve stockpiled national team-caliber talent. They’ve sustained this unbeaten run because they will do whatever it takes to find late goals or, especially, to not concede them.

The players, Pickett says, “will die on that field before we get a goal scored on us, or before we lose a game.”

They’ll sprint to close down a cross. They’ll fling their body at a shot. They’ll press, but also hustle back and scramble a ball clear from their own goal mouth.

They’ve conceded only 13 goals in 23 games. On their current pace, they’re the best defensive team in NWSL history. And that, players and Hines say, is no coincidence. They drill their rotations and communication in training, often with “unopposed shape work,” Strom says. They also pit defense vs. attack, sometimes 4-v-8, “numbers down” — and “Are you gonna use that as an excuse?” Hines asks. “Or are you gonna thrive in that moment?”

Hines, a former defender himself, has taught them to thrive, and instilled the mentality: “It’s gotta be painful [to concede].”

Strom confirms: “We hate getting scored on.” No matter the time or place, training or playoffs, tight game or blowout, “it is the worst feeling.”

They have, perhaps, also ridden some luck. Their goal differential is +30, but their Expected Goal differential is only +18.7. There are games, Carter and Strom admit, when they haven’t been at their best; games that, last year or any other year, might have ended in defeat.

But none have, and “Is it luck? Or do you make your own luck?” Strom wonders. Is it “written in the stars,” or written by a special group of women who believe?

“I’ve stopped trying to figure it out,” she concludes. “And I’m just enjoying it.”

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