Orlando City B

Orlando City B (or OCB for short) is a USL League One club that began play in 2016. Owned by Orlando City SC and based at the Orlando City training facility in Kissimmee, the club plays its home games at Osceola County Stadium.[1] Originally the club played in the United Soccer League, the second tier of the US soccer pyramid in 2016 and 2017,[2] before electing for forgo the 2018 season and join the newly formed third division, USL League One, in its inaugural 2019 season.[3]

Orlando City B
Full nameOrlando City B
Nickname(s)Lions, OCB
FoundedJune 30, 2015 (2015-06-30)
StadiumOsceola County Stadium
Kissimmee, Florida
Capacity5,400
OwnerOrlando City SC
Head CoachMarcelo Neveleff
LeagueUSL League One
2019League: 10th
Playoffs: DNQ
WebsiteClub website

History

United Soccer League, (2016–17)

On June 30, 2015, Orlando City SC announced that they would operate a USL club starting in 2016[4] in the Central Florida area. The team would be their direct USL affiliate, and Orlando City and Louisville City (their USL affiliate club for 2015) had negotiated a "long-term formal partnership" to replace their affiliation arrangement.[5]

Orlando City also announced that Anthony Pulis would coach the new team. Pulis was a player for Orlando City SC's USL club from 2011 to 2014 and is the son of Tony Pulis, manager of numerous English Premier League sides.[5] On August 11, 2015, Arizona United announced that Rob Valentino would retire from playing[6] to take the assistant coach role for Orlando's new USL team.[7]

On October 15, 2015, the club was officially branded Orlando City B, with home games to be played in Melbourne at the Titan Soccer Complex on the campus of EFSC campus.[8] In addition, OCB announced its first ever player signings; defenders Mikey Ambrose and Kyle Callan-McFadden and midfielder Tony Rocha.[9]

On August 12, 2016, in a game against New York Red Bulls II, Orlando City B participated in the first competitive match in North America to employ Video Assistant Referee technology.[10] They finished their debut season 8th in the Eastern Conference, the final qualifying spot for playoffs. They lost in the Conference Quarterfinal to New York Red Bulls II 4–0.[11]

In November 2016 it was announced that OCB would be moving to the newly opened Orlando City Stadium in time for the 2017 season.[12] The team finished the season in 9th place, two points short of the playoffs, but finished one place higher in the overall standings than their debut season.

Hiatus, (2018)

On January 12, 2018, the organization declared its intention to forgo the 2018 season as they continued to assess their minor league participation, a move that had looked likely by this point with OCB only having one player under contract and lacking a manager following Anthony Pulis' departure for Saint Louis FC in November.[13]

USL League One, (2019–present)

In June 2018, the club announced it was to become a founding member of USL's new third tier league, USL League One, scheduled to begin play in 2019.[14] It was hoped the move would lead OCB to better act as an upward transitional stepping-stone between Orlando City's Development Academy and the senior MLS team. On October 3, 2018, Fernando De Argila was announced as head coach. He had previously been head coach and director of methodology at the Soccer Institute at Montverde Academy.[15] After winning only three of the opening 19 games, De Argila was sacked in July 2019. Roberto Sibaja acted as interim head coach from the rest of the season as the team finished in last place.[16]

In May 2019, the team announced plans to relocate OCB as part of a wider vision to house all of Orlando City's development pyramid at the same location for the first time, creating a 20-acre training complex at Osceola Heritage Park to house the senior MLS team, OCB and Development Academy.[17] Orlando City B will play their matches at the new site starting in the 2020 season following the departure of minor league baseball team Florida Fire Frogs.[18] Ahead of the season it was announced Orlando City Academy Director Marcelo Neveleff would be the team's new head coach.[19]

Location

Tim Holt, Orlando's vice president of development, said that they would be looking for a stadium in Central Florida in order to facilitate the training of emerging players with the MLS team. Holt was the president of USL until May 2015.[4] Eastern Florida State College's stadium was visited by team personnel as a possible location.[20]

On August 21, 2015, the VP for athletics at Eastern Florida State College claimed in a pitch to the Brevard County Tourist Development Council's Sports Commission that the college's Titan Soccer Complex and a stadium in Deland were among the finalists to host games for the USL team.[21] Said plan was approved and the Titan Sports Complex at ECSC was OCB's official home venue for the 2016 season.[8][9]

For the 2017 season in the USL, Orlando City B moved to Orlando City's newly built home stadium, Orlando City Stadium.

For the 2019 season in USL League One, the team moved to Montverde Academy.[22]

In 2020, as part of a club-wide move, the team relocated again, this time to the new Orlando City training facility at Osceola Heritage Park alongside both the senior MLS team and Development Academy. Matches are played at the complex's newly converted 5,400 seat Osceola County Stadium.[1]

Players and staff

Current roster

As of August 1, 2020[23]
No. Position Player Nation
26 Defender Michael Halliday ([A])  United States
41 Goalkeeper Javier Otero ([B])  Spain
45 Midfielder Raul Aguilera  United States
46 Midfielder Austin Amer  United States
47 Defender Franklin Carabalí  Ecuador
48 Forward Fablo Dos Santos Oliveira (on loan from Barra da Tijuca)  Brazil
49 Forward Aleksandar Gluvačević  United States
50 Defender Owen Guske ([B])  United States
51 Goalkeeper Russell Robles ([B])  United States
53 Forward Julian Kennedy ([B])  United States
54 Defender Mason Lamb ([B])  United States
55 Defender Juan Pablo Monticelli  United States
56 Midfielder Theodore Ndje  United States
57 Midfielder Adam Ozeri (on loan from Ferro Carril Oeste)  United States
58 Midfielder Ignacio Poplawski (on loan from Estudiantes)  Argentina
59 Midfielder José Quintero ([B])  Venezuela
60 Defender Juan Ramos ([B])  Venezuela
61 Goalkeeper Austin Aviza  United States
62 Forward Wilfredo Rivera ([B])  Puerto Rico
63 Defender Mateo Rodas  Colombia
64 Defender Jonathan Rosales  United States
65 Defender Daniel Rosario ([B])  Puerto Rico
66 Forward Kenji Tanaka de Paula ([B])  Brazil
67 Midfielder Moises Tablante ([B])  Venezuela
68 Defender Thomas Williams ([B])  United States
72 Defender Nick O'Callaghan  United States
73 Defender Jahlane Forbes ([B])  United States
  1. ^
    Signed to first team contract with Orlando City SC.
  2. ^
    Orlando City SC Academy player.

Staff

Executive
Chairman and majority owner Flávio Augusto da Silva
Chief executive officer Alex Leitão
General manager Luiz Muzzi
Coaching staff
Head coach Marcelo Neveleff
Assistant coach José Silva Caparrós
Goalkeeper coach Marcos Machado

Year-by-year

As of October 5, 2019
Year Division League P W D L GF GA Pts Position Playoffs
Conf. Overall
2016 3 USL 309813354935 8th 19th First round
2017 2 USL 32101210373642 9th 18th DNQ
2018 On Hiatus
2019 3 USL1 284420235216 N/A 10th DNQ

Head Coaches

  • Only competitive games counted. Includes USL regular season and playoffs.
As of matches played August 14, 2020
All-time Orlando City B coaching stats
Name Nationality From To P W D L GF GA Win%[nb 1]
Anthony Pulis  Wales June 30, 2015 November 20, 2017 63 19 20 24 72 89 030.16
Fernando De Argila  Spain October 3, 2018 July 25, 2019 19 3 4 12 16 33 015.79
Roberto Sibaja (interim)  Costa Rica July 25, 2019 December 20, 2019 9 1 0 8 7 19 011.11
Marcelo Neveleff  Argentina December 20, 2019 present 3 1 1 1 3 3 033.33
Total 94 24 25 45 98 144 025.53

References

  1. "Orlando City SC to Expand Presence in Osceola County". www.orlandocitysc.com.
  2. "Orlando City B Elects to Forgo 2018 USL Division II Season". January 12, 2018.
  3. "MLS-owned team becomes fourth announced club in Southeast region". September 10, 2018.
  4. Tenorio, Paul (June 30, 2015), Orlando City to own, operate USL franchise in 2016, Orlando Sentinel, retrieved July 31, 2015.
  5. Orlando City SC announce plans to field USL team in 2016, ending Louisville affiliation, MLSsoccer.com, June 30, 2015, retrieved July 31, 2015.
  6. Rob Valentino To Retire and Coach With Orlando City SC USL Club, August 11, 2015, archived from the original on December 22, 2015, retrieved August 11, 2015.
  7. Tenorio, Paul (August 11, 2015), Former Orlando City defender Rob Valentino named assistant coach of USL team, Orlando Sentinel.
  8. "USL Welcomes Back Orlando City SC for 2016". United Soccer League. October 15, 2015. Archived from the original on October 16, 2015. Retrieved October 15, 2015.
  9. Orlando City Announces Orlando City B, Signs Defenders Mikey Ambrose, Kyle Callan-McFadden, Midfielder Tony Rocha, October 15, 2015
  10. Borg, Simon (August 12, 2016). "MLS, USL receive IFAB approval for live video assistant referee experiments". MLSsoccer.com. Retrieved August 23, 2016.
  11. "OCB Season Ends in 4–0 Playoff Loss to New York". The Mane Land. Retrieved November 17, 2018.
  12. Staff, USLSoccer.com (November 29, 2016). "OCB Moving to Downtown Venue for 2017". USL Championship. Retrieved November 17, 2018.
  13. "Orlando City B Opts Out of the 2018 USL Season". The Mane Land. Retrieved November 17, 2018.
  14. Staff, USLSoccer.com (September 6, 2018). "Orlando City B Becomes USL Division III Founding Member". USL Championship. Retrieved November 17, 2018.
  15. "Orlando City B announces Fernando Jose De Argila Irurita as head coach | Pro Soccer USA". www.prosoccerusa.com. Retrieved November 17, 2018.
  16. "Orlando City B Parts Ways with Fernando Jose De Argila Irurita". www.orlandocitysc.com.
  17. "Orlando City Development Academy Set to Make Osceola Heritage Park Official Training Grounds". www.orlandocitysc.com.
  18. Reichard, Kevin (May 31, 2019). "Fire Frogs to Depart Osceola County Stadium at End of Season". Ballpark Digest.
  19. "Orlando City SC Appoints Marcelo Neveleff as OCB Head Coach". www.orlandocitysc.com.
  20. Malone, Giles (July 1, 2015), Eastern Florida State Could Be Home To Orlando City Soccer Minor League Team, retrieved August 5, 2015.
  21. Berman, Dave (August 21, 2015), "Melbourne could get soccer team with Orlando City ties", Florida Today, Gannett Company.
  22. https://www.orlandocitysc.com/post/2018/09/06/orlando-city-b-joins-usl-division-iii-inaugural-season
  23. "OCB squad list". Orlando City Soccer Club.
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