The Oscar Pareja era in Orlando City — the club’s most successful period since joining Major League Soccer — is over. The club announced today that it has “mutually agreed” to part ways with the veteran coach who has compiled by far the most wins of anyone in team history. While the Lions are off to their worst start in club history, the 2026 MLS season is only three weeks old and Pareja has had to field a team with one of the worst back lines in the league while down a Designated Player — not exactly a recipe for success.
Assistant Coach and former OCB manager Martin Perelman will lead the team in the interim.
“I want to thank Oscar for the dedication, leadership and professionalism he brought to our club,” Orlando City General Manager and Sporting Director Ricardo Moreira said in a club press release. “He delivered one of the most significant moments in Orlando City’s history with the 2022 Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup and helped establish the competitive foundation that has propelled us forward, highlighted by our active club-record run of six straight playoffs appearances, which is currently the longest streak in MLS. At the same time, we believe this is the right moment to take the club in a new direction as we look to the next phase of our growth and ambitions. We are grateful for everything Oscar has contributed and wish him nothing but success in the next chapter of his career.”
The club hired Pareja as its fourth full-time MLS head coach on Dec. 4, 2019, succeeding James O’Connor. Pareja compiled a record of 103-69-65 in 237 games at the helm across all competitions, and if our numbers look different from other places, we are not counting shootout losses as losses from Leagues Cup league phase games (because that’s dumb) or the matches for which Pareja was suspended, like the 2025 home match against the Chicago Fire in which Diego Torres — who leaves Orlando City along with Pareja — led the team. Pareja led the team to the 2022 U.S. Open Cup championship, the club’s first major trophy, and had led the Lions to the postseason in every year he’s been in charge. He also led Orlando to the MLS is Back Tournament final as well as the final four of the 2025 Leagues Cup.
City extended Pareja’s contract through 2028 just 11 months ago, and although the club faded down the stretch in 2025, the insane amount of travel for the Leagues Cup knockout stages and heavy legs from the club’s thinner roster areas a year ago forced a lot of extra miles onto some of the team’s most important legs — Marco Pasalic, Martin Ojeda, Jansson, Eduard Atuesta, and others. Pareja, for his part, never looked for excuses or threw his players under the bus in the same way that former OCSC coach Jason Kreis did during his tenure. He accepted the blame for every on-field mistake, whether he could control it or not, including his club’s performance after Maxime Crepeau’s ridiculous red card on Saturday at New York City FC.
“I want to express my sincere gratitude to the club’s players, staff, and supporters for the trust they’ve given me over these last several years,” Pareja said in the club’s release. “Together, we shared moments that will stay with me forever. While it is the right time for both me and the club to move in new directions, I leave proud of the work we did and with deep appreciation for the people who made it possible. Orlando will always have a special place in my heart, and I wish the team nothing but success in the future.”
“Oscar’s impact on our club and community will always be remembered,” said Mark Wilf, Orlando City SC Owner & Chairman. “He helped elevate Orlando City on and off the field, guided us through milestones that reshaped our trajectory and represented our crest with integrity. We are grateful for all he has given to the organization.”
Perelman coached OCB in 2022 and 2023 before joining the MLS side’s staff as an assistant coach in 2024. OCB is also losing its coach at this time, as Perelman’s replacement with the reserve squad, Manuel Goldberg, will become an interim assistant with the MLS side. Goldberg served as Perelman’s assistant with OCB for two seasons before replacing him. Julian Vergara will be OCB’s interim manager.
What It Means for Orlando City
Reading Moreira’s statement, it’s hard to imagine what direction the club is choosing to go from here. Without significant upgrades to the roster, this does not look like a playoff team in a highly competitive MLS Eastern Conference. The back line, made up of an underachieving David Brekalo, rookie Nolan Miller (splitting time with teenaged new arrival Iago), the unconvincing Adrian Marin, and the recently arrived Griffin Dorsey, has been abysmal to start the year in the absence of injured captain Robin Jansson. While time may help that group gel to some extent, it is not a defensive group that opposing teams will lose sleep over.
The roster has suffered heavy losses along the back line, losing starters Rodrigo Schlegel and Alex Freeman as well as key backups Kyle Smith and Dagur Dan Thorhallsson. Additionally, the club moved on from starting goalkeeper Pedro Gallese. While upgrades were needed across the board, it’s hard to argue that any of those positions have even maintained their previous quality, let alone improved. Marin at least has a chance to provide an improvement at left back, as he’s finally been through a full camp and had time to integrate. It hasn’t helped that he picked up a knock early in this season.
Orlando City appears content with simply trying a new voice, and there’s nothing wrong with that (Pareja was the second-longest tenured coach in MLS behind Seattle’s Brian Schmetzer), but any new voice will need a back line, a goalkeeper who doesn’t get unnecessarily ejected, and a third Designated Player. That voice will also need the MLS U22 Initiative kids to grow up quickly, because they represent the depth of a team that sorely needs some. It’s clear that the club believes the roster is good enough for the moment, but three games have shown that it is not, unless Pareja was making things more complicated than the players could handle.
Pareja has been a good soldier for the club his entire tenure. He has routinely put every failure on his own shoulders and has given all credit for successes to his players and the organization. The Colombian has stoically led Orlando City to its highest highs. It is hard to imagine a way forward this season regardless of who takes over unless some changes come to the roster.