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Orlando Storm

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Football team in Orlando, Florida
For the WTT franchise, seeOrlando Storm (tennis).

Orlando Storm
Current season
Orlando Storm logo
Orlando Storm wordmark
LogoWordmark
General information
FoundedOctober 7, 2025; 4 months ago (2025-10-07)
Inaugural season2026
StadiumInter&Co Stadium
Orlando, Florida
ColorsOrange, dark navy, purple
   
Websitewww.theufl.com/orlando
Personnel
OwnerLeague owned
Head coachAnthony Becht
Team history
  • Orlando Storm (2026–present)
Home fields
League / conference affiliations
United Football League (2026–present)

TheOrlando Storm are an upcoming professionalAmerican football team based inOrlando, Florida. The Storm compete in theUnited Football League (UFL). The team was announced on October 7, 2025 as part of several major updates to the UFL which saw the replacement of three existing teams and the re-branding of others.[1] The Storm are owned and operated by the UFL (a consortium ofMike Repole,Dwayne Johnson,Dany Garcia,RedBird Capital Partners andFox Corporation) and play their home games atInter&Co Stadium.

History

[edit]

The XFL, one of the two partners that eventually merged into the UFL, had previously had two teams in Central Florida. In 2020, the XFL placed theTampa Bay Vipers 80 miles southwest atRaymond James Stadium in Tampa, with the team's headquarters based between the two cities inPlant City.[2] Orlando, which had been one of the most successful cities in the original XFL with theOrlando Rage, had not yet been available when the 2020 XFL was established because theAlliance of American Football had already established theOrlando Apollos there, that league's eventualde facto champion. Orlando eventually became available after the AAF's bankruptcy, and plans were being set to move the Vipers to Orlando before the XFL was forced to shut down in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[3] (The XFL's merger partner, theUnited States Football League, also included a "Tampa Bay Bandits" among its inaugural franchises in 2022, but this team did not survive to ever play in Florida, instead being replaced by theMemphis Showboats a year later.[4])

In 2023, following the XFL's pandemic-related hiatus and sale, the XFL would indeed return to Orlando, but in a different manner: the XFL Orlando team would instead receive the branding of the former New York Guardians, becoming theOrlando Guardians. The Guardians underperformed greatly compared to the Rage and the Apollos, and after finishing last in the XFL in 2023, it was excluded from the merger into the UFL. The UFL maintained aretainer agreement withCamping World Stadium in the event the league chose to return to Orlando.[5]

On October 7, 2025, under new co-owner and business director Mike Repole, the UFL announced its return to Orlando with the establishment of the Orlando Storm. The Storm opted not to return to Camping World Stadium and instead chose the more intimate Inter&Co. Stadium, part of an initiative of Repole's to play in soccer-specific stadiums to take advantage of their smaller capacities for a more intimate crowd experience.[6][7] Repole did not give a specific reason for the name (unlike the two other teams unveiled that day);[8] the Storm brand has a long history in Central Florida football, having been used by theTampa Bay Storm from 1991 to 2017. The Tampa Bay Storm had shared a bitter rivalry, theWar on I-4, with Orlando's team, thePredators.

Even before the Apollos, the city of Orlando had a long list of minor league professional football teams, most of which existed in short-lived and failed leagues: thePanthers of the 1960s, theBlazers of the 1970s, theAmericans andRenegades of the 1980s, theThunder of the 1990s and theTuskers in the late 2000s, in addition to the aforementioned Rage, Apollos, Guardians, Predators, anda second Predators. Repole expressed hope that the robust institutional backing the UFL has would, along with the more intimate fan experience at a smaller stadium, ensure the Storm's long-term stability and ease fans' concerns about the team disappearing.[7]

Head coachAnthony Becht was reassigned from theSt. Louis Battlehawks to the Orlando Storm on December 23, 2025.[9]

Current roster

[edit]

Players

[edit]
Orlando Storm roster
Quarterbacks(QB)

Running backs(RB)

Wide receivers(WR)

Tight ends(TE)

  • -- Shawn Bowman
  • -- Konner Fox
  • -- Steven Stillianos
Offensive linemen(OL)

Defensive linemen(DL)

Linebackers(LB)

Defensive backs(DB)

Special teams(ST)

Staff

[edit]
Orlando Storm staff
Head coach
Offensive coaches
 
Defensive coaches

Player history

[edit]

Notable players

[edit]
SeasonPosNameNotes
2026–presentQBDorian Thompson-RobinsonFormerCleveland Browns Quarterback, 2023 5th Round Pick
2026–presentWRK. J. HamlerFormerDenver Broncos Wide Receiver, 2020 2nd Round Pick

Coach history

[edit]

Head coaches

[edit]
#CoachTermRegular seasonPlayoffsAwards
GCWLWin %GCWL
Orlando Storm
1Anthony Becht2026–present

Offensive coordinators

[edit]
#CoachTermRegular seasonPlayoffsAwards
GCWLWin %GCWL
Orlando Storm
1Kyle Caskey2026–present

Defensive coordinators

[edit]
#CoachTermRegular seasonPlayoffsAwards
GCWLWin %GCWL
Orlando Storm
1Donnie Abraham2026–present

Season by season record

[edit]
UFL champions (2024–present)Conference champions*Division champions^Wild Card berth#
SeasonTeamLeagueConferenceDivisionRegular seasonPostseason resultsAwardsHead coachesPct.
FinishWL
20262026UFLTBDN/aN/aN/aN/aN/a
TotalN/aN/aAll-time regular season record (2026-)
N/aN/aAll-time postseason record (2026-)
N/aN/aAll-time regular season and postseason record (2026-)

References

[edit]
  1. ^"United Football League Announces New Vision, New Markets and Team Rebrands for 2026".theufl.com. October 7, 2025. RetrievedOctober 7, 2025.
  2. ^"XFL turns eyes to Plant City". August 15, 2019.
  3. ^Miketniac, Chuck (April 13, 2020)."SOURCES: XFL called about relocating team to San Antonio days before suspending operations".WOAI-TV.Archived from the original on September 1, 2020. RetrievedApril 18, 2020.
  4. ^Gallant, Jacob (June 12, 2023)."Showboats returning to Memphis for another season".WMC-TV. RetrievedJune 13, 2023.
  5. ^Larsen, James (October 3, 2025)."San Antonio Out, Orlando Likely To Rejoin UFL In 2026".Pro Football Newsroom. RetrievedOctober 4, 2025.
  6. ^Camenker, Jacob (October 7, 2025)."UFL relocating teams to Columbus, Louisville, Orlando amid sweeping changes".USA Today. RetrievedOctober 7, 2025.
  7. ^abBianchi, Mike (October 7, 2025)."Storm warning: Orlando gets another shot at spring football in UFL".Orlando Sentinel. RetrievedOctober 8, 2025.
  8. ^Camenker, Jacob (October 7, 2025)."UFL relocating teams to Columbus, Louisville, Orlando amid sweeping changes".USA Today. RetrievedOctober 7, 2025.
  9. ^"Orlando's new UFL team hires Anthony Becht as head coach".Orlando Sentinel. December 23, 2025. RetrievedDecember 23, 2025.

External links

[edit]
Franchise
Stadiums
Key personnel
Culture
Affiliations
Seasons
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Former teams
Key personnel
Drafts
Seasons
Championships
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Baseball
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MLP
Miami Pickleball Club
Orlando Squeeze
Roller derby
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Soccer (indoor)
NISL
Central Florida Crusaders
Tampa Bay Strikers
MASL2
Atletico Orlando
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