Griezmann arrives, Orlando lights up
Antoine Griezmann’s American dream took its time. Since he was 18, he has talked about it, thought about it and made it a promise to himself. On Wednesday night, against the Tampa Bay Rowdies, he finally pulled on the Orlando City shirt for the first time. And, as if the script had been written in advance, he didn’t waste a second.
A goal, an assist, a 6-0 win. For a debut, you could do a lot worse.
A first goal that feels like Griezmann
He got the opener. Nice move, the ball dropped to Griezmann inside the box, and he drilled a low finish across goal that gave the keeper no chance. Clean, sharp, familiar. Anyone who has followed his career at Atletico Madrid, Barcelona or with France knows he can produce that sort of finish in his sleep. The change in league has not dented the precision.
GUESS WHO 😉
🟣 1-0 🟢 pic.twitter.com/cWcA7LGl9f
— Orlando City SC (@OrlandoCitySC) July 8, 2026
After the break, he added an assist to his night. The goalkeeper made a mess of a clearance, Griezmann nicked the ball and rolled it to Ivan Angulo for a tap-in. Not the hardest pass of his career, sure, but the knack for being in the right place at the right time never goes away.
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The American dream, long-haul edition
What makes the Orlando move interesting is that it doesn’t feel like some rushed end-of-career landing. Griezmann has signed through to 2028, at 35, in a league he had targeted long before the question ever became real. At his official unveiling, he said it again: playing in MLS before hanging up his boots was a childhood ambition, not a fallback.
He also arrives at a pretty good moment for football in America. The 2026 World Cup is being played on US soil right now, the country is in football fever, and MLS is cashing in on the kind of spotlight it has waited years for. Griezmann could hardly have picked a better time to land.
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137 caps, 44 goals, and a fresh chapter
The record speaks for itself. World Cup winner in 2018, Ballon d’Or winner in 2018, best player at Euro 2016, 137 caps for France and 44 goals: Griezmann arrives in MLS with a CV that very few players in the league’s history can match. Even Messi, who he will surely face on American turf in the months ahead, only arrived at Inter Miami after a career every bit as stacked.
At his Orlando unveiling, Griezmann even smiled as he mentioned the idea of facing his former club teammate again. The American Clasico is already brewing in people’s minds.
No more Europe, but not done yet
One thing is clear: Griezmann will not be going back to play in Europe. He said as much, and Orlando through to 2028 backs that up. This isn’t a disguised retirement. It’s a proper life choice, planned and backed for a long time.
On Wednesday, against a Tampa Bay Rowdies side that was well beaten, he put the first brushstrokes on a new chapter. What comes next will be harder, of course. But for now, Griezmann’s American dream has started exactly how he would have wanted.
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