ORLANDO, Fla. â After Cyle Larinâs departure from the club last week, Orlando City SC CEO Alex Leitao did not hold back while closing the door on the offseason transfer saga.
Larin, Orlando's 22-year-old Canadian goalscorer, was prolific in his three MLS seasons for the Lions, but was public about his ambition to play in Europe, especially as the 2017 wound down. Larin would eventually leave Orlando without permission from the club to train with Turkish club Besiktas, a move that provoked the MLS team's ire.
âI will start asking you guys to understand and respect the fact that itâs going to be the last time we speak about this player. Iâve been in this business for so long â more than 17 years â so I can testify we didnât overreact to what happened,â Leitao told reporters during the teamâs media day on Monday. âYou donât see that happen very often this kind of situation for the same reason. For this situation to happen, you need to have one side, a player that doesnât respect the club, doesnât respect his contract, doesnât care about the group, and this was exactly what we saw from Cyle.â
Leitao said that when Larin left to train with Besiktas before the transfer was made, Orlando had to explain to the Turkish club that the striker was still under contract and negotiations needed to occur.
âAt this moment, we had a conversation,â the Orlando City CEO continued. âWhatâs the point to force a player like that with that character, with that personality, a troublemaker [to stay]? Whatâs the point of bringing a player like that back to the club? We decided it was better to do it and do it fast in order to put our efforts and focus on the players we have.â
Orlando City and Besiktas eventually came to an agreement for Larin where the Lions will receive an estimated $2.3 million, according to Turkish media outlets. For Leitao, he thinks it was a good deal to finally close the ordeal.
âWe engaged in negotiations with the Turkish club, and it ended in my opinion, with a good result for the club. So thatâs what exactly what happened,â Leitao said. âThere was no overreaction from the club because itâs not something that happens every day, and the reason is because players are becoming much more professional, and thatâs not what happened with that gentleman when he left this club.â
Orlando City head coach Jason Kreis also chimed in regarding the Larin transfer drama, saying a big factor in the offseason turnover the club experienced was because of how players acted off the field.
âFrom my point of view, what we saw last year, with the things happening off the field, was alarming and we werenât happy about it,â Kreis said. âAnd we tried to address that the best way we know how, which is disciplinary this season, but also the decisions that were made this offseason.
âWe felt a strong desire to have better professionals here that were more serious about what they were doing and are like-minded like with us,â the head coach added. âWe want guys that want to compete, we want guys that want to win, we want guys that feel the pain when we donât win â because we feel that.â





