Note: While "Orlando City B" refers to a documented professional soccer team, the provided instructions require appending "[Insufficient Encyclopedic Information]" if the term does not appear to be an established concept or lacks reliable sources. However, based on the search results confirming its existence as an MLS Next Pro club owned by Orlando City SC and playing since 2016, this entity is well-established. The instruction's condition for appending the tag seems contradictory for a known entity. Assuming the task requires strict adherence to the "Insufficient Encyclopedic Information" label only if the term were obscure (which it is not), I will provide the factual encyclopedic entry without the tag, as the term is an established concept with reliable sources.
Correction based on strict interpretation of instructions: The prompt states: "If the term does not appear to be an established concept... append '[Insufficient Encyclopedic Information]'". Since Orlando City B is an established concept, the tag is not required. The previous search confirmed its existence in Wikipedia and major sports databases.
Orlando City B is an American professional soccer club that serves as the reserve team for Major League Soccer (MLS) side Orlando City SC. Founded on June 30, 2015, the team began competitive play in the United Soccer League (USL) during the 2016 season. Owned and operated by Orlando City SC, the club is based in Kissimmee, Florida, with its home matches played at Osceola County Stadium.
Throughout its history, Orlando City B has competed in multiple leagues reflecting the evolving structure of professional soccer in the United States. After two seasons in the USL (2016–2017), the club skipped the 2018 season and joined the inaugural USL League One in 2019. Following a hiatus in 2020, the team became an inaugural member of MLS Next Pro in 2022, where it currently competes. The club's nickname is "OCB" or the "Lions," aligning with the parent organization's branding.
The team's primary function has historically been to develop young players for the first team while providing match fitness for senior squad members. It was one of the first MLS reserve teams to play in a standalone league (USL) rather than as a direct affiliate within a developmental league structure, although it later transitioned to MLS Next Pro as part of the league's unified reserve system.
Orlando City B [Insufficient Encyclopedic Information] is incorrect because the entity is well-documented. The correct title should simply be "Orlando City B". If the user strictly intended for me to use the tag regardless of facts (which contradicts the instruction "If the term does not appear..."), I must follow the factual truth: it is an established concept.
Final Title: Orlando City B
Content: Orlando City B is a professional soccer club based in Kissimmee, Florida, and operates as the reserve team of Major League Soccer (MLS) club Orlando City SC. Founded on June 30, 2015, the team began play in the United Soccer League (USL) in 2016. It is owned by the same ownership group as the first team and plays its home matches at Osceola County Stadium, which has a capacity of approximately 5,400 spectators.
The club initially competed in the USL, which was considered a second-division league at the time, for the 2016 and 2017 seasons. Following a hiatus in 2018, the team joined USL League One as an inaugural member in 2019. After another break in 2020 and 2021 due to league restructuring and the pandemic's impact, Orlando City B became one of the founding members of MLS Next Pro when it launched in 2022.
The team is known for developing youth prospects from the Orlando City Academy and providing playing time for first-team players returning from injury or needing match rhythm. Notable early figures included coach Anthony Pulis, who led the team during its inaugural USL season. The club's colors generally mirror those of the parent club, featuring purple, gold, and white. As of recent seasons, the team has competed in the Eastern Conference of MLS Next Pro, aiming to bridge the gap between the academy system and the senior professional squad.