Having reached the top tier, with Orlando City SC, Grinwis’ career stalled in that way peculiar to goalkeepers. He became a permanent back-up. Training hard, as hard as anyone in the squad, there was no pay-off at the end of the week. But he knew his chances would come in the Open Cup.
“No one’s expecting anything from the second or third-choice goalkeeper, but I took that as a point of pride,” he said of the 2019 Quarterfinal against NYCFC that his excellent play helped send to a shootout. “In penalties the pressure’s off you as a goalkeeper and you go back to when you were a little kid and you wanted to stand in the spotlight.
“You want to be the hero, and you get the chance to be,” he said.
Running of the Wall
It was a day made famous by Orlando fans running the length of Exploria Stadium, manically through the concourses, to get behind Grinwis after NYCFC’s Maxime Chanot won the coin toss and selected to take the kicks at the empty end of the field. Grinwis saved two penalties and became forever associated with that year’s Semifinal run (and what became known in Orlando City lore as the ‘Running of the Wall’).
“I’m forever indebted to Orlando City and especially all the fans at the club,” he said, tilting his laptop during the video-call interview for this story to reveal posters of his time in Florida framed on the wall of his home in Charleston. “I’m not there anymore, but they always make me feel loved.”
Good luck trying to find anyone with a bad word to say about Grinwis. Fellow Orlando City goalkeeper Mason Stajduhar, who Grinwis helped plan and pull off a surprise marriage proposal on-field after an Open Cup game in 2022, calls him a “really special guy.”
That’s pretty much an across-the-board sentiment.
But all players want to play week in and week out. And, in 2020, it looked like it wasn’t going to happen for him in Orlando. When the outstanding Peruvian international Pedro Gallese was brought into the club, the “writing was on the wall” according to Grinwis, who slid farther still down the pecking order.
Sacramento Republic – who would go on to reach the Final of the Open Cup in 2022 – was Grinwis’ next destination. What was meant to be a rebirth turned into a nightmare. Knee ligament rupture led to surgery. Follow-up infections led to more surgeries and a year where he was “basically living at the hospital.”
When the Republic decided not to pick up his contract, Grinwis, one of the most cheerful characters you’ll meet, hit a low ebb. Deep in the muck of self-doubt, he decided to go back to where it all started – to Ann Arbour, Michigan.
The Low-Down
“I got a call to help out with some finishing training with some high schoolers, out in the middle of nowhere in Michigan. It’s freezing cold,” he said, remembering one of his lowest points, when chucking it all in seemed inevitable. “I’m saving some shots, but they’re scoring on me too.
“And I’m thinking: I was just a pro player and playing an Open Cup Semifinal and now this – is this ever going to really happen for me?”
He was making cold calls in search of a foothold for the next step, trying to stay positive and heed the advice of loved ones, when out of nowhere, he ended up back in Orlando. “I was living there rent free with my old teammate, Will Johnson, helping look after his kids,” he said of his return to Orlando City, who offered to let him finish his rehab at the club.
“It was just this crazy process – another crazy part of the rollercoaster ride,” he said about eventually signing again for the club – in need of back-up cover – from 2021 through to last year.”