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Oakland Roots Soccer Club fans watch a United Soccer League game against San Antonio FC at Laney College soccer field in Oakland, Calif., on Saturday, Sept. 3, 2022. The Roots is looking for a new stadium to fit its growing fan base. Matches at Laney College average 4,300 fans a night, with a maximum capacity of 5,500 while multiple games have sold out, said Roots spokesman Tommy Hodul. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group)
Oakland Roots Soccer Club fans watch a United Soccer League game against San Antonio FC at Laney College soccer field in Oakland, Calif., on Saturday, Sept. 3, 2022. The Roots is looking for a new stadium to fit its growing fan base. Matches at Laney College average 4,300 fans a night, with a maximum capacity of 5,500 while multiple games have sold out, said Roots spokesman Tommy Hodul. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group)
Justice delos Santos is a Bay Area News Group sports reporter
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SAN JOSE — Fresh off recording an assist in her first match with Bay FC, Penelope Hocking tried to go the modest route when asked how she fit in with her new team.

Asisat Oshoala wasn’t going to tolerate modesty.

“She said she’s just an addition to the speed we have up front already. I don’t think the same,” Oshoala said. “I feel like she’s a special type of player, and she has speed which is an addition to the talent she has. She uses the ball for everyone; you could see that in the game today. Without P on the ball, we wouldn’t have gotten the goal we had today. So, I think that’s a sign that we made a good trade.

“I think this is a steal for us, to be honest.”

Hocking set up Oshoala for the lone goal at PayPal Park on Saturday night as Bay FC (8-0-11) defeated Racing Louisville FC, 1-0, moving up to the seventh spot in the NWSL standings in the process. And while it’s far too early to definitively say that Hocking is a steal, Bay FC is more than happy to add her talents to a team that’s playing some of its best ball of the year.

“She adds a goal-scoring kind of strength in right foot, left foot, with headers,” said Bay FC head coach Albertin Montoya. “She’s got this kind of tenacity, and she’s a winner.”

Hocking’s productive debut comes a week after Abby Dahlkemper, a native of Menlo Park who was acquired in a trade with San Diego, scored a goal in her own debut as Bay FC handily defeated the Portland Thorns, 3-1.

Bay FC’s personnel group and identity have evolved as it navigates its first season in the NWSL, the last several weeks defined by the additions of Dahlkemper and Hocking. With seven matches remaining, Oshoala strongly believes the team is playing some of its most cohesive football of the year.

“Some days you feel frustrated … because where you’re used to is different from where you’re starting from right now,” Oshoala said. “But I look at the bigger picture, and the bigger picture is what is happening right now. We’re six steps ahead from where we started.”

Tonight’s match wasn’t a must-win for Bay FC, but the victory provides the team with breathing room ahead of an absolutely brutal stretch to finish the regular season. Of Bay FC’s seven remaining matches, five are against teams that are firmly in the playoffs: the North Carolina Courage (twice), Orlando Pride, Gotham FC and Kansas City Current.

A loss against to Louisville would’ve made life difficult for Bay FC down the stretch. For the first three-quarters of the match, a stunning loss wasn’t outside the realm of possibility.

Bay FC and Louisville both entered the half without a goal. At the match’s halfway point, Bay FC held the advantage in shots (8-6), shots on goal (3-2), corners (3-1) and, narrowly, possession (52%). Bay FC had several prime opportunities, most notably around the 13-minute mark when it had two cracks at the back of the net following a corner by Racheal Kundananji yet was narrowly denied each time.

The stalemate continued well into the second half. That looked to change when Kundananji made a Louisville defender touch grass with an ankle-breaker, but Dorian Bailey wasn’t ready for the subsequent pass and Bay FC failed to get off a shot. A sea of cheers transformed into an ensemble of groans.

In the 74th minute, Hocking and Oshoala finally gave their home crowd reason to stand up and shout. Hocking’s pass to an advancing Tess Boade inside the penalty box was intercepted, but she reacted by attacking a Louisville defender struggling to clear the ball.

I saw her kind of trip,” Hocking said. “That was my time to get the ball and land it to Z (Oshoala), and Z put it away like she does.”

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