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Tag: Bay FC

  • Cal’s Metayer helps lead Washington Spirit into NWSL championship game at PayPal Park

    SAN JOSE — Few players in the NWSL cover more ground than Paige Metayer.

    The former Cal midfielder has transformed into one of the league’s most versatile players. On Saturday, she brings that full-spectrum game back to the Bay Area as the Washington Spirit face Gotham FC in the NWSL championship at PayPal Park.

    The third-year pro has played at forward, midfield, and fullback for the Spirit, and started at right back in last year’s 1-0 championship game loss to Orlando.

    Bay FC’s Penelope Hocking advances on Gotham FC in Saturday night’s NWSL match in Harrison, N.J. Hocking scored Bay FC’s lone goal when she scored from close range in the 11th minute. It was Hocking’s fourth goal in her last five games. (Courtesy of Bay FC / NWSL) 

    Metayer started for four years at Cal, but didn’t receive all-conference recognition and went undrafted. But the Spirit offered her a preseason invite, and it took her just a few weeks to prove she belonged.

    As a rookie in 2023, she started all 21 matches she appeared in, and scored three goals—every one of them a headed finish off a corner kick. Heading had never been a strength earlier in her career, but like so much else in her game, she developed it quickly, even unexpectedly.

    “It wasn’t something I specialized in,” she said. “I wasn’t very tall growing up, so heading wasn’t really part of my game. But the service was great, and I was able to get my head on things. It became a strength I didn’t know I had.”

    Cal coach Neil McGuire wasn’t surprised at Metayer’s professional evolution.

    “She’s got incredible soccer intellect,” McGuire said. “She understands the game at a really high level, so positionally she can play in a number of spots. Athletically she’s extremely fit. Technically she’s gifted. She can deal with pressure, strike a ball over distance, receive with both feet—she just has a lot of strengths that make her right for the professional game.”

    That combination of intelligence, composure, and athleticism turned her into one of the most adaptable players on the Spirit roster. In 2024 alone, she appeared in 20 regular-season matches, making 11 starts, and played across all three levels of the field.

    Harold Gutmann

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  • Bay FC’s parent organization adds 2 hires, including former England women’s GM

    Bay FC’s brand is getting bigger, and it’s starting to reach beyond the limits of the second-year National Women’s Soccer League club itself.

    Bay Collective, an organization founded in January by Bay FC owners Sixth Street as a parent company of sorts, has hired two new staffers to build out its front office, the club told the Bay Area News Group.

    Anja van Ginhoven joins as the director of global women’s football operations at Sixth Street, and Patricia González joins as the global sporting director of Bay Collective.

    The two new voices are joining from the English Football Association and Atlético Madrid, respectively, and will be working under Bay Collective CEO Kay Cossington’s leadership to drive the next phase of the Bay Collective’s strategy.

    The moves come as Bay FC enters a state of transition with two games remaining in the regular season. Founding Bay FC CEO Brady Stewart already left her role in September, and head coach Albertin Montoya will be stepping down from his role at the end of the season.

    “Patricia and Anja bring deep expertise and proven success at the highest levels within global women’s football,” Cossington said in a statement. “They have lived and breathed women’s football for the better part of their lives. Their experience and leadership will be instrumental in driving our organization to excel, fostering environments both on and off the pitch where players and staff can reach their full potential. They bring immense value to us, and their unrivalled knowledge of women’s football makes Bay Collective unique as we seek to execute the next phase of our strategy. I am thrilled for them to come on board.”

    In the role as the director of global women’s football operations, van Ginhoven will be responsible for optimizing the platform’s soccer-related activities and operations, the club said. Her role will involve shaping the direction for football governance, operations, performance enhancement and facility development.

    Van Ginhoven was previously the general manager of the English women’s national team for the past four years. She previously worked as general manager and communications manager for the Dutch women’s national team.

    González will oversee and drive the sporting strategy for all clubs within Bay Collective and will work closely with club managers, coaches, and senior leadership to leverage data and analytics and position each club for success on and off the pitch, the club said. In her previous role as the women’s technical director of Atlético Madrid, she oversaw the scouting strategy and helped shape the club’s high-performance culture.

    González, a former player, has also worked for FIFA and led its talent development unit.


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    Christian Babcock

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  • Second-half goal pulls Bay FC into a 1-1 draw with visiting Gotham FC

    SAN JOSE — Racheal Kundananji scored in the second half to pull Bay FC into a 1-1 draw with Gotham FC in the National Women’s Soccer League on Sunday night.

    Bay (4-10-7) earned its second straight draw but has not won since June 7 and remained below the playoff line. Gotham (8-6-7) is unbeaten in its last five league matches and is third in the league standings.

    “An excellent game from us today, a little unfortunate that we didn’t get a goal there at the end,” said Bay FC head coach Albertin Montoya, who earlier this month announced he’ll resign at season’s end. “But I thought it was an exciting game on both halves. Just [am] proud of the team, they came out with so much desire and fight.”

    Esther Gonzalez fed a short pass to Rose Lavelle who sent the ball to the opposite post to put Gotham up in the 36th minute at PayPal Park.

    Kundananji tied it for Bay in the 68th with a smash from atop the box that arced up before falling into the side netting.

    Bay FC defender Brooklyn Courtnall celebrated a career milestone in the match as she made the first start of her young career. The University of Southern California product made her club debut in last week’s match at Orlando, and made four appearances off the bench for the North Carolina Courage this season prior to joining Bay FC on loan last month.

    Staff and wire reports

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  • Bay FC mounts late comeback, falls to Washington Spirit in front of record crowd at Oracle Park

    SAN FRANCISCO — Bay FC put up a good fight in the second half, but it was unable to catch up to the Washington Spirit in the two teams’ showcase game at Oracle Park in San Francisco.

    In front of an NWSL-record announced crowd of 40,091 fans, Bay FC fell down three goals but rallied to make a game of it late. Kelli Hubly’s second-half goal gave Bay FC hope, but Washington hung on to win 3-2.

    Washington (9-4-4) built its first-half lead with goals by Kate Wiesner and Croix Bethune, plus an own goal by Hubly in stoppage time.

    Racheal Kundananji responded with Bay FC’s first goal even later in stoppage time, a header in the fifth minute of added time that gave Bay FC needed hope heading into the halftime break.

    Bay FC goalkeeper Jordan Silkowitz (29) fights for the ball against the Washington Spirit’s Gift Monday (21) during the first half of an NWSL match at Oracle Park in San Francisco, Calif., on Saturday, Aug. 23, 2025. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group) 

    Then Hubly really gave Bay FC’s record home crowd a reason to believe in the 54th minute, heading home a corner kick from Alyssa Malonson to bring Bay FC within a goal.

    Bay FC (4-8-5) generated a number of late chances and was generally on the front foot for the rest of the game, but the hosts were unable to equalize and reward their home fans with a result.

    Check back for updates to this story.

    Bay FC celebrates their second goal scored by Bay FC's Kelli Hubly (11) against the Washington Spirit during the second half of an NWSL game at Oracle Park in San Francisco, Calif., on Saturday, Aug. 23, 2025. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group)
    Bay FC celebrates their second goal scored by Bay FC’s Kelli Hubly (11) against the Washington Spirit during the second half of an NWSL game at Oracle Park in San Francisco, Calif., on Saturday, Aug. 23, 2025. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group) 
    Bay FC fans celebrate a goal by Bay FC's Racheal Kundananji (9) against the Washington Spirit during the first half of an NWSL game at Oracle Park in San Francisco, Calif., on Saturday, Aug. 23, 2025. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group)
    Bay FC fans celebrate a goal by Bay FC’s Racheal Kundananji (9) against the Washington Spirit during the first half of an NWSL game at Oracle Park in San Francisco, Calif., on Saturday, Aug. 23, 2025. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group) 
    The Bay FC takes on the Washington Spirit during the first half of an NWSL game at Oracle Park in San Francisco, Calif., on Saturday, Aug. 23, 2025. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group)
    The Bay FC takes on the Washington Spirit during the first half of an NWSL game at Oracle Park in San Francisco, Calif., on Saturday, Aug. 23, 2025. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group) 
    Fans celebrate the second goal scored by Bay FC's Kelli Hubly (11) against the Washington Spirit during the second half of an NWSL game at Oracle Park in San Francisco, Calif., on Saturday, Aug. 23, 2025. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group)
    Fans celebrate the second goal scored by Bay FC’s Kelli Hubly (11) against the Washington Spirit during the second half of an NWSL game at Oracle Park in San Francisco, Calif., on Saturday, Aug. 23, 2025. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group) 

    Originally Published:

    Christian Babcock

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  • Bay FC suffers heartbreaking loss to undefeated Orlando Pride on late goal by Barbra Banda

    Bay FC suffers heartbreaking loss to undefeated Orlando Pride on late goal by Barbra Banda

    SAN JOSE — Two screaming passes went across the penalty area in the late moments of Friday night’s clash between Bay FC and the undefeated Orlando Pride, but Bay FC couldn’t finish either chance.

    A minute later, the hometown club surrendered a heartbreaking goal to Orlando’s Barbra Banda to complete a devastating 1-0 loss at PayPal Park.

    “This one hurts,” said head coach Albertin Montoya. “The team played well and we deserved better.”

    Bay FC was every bit as good as the first place Pride most of the night, out-shooting them 13-12, and had several chances to win it in the final few minutes.

    In the 79th minute, rookie left back Maddie Moreau dribbled by two defenders on the left side of the box and slotted a pass to Dorian Bailey, but Bailey’s low shot was stopped by the foot of goalie Anna Moorhouse.

    Then in the 83rd minute, Racheal Kundananji dribbled down the left side and put the ball through the legs of Orlando defender Emily Sams, then crossed her up a second time and fired a perfect pass into the penalty area, but Rachel Hill’s first-time shot went a few feet wide of the goal.

    “The best teams finish those chances,” Montoya said. “But we’re creating chances and creating a lot of really good chances. It’s frustrating but it’s also encouraging because we’ve come a long way. We’re getting better.”

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  • Bay FC’s first home game at PayPal Park sees fans sell out stadium

    Bay FC’s first home game at PayPal Park sees fans sell out stadium

    San Jose – Fans sold out PayPal Park for the Bay FC’s inaugural home game. 

    The team fell to the Houston Dash 3-2, but that didn’t stop fans from supporting the team.

    “For me this is very personal,” Cassie Gray said.

    Gray grew up in San Jose and played soccer throughout her life, eventually playing at UC Berkeley and training with a professional team in San Jose before they disbanded the league.

    “I want my daughter to be able to see what soccer in the Bay Area is like and get to grow up with women to look up to,” Gray said about the importance of representation. “When you see it, you can be it.”

    For Gray, soccer is a family affair. Her husband used to play soccer professionally for the San Jose Earthquakes in the same arena.

    “Every time I would go to his games that’s what I would hope — that someday I would be watching women,” Gray said.  

    The Grays are founding season ticket members. They hope to continue to watch all the home games together as a family.

    “It’s really exciting,” Miller said, Gray’s 10-year-old daughter.

    “For my daughter, I’m just really excited for her to see that this many people show up for women’s sports, and the sky is the limit,” said Gray. “She can be whatever she wants in this realm, and even if she chooses not to play, that we can watch these games together and support the growth of female athletes in America.”

    While the Bay Area recently lost the Raiders to Las Vegas and the Athletics are expected to join them soon, women’s sports are growing. In addition to Bay FC, there will be a WNBA expansion team in 2025.

    “I feel like we get overlooked a lot in the Bay Area, so I feel like it’s about time that we stand up and show up,” Becky Price said about Bay Area Fan supporting women’s sports.

    Gray says she’s hopeful for the rest of the season, despite a 1-2 start.

    “I think they’re going to do a great job,” Gray said.

    Bay FC’s next game will be at PayPal Park again on April 14.

    Amanda Hari

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  • Bay FC sign Kundananji from Madrid CFF for world-record fee

    Bay FC sign Kundananji from Madrid CFF for world-record fee

    National Women’s Soccer League (NWSL) side Bay FC have signed Zambia forward Racheal Kundananji from Madrid CFF for a world-record fee. 

    A source with knowledge of negotiations, who is granted anonymity to protect relationships, confirmed to The Athletic that the fee for the 23-year-old is €735,000 ($785,000).

    She has signed a contract until 2027 with the option of a further year. 

    Bay FC general manager, Lucy Rushton, said: “We are delighted to add Racheal to our group. She is a tremendous talent with dynamic attacking qualities and an incredible physical profile who has produced for both club and country.

    “Racheal has a composure in-front of goal and a natural ability to score with different types of finishes and from various locations. We believe she will continue to grow and develop at our club, showcasing her skillset and adding to the array of exciting attacking talent we have here.”

    Bay FC is a newly established team in the NWSL, set to embark on their inaugural season in 2024.

    Kundananji, meanwhile, has scored 33 goals in 43 Liga F games for Madrid.

    At international level, Kundananji showcased her talent by both playing and scoring in the 2023 Women’s World Cup. She also boasts an impressive record of 10 goals in 18 appearances for Zambia.

    She becomes the first African player to break a world transfer record.

    Chelsea broke the women’s transfer record last month after signing Colombia international striker Mayra Ramirez from Levante. The Spanish side said that the deal amounts to €450,000 ($482,000, £382,800) fixed, plus a further €50,000 in variable amounts based on goals that the club expects to be met, one of which requires Ramirez to play 30 per cent of the matches.

    England midfielder Keira Walsh previously broke the women’s transfer record in 2022 following her move from Manchester City to Barcelona. 

    Kundananji joined Madrid from Eibar in August 2022, having previously had stints at Kazakhstan club BIIK Shymkent and Zambian side Indeni Roses. 

    The women’s game saw a record spend for a January window of $2.1m. This marked the second record-breaking transfer window in a row following the $3m spent last summer.

    In February, Bay FC also completed the signings of Arsenal defender Jen Beattie and Asisat Oshoala from Barcelona.

    GO DEEPER

    Chelsea approach Lyon’s Bompastor to succeed Hayes

    (Buda Mendes/Getty Images)

    The New York Times

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  • Lindsey Horan just wants to talk soccer

    Lindsey Horan just wants to talk soccer


    It’s USWNT captain Lindsey Horan’s final morning in the States before a flight back to France to rejoin Lyon, her club team. She’s spending it in a hotel lobby, tucked away at a table, talking to The Athletic for an hour about her time leading a team in the spotlight, how she sees her role during this time of transition, and one thing above all:

    “Can we think about the football?”

    Horan was speaking almost exactly five months since being named by then-USWNT head coach Vlatko Andonovski as captain of the national team alongside Alex Morgan (Horan has been getting the armband when both are on the field at the same time). The role is the fulfillment of a life goal, but also seems like a natural outcome, given how often, and how intensely, she thinks about the game.

    Her first five months in that leadership role were full of notable exits: her team’s from the World Cup, Andonovski’s, and the retirements of Megan Rapinoe and Julie Ertz. It was capped with a big addition: U.S. Soccer’s announced hiring of Emma Hayes as head coach.

    Horan, now 29 years old and with 139 senior national team caps under her belt, is part of an in-between camp: too experienced to be a newcomer, and too new to be on the way out. It’s her generation – which also includes Rose Lavelle, Emily Sonnett and others – that must keep the team’s signature fire, that USWNT DNA, burning even as the team undergoes a serious re-think after its worst ever World Cup finish.

    GO DEEPER

    Vlatko Andonovski interview: ‘A moment there that I was like, ‘Do I really love this game anymore?’

    “We have to continue that,” she says of herself and fellow in-betweeners. “You have to be amongst this team for a while to know what the f— that takes… it’s one of the most competitive national teams to be a part of.”

    No one on the team is talking about starting from scratch. It’s just that they need more ways to win. More than mentality or fitness levels, more than a never-say-die approach. That’s what Horan said her early conversations with Hayes have been about. And that’s why she wants to talk about football, and how the USWNT can bounce back — not just by playing better, but by thinking more.

    “We’ve been so successful for so long in a certain way that we play, that attack and transition,” Horan says. “We’ve had individual brilliance. We’ve had soccer players on the field and real players that want to play and it all kind of meshed together or it would always work out, or our DNA would take us to this place where we come out on top because our mentality was so f—ing good.”

    The game is changing, and Horan recognizes this. She praises Portugal’s level of play at the World Cup, the investment into the game in Spain and other European countries, and the high level of up-and-coming U.S. talent (specifically citing 19-year-old San Diego Wave forward Jaedyn Shaw). If there was a theme for Horan and the rest of the USWNT in that final camp of the year, it was a repetitive one: no one actually knows the ceiling of this team.


    Horan cited Shaw as an exciting young player for the U.S. (Brad Smith/ISI Photos/USSF/Getty Images for USSF)

    “Even in these past few games, you see little glimpses of that, but it’s the final product, continuing to do that throughout the game, getting everyone on the same page, not just four or five players,” she says. “If you can develop that more, and it’s inherent in every single player on the team, you’re looking to play the combinations, all of these things? No idea what this team can do.

    “Then you have the mentality aspect on top of it, where if the football is not going well, we know that we can freakin’ go. We have players on the field that are faster, stronger, capable in behind, and we’re gonna gut it out, right? The world is going to be very fearful.”

    Those words could cause a stir. In 2019, Ali Krieger suggested the USWNT substitutes could take on and beat multiple other teams at the World Cup, and it was a massive point of contention for a team that got plenty more criticism from across American culture even as it was celebrated for its third consecutive title.

    “We have to be one of the most talked about teams,” Horan says. “We’re always in the magnifying glass on every single thing we do or anything we say.”

    Individual players can bear the brunt of that magnifying glass just as much as the team can. There’s a clear, though understandable, vein of frustration from Horan over how her own performances are understood, even from the USWNT’s own fanbase. To illustrate her point, Horan brings up that many viewers will take a television commentator’s analysis at face value.

    “American soccer fans, most of them aren’t smart,” she says. “They don’t know the game. They don’t understand. (But) it’s getting better and better.”

    She takes a brief pause, sensing that those words, too, will cause a stir.

    “I’m gonna piss off some people,” she continues, “but the game is growing in the U.S. People are more and more knowledgeable, but so much of the time people take what the commentators say, right? My mom does it!” She breaks into laughter. “My mom says, ‘Julie Foudy said you had such a good game!’ And I’m here, just going, ‘I was f—ing s— today.’”

    When playing with Lyon in France, Horan says, things are different.

    “From what I’ve heard, people understand my game a little bit more, a sense of my football and the way I play,” she says. “It is the French culture. Everyone watches football. People know football.”

    None of that, though, compares to Horan’s experience at the 2023 World Cup. The outside commentary, including from her own former teammate Carli Lloyd, the entrances into stadiums in their custom suits; the tone used in interviews; the body language. Everything was scrutinized. This time, though, the talk was accompanied by bad performances, and bad results.

    go-deeper

    GO DEEPER

    Carli Lloyd’s USWNT criticism a natural extension of her public persona

    Horan says she wasn’t bothered by the outside criticism, but noted no one else but the players could understand what it was like to be on that team. Ultimately, she says it felt “perfectly fine” that people would find something to talk about.

    “If you’re not backing it up on the field, people are gonna come and talk s— about what you’re doing, where your priorities are,” she says. “Like, ‘Are you getting ready for the game? Are you caring more about this s—?’”


    Horan has leaned on Lavelle (left) to help lead a team in transition (Jose Breton/Pics Action/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

    Horan, again, comes back to a small, seemingly innocuous detail: The traditional pre-match starting XI photo. In the NWSL, more and more teams have started using the occasion for various hijinks; something that Horan’s European teammates bring up as an example of Americans not taking their business seriously. It’s clear that it gets under her skin, too.

    “I want professionalism,” she admits. “Those little things, they really irked me. I don’t think I could do it, and maybe I’m wrong in saying that, I don’t know. It just bothers me. We put so much into this game, and it’s just like a joke sometimes.”

    She’s quick to point out she’s not going to be the one who shuts it down if it works for others. That’s not what she’s trying to say. It’s just that, ultimately, for her, it’s about the football.

    “We need to get back to the football. The football is the most important thing” Horan says. “So maybe we should knock some of the s— out for now. We need to focus on the game, we need to focus on being the absolute best we can be.”

    As captain, Horan can help enact that. It’s a role she’s clearly grown into, even as she has struggled to understand it in the months between Andonovski’s exit and Hayes’ hiring.

    Hayes hasn’t officially started yet, and won’t coach in games until after her job as Chelsea’s head coach ends along with the European season in May. But Hayes’ December visit with Horan and the rest of the team helped clarify the process, Horan says. It also gave Horan a chance to open up the lines of communication, to admit that sometimes she didn’t feel like she had full control, that she hadn’t been handed the reins.

    “I always felt like I was someone that could really touch on every single player and get the best out of them and try to make them the best that they could be,” Horan says. “I’m not going to be like the rah-rah speeches, all that nonsense. Becky (Sauerbrunn) and me are probably a little similar in that. I’m probably a little more crazy on the field. I want to make sure I’m the leader that I want to be, and no one’s trying to make me something else.”

    Before Andonovski gave her the armband — a move made in part because longtime captain Sauerbrunn missed the World Cup due to a lingering foot injury — Horan told him that getting the armband wouldn’t change her, or how players could talk to her. What it would change, she told him, is the tone it would set. She wanted to be a role model.

    “I’m not going to be a coach’s captain, I’m going to be a players’ captain,” she told Andonovski. So if that wasn’t what he wanted, then he shouldn’t make her a captain.

    Horan has lived up to her word since interim head coach Twila Kilgore stepped in, leaning on Morgan, Lavelle and Sonnett to make them part of the transitional process. She has empowered the team’s relative newcomers, too. The normally-reticent 23-year-old center back Naomi Girma said Horan “encouraged me just to find my voice.”

    “A lot of these new young players are going to have big freaking roles, even in this Olympics,” Horan says. “How the hell do we get the best out of them to go put us on the podium? It’s been a crazy place, but this is a really exciting role for me because I’ve felt like this is what I’m meant to do.”

    The team has four months until Hayes takes over, and six until the Olympics. The sprint is very much on for this massive group project to re-establish the team at the top, before looking ahead to 2027 and a World Cup that could be hosted at home. Every voice matters to Horan, from Horan to Lavelle to Morgan to Girma to Shaw and beyond.

    “We need to be doing everything we possibly can to be improving, to make each other better, holding the standards,” Horan says. “We need to change every bit of culture that we had prior to the last World Cup and going into this Olympics because we need to win. And that starts now.”

    (Photo: James Gilbert/Getty Images)





    The New York Times

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