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Oakland Roots bit by giveaway in 2-1 U.S. Open Cup loss to Tacoma Defiance

Credit: Oakland Roots SC

Oakland Roots saw its quest for the U.S. Open Cup end after its first match of the tournament, falling 2-1 in extra time to Tacoma Defiance at Starfire Stadium. Although the home team was some oddsmaker’s favorites, it had every feel of a Cupset with Oakland dominating the second half and most of extra time with all of its starters on the field.

Tacoma’s game-winner came in the 108th minute when Jackson Khoury stole possession off of Neveal Hackshaw down by Roots’ own end line, centering a pass for Osaze De Rosario. His shot from inside the area deflected off the bottom of Julian Bravo’s outstretched foot and into the net.

Defiance scored the game’s first goal in the 28th minute when Peter Kingston sent in a beautiful curling shot from about six yards outside the left elbow area of the penalty area. Kingston nearly scored again from a free kick six minutes later, but Raphael Spiegel pushed his shot onto the post. It marked Tacoma’s last attempt on target until scoring the game-winner in the second half of extra time.

Oakland took over in the second half with multiple chances to score. They took 15 touches inside the box, seven shots, two on target, and generated two big scoring chances.

Roots’ goal was scored in the 75th minute when Wolfgang Prentice drew a penalty kick when sending a pass inside the box. Surprisingly stepping to the penalty spot was Neveal Hackshaw, and even more surprisingly, he sent in a well-taken shot to the left side of the net. Roots had another big chance one minute earlier when Peter Wilson sent a shot on the volley straight to the keeper.

Oakland took five more shots in the first half of extra time and another five with four on target in the second 15 minutes. Tacoma’s Cody Baker drew his second yellow at the 117′ mark. Tyler Gibson took two shots and Justin Rasmussen took one in the remaining time, but couldn’t overly challenge Tacoma GK Andrew Thomas.

Here are our talking points coming out of the match.

Talking Points

Credit: Oakland Roots SC

Giveaways and conceding worldie goals have become synonymous with the start of Oakland Roots’ 2025 season.

Hackshaw’s giveaway in the 108th minute became the latest of a string of costly errors by Oakland’s defense. In the 3-nill loss to Rhode Island, its first goal came after a sloppy touch by Abdi Mohamed, who had another giveaway in their 3-2 loss to Monterey. Also against Monterey and Orange County, costly slips by Camden Riley enabled two goals.

It’d be interesting to see how these results would’ve changed if Oakland hadn’t shot itself in the foot.

At the same rate, Oakland seems to always get hit by absolutely beautiful goals. Is this enabled by defensive play or just Roots repeatedly getting struck by pure brilliance?

Three of Orange County’s four goals were class goals. Ethan Zubak landed a header after Cameron Dunbar whipped in a wicked ball, Nico Benalcázar had a beautiful curling free kick, and then Kyle Scott hit a longshot from outside the box. Against Monterey, Mayele Malango landed a curling shot. Clay Holstad also launched in a rocket to clean up a rebound for Rhode Island.

Tongith, it was Kingston’s free kick to punish Roots, hitting a shot about as perfect as it could’ve been.

Credit: Oakland Roots SC

Roots, in their effort to take over the game with aged veterans against a team of youngsters, fell short. Defiance’s oldest starter was 26-year-old keeper Andrew Thomas, while 30-year-old Danny Robles came off the bench. One look at the players Oakland used, and it’s clear that winning tonight was a priority.

Despite Tacoma being the bettors’ favorite before the opening whistle, tonight had all the characteristics of a Cupset, given Oakland closed the game with 10 of 11 usual starters on the field aside from goalkeeper Raphael Spiegel. In fact, Defiance had four 18-year-olds in the starting lineup.

And, boy, that hurt.

Goalkeeper Kendall McIntosh has repeatedly mentioned going for silverware this season and the U.S. Open Cup, undoubtedly, was one of the club’s marquee chances to make headlines. Oakland no-longer has a chance to renew the Fuck John Fisher Derby against San Jose Earthquakes. Knocked out after one match, Roots’ only remaining chance at a trophy might be the USL Jägermeister Cup.

It’s already looking assured that the regular season Players’ Shield is out of reach, which would require Roots to finish with the league’s best record. That leaves the USL Championship title through the postseason, and sitting in last-place of the Western Conference, that dream is sounding more farfetched by the day.

Credit: Oakland Roots SC

Roots’ second half was perhaps its best all season, even better than its first-half performance in their 2-1 win over FC Tulsa on Saturday. Oakland generated two big scoring chances, including the penalty kick, taking 15 touches inside the penalty area to top 14 in the first half of the Tulsa match.

They added six more touches in the box in the first 15 minutes of extra time and another five in the latter half.

Wolfgang Prentice continues to show he is Roots’ best player. He quickly got involved after entering in the 57th minute, taking a pass from Thomas off of the face to set up a chance by Jose Luis Sinisterra nine minutes later. Then, in the 75th, Wolfy drew the penalty kick to set up Hackshaw’s goal.

Peter Wilson also entered in the 57th. He created Roots’ other big scoring chance in the 74th when Justin Rasmussen played him a nice cross in the box. On the run, Wilson shot the ball out of the air, but Thomas got low to make the save. He then laid off a ball to Bobosi Byaruhanga in the 108th minute, but Bobosi’s shot bounced slowly to the keeper.

Bobosi and Sinisterra also had productive appearances after coming on in the second half.

Byaruhanga also took shot attempts in the 92nd and 103rd, but he didn’t hit either shot with much velocity. He also tried to catch Thomas off of his line on a 60-yard bomb in the 78th, but it was grabbed and wasn’t on target anyway.

Sinisterra drew a foul a few feet above the penalty area in the 71st at the end of a nice dribble toward the area and had a shot go wide in the 100th.

Make no mistake: that one was painful, and losing to an MLS Next Pro side is a lot to frown on. But Roots now look to pick itself up on Saturday back at the Coliseum against Orange County.

It marks the second meeting between the two sides already just one month into the season. OCSC is in a bit of a downturn, losing tonight 4-2 in penalty kicks to USL League One side AV Alta after ending regulation and extra time in a 2-2 tie. Orange County won its last league game against Sacramento 2-1 but lost 1-0 to Las Vegas on April 5 and got dominated 3-nil by Monterey on March 22.

Oakland and Glinton will have a more difficult choices on their hands with a short roster. Prentice and Wilson played 63 minutes, Sinisterra and Bobosi appeared for 56, and players like Hackshaw, Tyler Gibson, and Rasmussen were in for all 120 minutes.

Roots will have to find a way to bottle its productivity in the second half against Tacoma and the first half against Tulsa. If not, things are going to get increasingly bleak for an already fractured fanbase.

Starting Lineups

As expected, Oakland has several new faces in tonight’s starting lineup. Raphael Spiegel and Gagi Margvelashvili get their first start of 2025, while Project 51O graduates like Ilya Alekseev, Luis Saldana, and Ali Elmasnaouy appear in the starting 11. Usual Roots’ players like Neveal Hackshaw, Justin Rasmussen, Danny Gomez, Abdi Mohamed, and Tyler Gibson are back in, while EJ Johnson provides speed up top. It could be another two-pronged attack with Johnson and Saldanda up top.

All in all, a strong lineup with solid bench options for a midweek Cup match. If Oakland is pushing for a goal in the second half, Gavin Glinton will have options to choose from.

Timeline

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