2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup

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2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup
Copa de Oro de la Concacaf 2019
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Tournament details
Host countries Costa Rica
Jamaica
United States
Dates June 15 – July 7
Teams 16
Venue(s) 17 (in 16 host cities)
Final positions
Champions  Mexico (8th title)
Runners-up  United States
Tournament statistics
Matches played 31
Goals scored 96 (3.1 per match)
Attendance 1,043,168 (33,651 per match)
Top scorer(s) Jonathan David (6 goals)
Best player Raúl Jiménez
Best young player Christian Pulisic
Best goalkeeper Guillermo Ochoa
Fair play award  United States
2017
2021

The 2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup was the 15th edition of the CONCACAF Gold Cup, the biennial international men's soccer championship of the North, Central American, and Caribbean region organized by CONCACAF. The tournament was primarily hosted in the United States, with Costa Rica and Jamaica hosting double-headers in the first round of matches in groups B and C, respectively.

The United States were the defending champions, having won the 2017 tournament. With the abolition of the FIFA Confederations Cup, the CONCACAF Cup was annulled and the Gold Cup did not qualify the winner to a major tournament for the first time since 2009.

In February 2018, CONCACAF announced that the tournament would expand to 16 teams from 12.[1][2]

Mexico won their eighth Gold Cup title (their eleventh CONCACAF championship) with their 1–0 victory over the United States in the final.[3]

Venues

In May 2018, CONCACAF confirmed that matches would be held in Central America and the Caribbean in addition to the United States.[1][2][4] This was the first time that the Gold Cup was held in the Caribbean, with all previous matches having taken place in the United States, Mexico, or Canada.

United States

In May 2018, CONCACAF announced the fifteen venues in the United States which would host matches.[5] Soldier Field in Chicago was announced on September 27, 2018, as the venue of the final.[6]

Pasadena, California
(Los Angeles area)[4]
Denver[7][4] Houston[8][4]
Rose Bowl Broncos Stadium at Mile High NRG Stadium BBVA Stadium
Capacity: 90,888 Capacity: 76,125 Capacity: 71,795 Capacity: 22,039
DSCN5753 invescofieldatmilehigh e.jpg
NRG stadium prepared for Super Bowl Li (32513086661).jpg
BBVA Compass Stadium, Skyline View.JPG
Charlotte[4]
Bank of America Stadium
Capacity: 75,525
Bank of America Stadium.jpg
Philadelphia[4]
Lincoln Financial Field
Capacity: 69,176
Nashville[4]
Nissan Stadium
Capacity: 69,143
LP Field 2009 crop.jpg
Cleveland[9][4] Glendale, Arizona
(Phoenix area)[4]
Chicago[10][4] Harrison, New Jersey
(New York City area)[11][4]
FirstEnergy Stadium State Farm Stadium Soldier Field Red Bull Arena
Capacity: 67,895 Capacity: 63,400 Capacity: 61,500 Capacity: 25,000
University of Phoenix Stadium aerial.jpg
UsavsHonduras.JPG
Red Bull Arena Harrison behind goal.jpg
Los Angeles[12][4] Frisco, Texas
(Dallas/Fort Worth area)[13][4]
Saint Paul, Minnesota
(Minneapolis–Saint Paul area)[14][4]
Kansas City, Kansas
(Kansas City area)[15][4]
Banc of California Stadium Toyota Stadium Allianz Field Children's Mercy Park
Capacity: 22,000 Capacity: 20,500 Capacity: 19,400 Capacity: 18,467
Livestrong Sporting Park - Sporting KC v New England Revolution.jpg

Costa Rica

On November 26, 2018, CONCACAF announced that Costa Rica would host a double-header in the first round of matches of Group B on June 16, 2019, taking place at the Estadio Nacional de Costa Rica in San José.[16]

San José
Estadio Nacional de Costa Rica
Capacity: 35,175

Jamaica

On April 2, 2019, CONCACAF announced that Jamaica would host a double-header in the first round of matches of Group C on June 17, 2019, taking place at the Independence Park in Kingston.[17]

Kingston
Independence Park
Capacity: 35,000
Independence Park.jpg

Teams

Qualification

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The qualification system was changed and no longer divided into Central American and Caribbean zones. Among the 16 teams, six qualified directly after participating in the 2018 FIFA World Cup qualifying Hexagonal, while the other 10 teams qualified through the 2019–20 CONCACAF Nations League qualifying.[18]

Bermuda and Guyana made their Gold Cup debuts.

Team Qualification[upper-alpha 1] Date of
qualification
Gold Cup appearances
(+ CONCACAF Championship)
Last appearance Previous best Gold Cup performance[upper-alpha 2]
(+ CONCACAF Championship)
FIFA Ranking
at start of event[19]
CONCACAF Ranking
at start of event[20]
 Mexico Hex 1st place 7 March 2018[upper-alpha 3] 15th (23rd) 2017 Champions (1993, 1996, 1998, 2003, 2009, 2011, 2015)
Champions (1965, 1971, 1977)
18 1
 Costa Rica (co-hosts) Hex 2nd place 7 March 2018[upper-alpha 4] 14th (20th) 2017 Runners-up (2002)
Champions (1963, 1969, 1989)
39 3
 Panama Hex 3rd place 7 March 2018[upper-alpha 4] 9th (10th) 2017 Runners-up (2005, 2013) 75 5
 Honduras Hex 4th place 7 March 2018[upper-alpha 5] 14th (20th) 2017 Runners-up (1991)
Champions (1981)
61 4
 United States
(title holders & co-hosts)
Hex 5th place 7 March 2018[upper-alpha 5] 15th (17th) 2017 Champions (1991, 2002, 2005, 2007, 2013, 2017)
Runners-up (1989)
30 2
 Trinidad and Tobago Hex 6th place 7 March 2018[upper-alpha 4] 10th (16th) 2015 Semi-finals (2000)
Runners-up (1973)
92 11
 Haiti CNLQ 1st place 24 March 2019 7th (14th) 2015 Quarter-finals (2002, 2009)
Champions (1973)
101 10
 Canada CNLQ 2nd place 24 March 2019 14th (17th) 2017 Champions (2000)
Champions (1985)
78 6
 Martinique CNLQ 3rd place 23 March 2019 6th (6th) 2017 Quarter-finals (2002) N/A[upper-alpha 6] 12
 Curaçao CNLQ 4th place 23 March 2019 2nd (6th) 2017 Group stage (2017)
Third place (1963, 1969)
79 15
 Bermuda CNLQ 5th place 24 March 2019 1st (1st) None Debut 174 20
 Cuba CNLQ 6th place 24 March 2019 9th (11th) 2015 Quarter-finals (2003, 2013, 2015)
Fourth place (1971)
175 13
 Guyana CNLQ 7th place 23 March 2019 1st (1st) None Debut 177 22
 Jamaica (co-hosts) CNLQ 8th place 23 March 2019 11th (13th) 2017 Runners-up (2015, 2017) 54 7
 Nicaragua CNLQ 9th place 24 March 2019 3rd (5th) 2017 Group stage (2009, 2017)
Sixth place (1967)
129 14
 El Salvador CNLQ 10th place 24 March 2019 11th (17th) 2017 Quarter-finals (2002, 2003, 2011, 2013, 2017)
Runners-up (1963, 1981)
69 9
  1. Hex indicates 2018 FIFA World Cup qualifying Hexagonal, CNLQ indicates 2019–20 CONCACAF Nations League qualifying.
  2. Bold indicates that the corresponding team was hosting the event.
  3. Confirmed as Gold Cup participants on March 7, 2018, but qualified for the Hexagonal on March 29, 2016.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 Confirmed as Gold Cup participants on March 7, 2018, but qualified for the Hexagonal on September 2, 2016.
  5. 5.0 5.1 Confirmed as Gold Cup participants on March 7, 2018, but qualified for the Hexagonal on September 6, 2016.
  6. Martinique are not a FIFA member, and so do not have a FIFA Ranking.

Squads

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Each team had to submit a list of 23 players (three players had to be goalkeepers).[21]

Seeding

On August 31, 2018, CONCACAF announced that the top four teams of the September 2018 CONCACAF Ranking Index were seeded for the group stage of the tournament:[22]

Rank Seeded team Pts[23]
1  Mexico 2,042
2  United States 1,872
3  Costa Rica 1,798
4  Honduras 1,632

The groups and full match schedule were revealed on April 10, 2019, 18:00 EDT (15:00 local time, PDT), in Los Angeles, California, United States.[24][25][26]

Match officials

Match officials were announced on May 15, 2019.[27]

Referees

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Assistant Referees

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  • Canada Micheal Barwegen
  • Cayman Islands Kedlee Powell
  • Costa Rica Juan Carlos Mora
  • Costa Rica William Arrieta
  • Dominican Republic Helpys Feliz
  • Guatemala Gerson López
  • Guatemala Humberto Panjoj
  • Honduras Christian Ramírez
  • Honduras Walter López
  • Jamaica Nicholas Anderson
  • Mexico Alberto Morín
  • Mexico Miguel Hernández
  • Nicaragua Henri Pupiro
  • Qatar Taleb Al Marri
  • Qatar Saoud Al Maqaleh
  • El Salvador Juan Francisco Zumba
  • El Salvador David Morán
  • Suriname Zachari Zeegelaar
  • Trinidad and Tobago Caleb Wales
  • United States Frank Anderson
  • United States Ian Anderson
  • United States Corey Parker
  • United States Kyle Atkins
Targeted advanced referee program (TARP)

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  • Costa Rica Keylor Herrera
  • Dominican Republic Randy Encarnación
  • Grenada Reon Radix
  • Jamaica Oshane Nation
  • Mexico Diego Montaño
  • Panama Oliver Vergara
  • Panama José Kellys
  • Puerto Rico José Torres

Group stage

The match dates and the assignments were announced by CONCACAF on October 9, 2018.[28] The quarter-final pairings were later amended on October 12, 2018.[29] The top two teams from each group qualified for the quarter-finals.[21]

All match times listed are EDT (UTC−4), as listed by CONCACAF. If the venue is located in a different time zone, the local time is also given.

Group A

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Template:2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup group tables

2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group A 2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group A


2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group A 2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group A


2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group A 2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group A

Group B

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Template:2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup group tables

2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group B 2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group B


2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group B 2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group B


2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group B 2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group B

Group C

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Template:2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup group tables

2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group C 2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group C


2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group C 2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group C


2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group C 2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group C

Group D

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Template:2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup group tables

2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group D 2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group D


2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group D 2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group D


2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group D 2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group D

Knockout stage

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In the knockout stage, if a match was tied after 90 minutes, extra time was played, where a fourth substitute was allowed for each team. If still tied after extra time, the match was decided by a penalty shoot-out.[21]

Bracket

2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup knockout stage

Quarter-finals

2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup knockout stage


2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup knockout stage


2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup knockout stage


2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup knockout stage

Semi-finals

2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup knockout stage


2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup knockout stage

Final

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Statistics

Goalscorers

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Awards

The following Gold Cup awards were given at the conclusion of the tournament: the Golden Boot (top scorer), Golden Ball (best overall player) and Golden Glove (best goalkeeper).[31][32][33][34][35]

Golden Ball
Raúl Jiménez
Golden Boot
Jonathan David
6 goals, 2 assists
306 minutes played
Golden Glove
Guillermo Ochoa
Young Player Award
Christian Pulisic
Fair Play Trophy
 United States


Best XI

The technical study group selected the tournament's best XI.[36]

Goalkeeper Defenders Midfielders Attacker

Marketing

Broadcasting rights

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CONCACAF
Country Broadcaster Ref
 United States (co-host) FOX Sports (English) [37]
Univision (Spanish) [38]
 Costa Rica (co-host) Repretel
Teletica
 Jamaica (co-host) TVJ
 Canada TSN (English) [39]
RDS (French)
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 Mexico
ESPN [40][41]
Imagen Televisión
TV Azteca
 El Salvador TCS
 Guatemala Canal 3, Televisiete, Teleonce, Trecevisión
 Honduras Televicentro
 Panama TVMax
TVN
International
Broadcaster Ref
International (selected unsold markets) Concacaf GO
 Austria DAZN [42]
 Brazil
 Germany
 Spain
  Switzerland
<templatestyles src="Template:Hidden begin/styles.css"/> Sport Klub
 Ireland FreeSports [43]
 United Kingdom
 Israel Charlton
 Netherlands Fox Sports [44]
 Norway TV2
 Portugal Sport TV
 Russia Match TV
 Singapore StarHub [45]
 Slovakia Arena Sport [46]
 Sweden CMore Sport
 Tajikistan TV Varzish
 Turkey D-Smart

Sponsorship

References

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External links