2019–20 CONCACAF Nations League

The 2019–20 CONCACAF Nations League was the inaugural season of the CONCACAF Nations League, an international association football competition involving the men's national teams of the 41 member associations of CONCACAF. The Nations League qualifying tournament also served as part of the qualifying process for the 2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup, which was expanded from twelve to sixteen teams. The group stage of the tournament also served as qualification for the 2021 CONCACAF Gold Cup. The Finals, which decided the inaugural champions, was originally scheduled to be played in June 2020. However, on 3 April 2020 CONCACAF postponed the event until March 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[2][3] On 22 September 2020, it was announced that the event was again rescheduled until June 2021.[4] On 24 February 2021, CONCACAF confirmed the dates for the rescheduled Nations League Finals, 3 and 6 June 2021 with the venue later confirmed as Empower Field at Mile High in Denver, Colorado, United States.[5]

2019–20 CONCACAF Nations League
Tournament details
DatesQualifying:
6 September 2018 –
24 March 2019
League phase:
5 September –
19 November 2019
Nations League Finals:
3–6 June 2021
Teams41
Final positions
Champions United States (1st title)
Runners-up Mexico
Third place Honduras
Fourth place Costa Rica
Tournament statistics
Matches played106
Goals scored337 (3.18 per match)
Top scorer(s)Suriname Gleofilo Vlijter (10 goals)[1]
Best player(s)United States Weston McKennie[1]
Best goalkeeperHonduras Luis López[1]
Fair play award Barbados[1]

Format

The format proposals were first formally investigated at the XXXII CONCACAF Ordinary Congress in Oranjestad, Aruba on 8 April 2017.[6] The tournament was officially confirmed by CONCACAF in November 2017.[7] The format and schedule of the Nations Leagues was announced on 7 March 2018, 10:00 EST (UTC−5), at The Temple House in Miami Beach, Florida, United States.[8][9]

The Nations League began with a one-off qualifying phase, played across four matchdays from September 2018 to March 2019. The results determined the composition of the leagues for the group phase of the tournament. Apart from the six teams which participated in the 2018 FIFA World Cup qualifying hexagonal, the other 34 teams (Guatemala could not enter due to FIFA suspension) entered qualifying. Each team played four matches, two home and two away, with the results compiled into an aggregate table. Based on the standings, the teams were divided into tiers for the group phase of the inaugural edition of the CONCACAF Nations League. Moreover, the top ten teams in the qualifying phase qualified for the 2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup, joining the six hexagonal participants.[10][11]

The group phase of the Nations League, consisting of three tiered leagues, was played in the official FIFA match windows in September, October, and November 2019. All eligible teams were assigned by sporting performance into Leagues A, B, and C. Each league was sub-divided into four groups, featuring promotion and relegation, in which the teams competed in a home-and-away, round-robin format over the course of the group phase.[12]

League A contained twelve teams, split into four groups of three teams. The six hexagonal participants were joined by the top six teams from qualifying. The four group winners qualified for the Nations League final championship, played in June 2021, which determined the champions of the new competition. The four teams which finished last in their group were relegated to League B for the next edition of the tournament.

League B consisted of sixteen teams, split into four groups of four teams. The league contained teams which finished from 7th to 22nd in qualifying. The four group winners were promoted to League A, while the four teams which finished last in their group were relegated to League C for the next edition.

League C consisted of the remaining thirteen member associations, the teams which finished 23rd to 34th in qualifying, along with Guatemala, who did not enter qualifying. The league contained four groups, with three groups of three teams and one group of four teams. The four group winners were promoted to League B for the next edition of the competition.

In September 2019, it was announced that the Nations League would also provide qualification for all sixteen teams participating in the 2021 CONCACAF Gold Cup (no teams would qualify automatically).[13]

The following teams qualified for the Gold Cup after group play concluded in November 2019:

  • The top two teams from each of the four League A groups
  • The winners of each of the four League B groups

Initially, the final four spots at the Gold Cup were to be determined by two-legged matches between the second-place finishers of League B and the first-place finishers of League C, to be played in March 2020. The four winners of this round would then advance to the second round, to face the third-place finishers of League A, in matches to be played in June 2020. The four matchup winners of the second round would qualify for the 2021 Gold Cup. However, following the COVID-19 pandemic, this format was changed. In July 2020, CONCACAF announced that the qualifiers would be played by the twelve aforementioned teams as a centralized preliminary round in the United States, in the week prior to the 2021 Gold Cup group stage.[14] In September 2020, CONCACAF announced that Qatar were invited to the Gold Cup as guests, and that the qualification tournament would determine the last three teams to participate in the group stage of the Gold Cup. The qualification tournament will feature two rounds, with the twelve participating teams divided into six one-off ties in the first round. The six winners will advance to the second round, with the winners of the three one-off matches qualifying for the Gold Cup.[15]

Tiebreakers

The ranking of teams in each group was determined as follows (Regulations Article 12.7):[16]

  1. Points obtained in all group matches (three points for a win, one for a draw, zero for a loss);
  2. Goal difference in all group matches;
  3. Number of goals scored in all group matches;
  4. Points obtained in the matches played between the teams in question;
  5. Goal difference in the matches played between the teams in question;
  6. Number of goals scored in the matches played between the teams in question;
  7. Number of away goals scored in the matches played between the teams in question (if the tie was only between two teams);
  8. Fair play points in all group matches (only one deduction could be applied to a player in a single match):
    • Yellow card: −1 points;
    • Indirect red card (second yellow card): −3 points;
    • Direct red card: −4 points;
    • Yellow card and direct red card: −5 points;
  9. Drawing of lots.

Entrants

All of CONCACAF's 41 member associations participated in the competition.[17] The six teams which participated in the fifth round (hexagonal) of 2018 FIFA World Cup qualification received automatic entry into League A. Of the remaining 35 teams, 34 entered into qualifying to determine which league they entered. The National Football Federation of Guatemala was suspended by FIFA in October 2016,[18] and therefore Guatemala was ineligible to enter qualifying after missing the deadline of 1 March 2018.[19] However, as the suspension was lifted by FIFA in May 2018,[20] they automatically entered into League C of the group phase.

Key to colours
2018 WCQ Hexagonal participants automatically in League A
Remaining CONCACAF members compete in qualifying
Association suspended at deadline to enter qualifying automatically in League C
RankTeamPts[17]
1  Mexico2,047
2  United States1,853
3  Costa Rica1,845
4  Panama1,700
5  Honduras1,669
6  Jamaica1,516
7  Canada1,448
8  Guatemala[a]1,417
9  Haiti1,348
10  El Salvador1,347
11  Trinidad and Tobago1,339
12  Martinique[b]1,271
13  Cuba1,146
14  French Guiana[b]1,108
15  Guadeloupe[b]1,089
16  Nicaragua1,032
17  Saint Kitts and Nevis1,023
18  Curaçao1,018
19  Suriname991
20  Antigua and Barbuda946
21  Dominican Republic925
RankTeamPts[17]
22  Bermuda924
23  Guyana914
24  Belize853
25  Bonaire[b]799
26  Grenada795
27  Saint Vincent and the Grenadines793
28  Saint Lucia773
29  Barbados731
30  Puerto Rico693
31  Bahamas627
32  Dominica563
33  Aruba559
34  Cayman Islands543
35  Turks and Caicos Islands483
36  Montserrat435
37  U.S. Virgin Islands401
38  Saint Martin[b]352
39  Sint Maarten[b]336
40  Anguilla261
41  British Virgin Islands261
Notes

Schedule

Below was the schedule of the 2019–20 CONCACAF Nations League.

The Nations League Finals were originally scheduled for the international window from 23 to 31 March 2020. However, on 5 August 2019 CONCACAF announced that the tournament would instead be played in June 2020.[21] The schedule for the tournament was announced on 9 March 2020, with the semi-finals on 4 June, and the third place play-off and final on 7 June 2020.[22] On 3 April 2020, the tournament was postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[2] On 27 July 2020, CONCACAF announced that the tournament would be held in the international window from 22 to 30 March 2021.[3] However, due to the postponement of the first round of CONCACAF World Cup qualifying, on 22 September 2020 CONCACAF announced that the final tournament would be held in June 2021.[4]

StageRoundDates
QualifyingMatchday 16–11 September 2018
Matchday 211–16 October 2018
Matchday 316–20 November 2018
Matchday 421–24 March 2019
League phaseMatchday 15–7 September 2019
Matchday 28–10 September 2019
Matchday 310–12 October 2019
Matchday 413–15 October 2019
Matchday 514–16 November 2019
Matchday 617–19 November 2019
FinalsSemi-finals3 June 2021
Third place play-off6 June 2021
Final

The fixture list for the group phase was confirmed by CONCACAF on 21 May 2019.[23][24][25]

Qualifying

The draw for the qualifying fixtures was held on 7 March 2018 directly after the launch event of the CONCACAF Nations League.[8] The 34 teams were seeded into four pots based on their position in the March 2018 CONCACAF Ranking Index. A computerized pre-draw produced a "master schedule", creating 17 fixtures for each matchday. The teams in each pot were then drawn to the corresponding positions in the schedule. The computer model assured that no teams would face each other more than once, and that each team would play two home and two away matches.[26][27] Based on their results, the teams were divided into tiers for the main round of the inaugural edition of the CONCACAF Nations League. Moreover, the top ten teams qualified for the 2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup to join the six hexagonal participants.[9]

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification
1  Haiti4400192+1712Qualification for League A
and 2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup
2  Canada4400181+1712
3  Martinique4400102+812
4  Curaçao4301222+209
5  Bermuda4301174+139
6  Cuba4301152+139
7  Guyana4301143+119Qualification for League B
and 2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup
8  Jamaica4301123+99
9  Nicaragua430192+79
10  El Salvador430172+59
11  Montserrat430163+39Qualification for League B
12  Suriname421182+67
13  Saint Lucia421174+37
14  Dominica421165+17
15  Saint Kitts and Nevis4202113+86
16  Dominican Republic420294+56
17  Belize420263+36
18  Antigua and Barbuda4202108+26
19  French Guiana420286+26
20  Saint Vincent and the Grenadines420256−16
21  Grenada4202714−76
22  Aruba411256−14
23  Guadeloupe411237−44Qualification for League C
24  Turks and Caicos Islands4112523−184
25  Barbados410337−43
26  Bonaire4103314−113
27  U.S. Virgin Islands4103316−133
28  Sint Maarten4103430−263
29  Cayman Islands401319−81
30  British Virgin Islands4013313−101
31  Anguilla4013115−141[a]
32  Bahamas4013115−141[a]
33  Puerto Rico400405−50
34  Saint Martin4004522−170
Source: CONCACAF
Rules for classification: Qualifying tiebreakers
Notes:

Seeding

The 41 CONCACAF members were allocated into pots of the league for which they qualified. Teams were seeded into pots based on their position in the November 2018 CONCACAF Ranking Index.[28] League A had three pots of four teams, while League B had four pots of four teams. League C had three pots, with pots 1 and 2 featuring four teams each, and pot 3 featuring five teams.[29][30]

Map showing the leagues each national team participated in.
  League A
  League B
  League C
League A
PotTeamPtsRank
1  Mexico1,9981
 United States1,8632
 Costa Rica1,7523
 Honduras1,6304
2  Panama1,5795
 Canada1,4717
 Haiti1,35910
 Trinidad and Tobago1,34211
3  Martinique1,28612
 Cuba1,15213
 Curaçao1,07915
 Bermuda86523
League B
PotTeamPtsRank
1  Jamaica1,5076
 El Salvador1,3809
 Nicaragua1,08314
 French Guiana1,05716
2  Saint Kitts and Nevis1,01818
 Dominican Republic98319
 Suriname97520
 Guyana95321
3  Antigua and Barbuda93022
 Belize83124
 Saint Vincent and the Grenadines82125
 Saint Lucia81326
4  Grenada74928
 Aruba63831
 Dominica59332
 Montserrat47835
League C
PotTeamPtsRank
1  Guatemala1,4198
 Guadeloupe1,05417
 Bonaire76627
 Barbados70729
2  Puerto Rico66530
 Bahamas58233
 Cayman Islands53234
 Turks and Caicos Islands45336
3  U.S. Virgin Islands39237
 Saint Martin33838
 Sint Maarten32839
 British Virgin Islands25740
 Anguilla25041

The draw for the group phase took place at The Chelsea Theater in Paradise, Nevada, United States on 27 March 2019, 22:00 EDT (19:00 local time, PDT).[31][32]

League A

Group A

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification or relegation
1  United States4301153+129Qualification for Finals and Gold Cup4–17–0
2  Canada4301104+69Qualification for Gold Cup2–06–0
3  Cuba (R)4004018−180Gold Cup prelims and League B0–40–1
Source: CONCACAF
(R) Relegated

Group B

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification or relegation
1  Mexico4400133+1012Qualification for Finals and Gold Cup3–12–1
2  Panama410359−43Qualification for Gold Cup0–30–2
3  Bermuda (R)4103511−63Gold Cup prelims and League B1–51–4
Source: CONCACAF
(R) Relegated

Group C

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification or relegation
1  Honduras431081+710Qualification for Finals and Gold Cup1–04–0
2  Martinique403145−13Qualification for Gold Cup1–11–1
3  Trinidad and Tobago (R)402239−62Gold Cup prelims and League B0–22–2
Source: CONCACAF
(R) Relegated

Group D

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification or relegation
1  Costa Rica413043+16Qualification for Finals and Gold Cup0–01–1
2  Curaçao41213305Qualification for Gold Cup, later withdrew[a]1–21–0
3  Haiti (R)403134−13Gold Cup prelims and League B1–11–1
Source: CONCACAF
(R) Relegated
Notes:

Nations League Finals

Seeding

The four teams were ranked based on their results in the group stage to determine the semi-final matchups.

SeedGrpTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPts
1B  Mexico4400133+1012
2C  Honduras431081+710
3A  United States (H)4301153+129
4D  Costa Rica413043+16
Source: CONCACAF
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) goals scored; 4) away goals scored; 5) disciplinary points; 6) drawing of lots (Regulations Article 12.9).[33]
(H) Hosts

Bracket

 
Semi-finalsFinal
 
      
 
June 3 2021 – Denver, CO
 
 
 Honduras0
 
June 6 2021 – Denver, CO
 
 United States1
 
 United States (a.e.t.)3
 
June 3 2021 – Denver, CO
 
 Mexico2
 
 Mexico (p)0 (5)
 
 
 Costa Rica0 (4)
 
Third place play-off
 
 
June 6 2021 – Denver, CO
 
 
 Honduras (p)2 (5)
 
 
 Costa Rica2 (4)

All times are local, MDT (UTC−6).

Semi-finals

Honduras  0–1  United States
Report
  • Pefok 89'
Attendance: 34,451[36]
Referee: Oshane Nation (Jamaica)




Third place play-off


Final

United States  3–2 (a.e.t.)  Mexico
Report


League B

Group A

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsPromotion, qualification or relegation
1  Grenada (P)642084+414League A and Gold Cup1–03–22–1
2  French Guiana622286+28Advance to Gold Cup prelims0–03–03–1
3  Belize6204612−661–22–00–4
4  Saint Kitts and Nevis (R)61238805Relegation to League C0–02–20–1
Source: CONCACAF
(P) Promoted; (R) Relegated

Group B

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsPromotion, qualification or relegation
1  El Salvador (P)6501101+915League A and Gold Cup1–02–03–0
2  Montserrat622245−18Advance to Gold Cup prelims0–22–11–1
3  Dominican Republic621355071–00–03–0
4  Saint Lucia (R)6114210−84Relegation to League C0–20–11–0
Source: CONCACAF
(P) Promoted; (R) Relegated

Group C

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsPromotion, qualification or relegation
1  Jamaica (P)6510211+2016League A and Gold Cup1–16–02–0
2  Guyana63121210+210Advance to Gold Cup prelims0–45–14–2
3  Antigua and Barbuda6303817−990–22–12–1
4  Aruba (R)6006518−130Relegation to League C0–60–12–3
Source: CONCACAF
(P) Promoted; (R) Relegated

Group D

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsPromotion, qualification or relegation
1  Suriname (P)6411165+1113League A and Gold Cup0–16–04–0
2  Saint Vincent and the Grenadines632164+211Advance to Gold Cup prelims2–21–01–0
3  Nicaragua6213911−271–21–13–1
4  Dominica (R)6105314−113Relegation to League C1–21–00–4
Source: CONCACAF
(P) Promoted; (R) Relegated

League C

Group A

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsPromotion or qualification
1  Barbados (P)6402144+1012League B and Gold Cup prelims3–04–01–0
2  Cayman Islands640278−1123–21–01–0
3  Saint Martin630378−191–03–01–2
4  U.S. Virgin Islands6105311−830–40–21–2
Source: CONCACAF
(P) Promoted

Group B

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsPromotion or qualification
1  Bahamas (P)4310102+810League B and Gold Cup prelims2–13–0
2  Bonaire4211108+271–14–2
3  British Virgin Islands4004515−1000–43–4
Source: CONCACAF
(P) Promoted

Group C

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsPromotion or qualification
1  Guatemala (P)4400250+2512League B and Gold Cup prelims5–010–0
2  Puerto Rico4202612−660–53–0
3  Anguilla4004221−1900–52–3
Source: CONCACAF
(P) Promoted

Group D

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsPromotion or qualification
1  Guadeloupe (P)4400202+1812League B and Gold Cup prelims10–05–1
2  Turks and Caicos Islands4202817−960–33–2
3  Sint Maarten4004615−901–22–5
Source: CONCACAF
(P) Promoted

Top goalscorers

League A
RankPlayerGoals
1 Jordan Morris4
Weston McKennie
3 Nahki Wells3
Junior Hoilett
Francisco Calvo
Alberth Elis
José Juan Macías
Josh Sargent
League B
RankPlayerGoals
1 Gleofilo Vlijter10
2 Jamal Charles6
3 Trayon Bobb4
Shamar Nicholson
Rowan Liburd
League C
RankPlayerGoals
1 Raphael Mirval7
2 Edi Danilo Guerra6
3 Gerwin Lake5
4 Marvin Ceballos4
Yannick Bellechasse
Billy Forbes

Notes

References

External links