2021 CONCACAF Gold Cup final

The 2021 CONCACAF Gold Cup final was a soccer match to determine the winners of 2021 CONCACAF Gold Cup. The match was the sixteenth final of the Gold Cup, a biennial tournament contested by the men's national teams of the member associations of CONCACAF and one invited team to decide the champion of North America, Central America, and the Caribbean. The match was held at Allegiant Stadium in Paradise, Nevada, United States, on August 1, 2021, and was contested by hosts the United States and the defending champions Mexico.[2]

2021 CONCACAF Gold Cup final
Allegiant Stadium in Paradise hosted the final.
Event2021 CONCACAF Gold Cup
After extra time
DateAugust 1, 2021 (2021-08-01)
VenueAllegiant Stadium, Paradise
Man of the MatchMatt Turner (United States)[1]
RefereeSaid Martínez (Honduras)
Attendance61,114
WeatherPartly cloudy
99 °F (37 °C)
23% humidity
2019
2023

It was the seventh Gold Cup final to be contested by Mexico and the United States, and the second consecutive. From the previous six finals, Mexico won five times – in 1993, 1998, 2009, 2011, and 2019. The United States only won in 2007 prior to this match.

The United States won the final 1–0, with the lone goal scored by Miles Robinson in extra time for their seventh Gold Cup title.[3]

Venue

The final was held at Allegiant Stadium in Paradise, Nevada, United States, located in the Las Vegas metropolitan area. It was the first major international tournament to be played at the venue, which was built for the Las Vegas Raiders of the National Football League.[4] It was also the first Gold Cup match to be played in the Las Vegas area.[5] The match was played in front of a full-capacity crowd after the easing of COVID-19 restrictions; CONCACAF began sale of general seating tickets on June 11, 2021, and sold out their allotment within 90 minutes.[6]

Referee

The referee in charge of the match was Said Martínez from Honduras. Martínez, who at the time was 29, was considered amongst the best confederation referees and was appointed along assistant referees, one fellow Honduran and a Nicaraguan as linesmen. Goal.com considered the match, the most important of his international career, which began in 2017.[7]

Route to the final

 United StatesRound  Mexico
OpponentResultGroup stageOpponentResult
 Haiti1–0Match 1  Trinidad and Tobago0–0
 Martinique6–1Match 2  Guatemala3–0
 Canada1–0Match 3  El Salvador1–0
Group B winners
PosTeamPldPts
1  United States (H)39
2  Canada36
3  Haiti33
4  Martinique30
Source: CONCACAF
(H) Hosts
Final standingsGroup A winners
PosTeamPldPts
1  Mexico37
2  El Salvador36
3  Trinidad and Tobago32
4  Guatemala31
Source: CONCACAF
OpponentResultKnockout stageOpponentResult
 Jamaica1–0Quarter-finals  Honduras3–0
 Qatar1–0Semi-finals  Canada2–1

Match

Details

United States  1–0  Mexico
Robinson 117'Report
Attendance: 61,114
United States
Mexico
GK1Matt Turner
RB2Reggie Cannon  65'
CB16James Sands
CB12Miles Robinson
LB21George Bello  65'
CM19Eryk Williamson  87'
CM23Kellyn Acosta  113'
CM17Sebastian Lletget  66'
RF7Paul Arriola (c)  87'
CF9Gyasi Zardes
LF13Matthew Hoppe  120+1'
Substitutions:
DF20Shaq Moore  65'
DF3Sam Vines  65'
MF10Cristian Roldan  66'
MF6Gianluca Busio  87'
FW8Nicholas Gioacchini  87'
DF24Henry Kessler  120+1'
Head coach:
Gregg Berhalter
GK1Alfredo Talavera
RB21Luis Rodríguez
CB2Néstor Araujo
CB15Héctor Moreno (c)  44'
LB23Jesús Gallardo  114'
CM6Jonathan dos Santos  76'
CM4Edson Álvarez  117'
CM16Héctor Herrera  72'
RF17Jesús Manuel Corona  91'
CF11Rogelio Funes Mori  106'
LF10Orbelín Pineda  76'
Substitutions:
DF3Carlos Salcedo  44'  106'
MF14Érick Gutiérrez  76'
FW24Rodolfo Pizarro  76'
DF5Osvaldo Rodríguez  91'
FW9Alan Pulido  106'
DF19Gilberto Sepúlveda  106'
Head coach:
Gerardo Martino

Man of the Match:
Matt Turner (United States)[1]

Assistant referees:[8]
Walter López (Honduras)
Henri Pupiro (Nicaragua)
Fourth official:
Mario Escobar (Guatemala)
Reserve assistant referee:
Christian Ramírez (Honduras)
Video assistant referee:
Drew Fischer (Canada)
Assistant video assistant referee:
Tatiana Guzmán (Nicaragua)

Match rules[9]

  • 90 minutes.
  • 30 minutes of extra time if necessary.
  • Penalty shoot-out if scores still level.
  • Maximum of twelve named substitutes.
  • Maximum of five substitutions, with a sixth allowed in extra time.[note 1]

Notes

References