2011 CONCACAF Gold Cup

The 2011 CONCACAF Gold Cup was the 11th edition of the CONCACAF Gold Cup competition, and the 21st CONCACAF regional championship overall in CONCACAF's 50 years of existence. The United States was the host nation.

The competition started on June 5, 2011, at Cowboys Stadium in Arlington, Texas and ended with the final on June 25, 2011, at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California, with Mexico beating the United States 4–2.

This competition was the fifth tournament without guests from other confederations. Mexico won their sixth Gold Cup, and ninth CONCACAF Championship overall. It was the third consecutive Gold Cup final and second consecutive win also.

As winner of the tournament, Mexico qualified for the 2013 FIFA Confederations Cup in Brazil as the representative from CONCACAF.

Venues

The set of thirteen venues – the same number as the 2009 Gold Cup – was announced on December 16, 2010. Each stadium hosted a doubleheader, except the Rose Bowl which hosted the final.

Teams

Qualification

A total of 12 teams qualified for the tournament. Three berths were allocated to North America, five to Central America, and four to the Caribbean.

Squads

The 12 national teams involved in the tournament were required to register a squad of 23 players; only players in these squads were eligible to take part in the tournament.

Suspension of Mexican players

On June 9, 2011, the names of five Mexican players were released announcing Christian Bermúdez, Édgar Dueñas, Guillermo Ochoa, Francisco Javier Rodríguez and Sinha, all tested positive for clenbuterol prior to the start of the 2011 Gold Cup. They were withdrawn from the squad a few days after their June 5 Gold Cup starting match and 5-0 win against El Salvador. Mexican officials said they believed the positive tests were caused by eating meat tainted with the drug. CONCACAF General Secretary Chuck Blazer said a meeting of the confederation's national teams committee, which also serves as the organizing committee of the Gold Cup, was to be convened on June 10 to consider the situation, including possibly allowing Mexico to replace the five players. However, the meeting was postponed to allow for more information to be gathered. The Mexican Football Federation said on June 14 that the "B" samples of those five involving players were negative. The CONCACAF Gold Cup Organizing Committee announced on June 19 that Mexico would be allowed to replace the suspended players. The replacement players were, Luis Ernesto Michel, Héctor Reynoso, Paul Aguilar, Marco Fabián, and Hiram Mier. All players were later acquitted by the Mexican Football Federation and the results were blamed on contamination of meat, with the ingestion of clenbuterol considered non-intentional. However, the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) appealed to the Court of Arbitration for Sport to request a ban. On October 12, 2011, WADA withdrew the request after the full file was available for them.

El Salvador match fixing

On September 20, 2013, the Salvadoran Football Federation banned 14 Salvadoran players for life due to their involvement with match fixing while playing with the El Salvador national team over the previous two years, including 8 players (Dennis Alas, Luis Anaya, captain Marvin González, Reynaldo Hernández, Miguel Montes, Dagoberto Portillo, Osael Romero, Ramón Sánchez and Miguel Montes), from El Salvador's 5-0 loss to Mexico on June 5 at the 2011 CONCACAF Gold Cup.

Group stage

All Times are U.S. Eastern Daylight Time (UTC−4) (Local Times in parentheses)

Group A

Source:
Costa Rica 5–0 Cuba
Ureña7', 46'
Saborío41'
Mora47'
Campbell71'
Report
Attendance: 80,108
Mexico 5–0 El Salvador
Juárez55'
De Nigris58'
J. Hernández60', 67', 90+5' (pen.)
Report

Cuba 0–5 Mexico
ReportJ. Hernández35', 76'
Dos Santos63', 68'
De Nigris65'
Attendance: 46,012
Referee: Courtney Campbell (Jamaica)

El Salvador 6–1 Cuba
Zelaya13', 71'
Romero29'
Blanco69'
Álvarez84'
Quintanilla90+4'
ReportMárquez83'
Attendance: 62,000
Referee: Neal Brizan (Trinidad and Tobago)
Mexico 4–1 Costa Rica
Márquez17'
Guardado19', 26'
Barrera38'
ReportUreña69'
Attendance: 62,000

Group B

Source:
Honduras 0–0 Guatemala
Report

Jamaica 2–0 Guatemala
Phillips66', 76'Report
Attendance: 18,057
Grenada 1–7 Honduras
Murray20'ReportBengtson26', 37'
Costly28', 67', 71'
W. Martínez88'
Mejía90+3'
Attendance: 18,057
Referee: Dave Gantar (Canada)

Guatemala 4–0 Grenada
del Aguila16'
Pappa22'
Ruiz54'
Gallardo59'
Report
Honduras 0–1 Jamaica
ReportJohnson36'
Attendance: 25,000

Group C

Source:
Panama 3–2 Guadeloupe
Pérez29'
Tejada31'
Gómez57' (pen.)
ReportJovial65', 78'
Attendance: 28,209
Referee: Marlon Mejía (El Salvador)
United States 2–0 Canada
Altidore15'
Dempsey62'
Report
Attendance: 28,209

Canada 1–0 Guadeloupe
De Rosario51' (pen.)Report
Attendance: 27,731
Referee: Trevor Taylor (Barbados)
United States 1–2 Panama
Goodson66'ReportGoodson19' (o.g.)
Gómez36' (pen.)
Attendance: 27,731

Canada 1–1 Panama
De Rosario62' (pen.)ReportTejada90+1'
Guadeloupe 0–1 United States
ReportAltidore9'
Attendance: 20,109
Referee: Jeffrey Solís (Costa Rica)

Ranking of third-placed teams

Source:

Knockout stage

Bracket

 
Quarter-finalsSemi-finalsFinal
 
          
 
19 June – District of Columbia
 
 
 Jamaica0
 
22 June – Houston
 
 United States2
 
 United States1
 
19 June – District of Columbia
 
 Panama0
 
 Panama (p)1 (5)
 
25 June – Pasadena
 
 El Salvador1 (3)
 
 United States2
 
18 June – East Rutherford
 
 Mexico4
 
 Costa Rica1 (2)
 
22 June – Houston
 
 Honduras (p)1 (4)
 
 Honduras0
 
18 June – East Rutherford
 
 Mexico (a.e.t.)2
 
 Mexico2
 
 
 Guatemala1
 

Quarter-finals


Mexico 2–1 Guatemala
De Nigris48'
J. Hernández66'
ReportRuiz5'
Attendance: 78,807
Referee: Courtney Campbell (Jamaica)

Jamaica 0–2 United States
ReportJones49'
Dempsey80'

Semi-finals

United States 1–0 Panama
Dempsey76'Report
Attendance: 70,627

Honduras 0–2 (a.e.t.) Mexico
ReportDe Nigris93'
J. Hernández99'
Attendance: 70,627

Final

United States 2–4 Mexico
Bradley8'
Donovan23'
ReportBarrera29', 50'
Guardado36'
Dos Santos76'
Attendance: 93,420

Statistics

Goalscorers

There were 80 goals scored in 25 matches, for an average of 3.2 goals per match.

7 goals

4 goals

3 goals

2 goals

1 goal

1 own goal

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).

References

Uses material from the Wikipedia article 2011 CONCACAF Gold Cup, released under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.