
Mexico defeat USA 2-1 to retain CONCACAF Gold Cup
A header 13 minutes from time from Mexico skipper Edson Alvarez completed a come-from-behind victory for 'El Tri' after a typically hard-fought tussle between the North American arch-rivals and 2026 World Cup co-hosts.
The win was no less than Mexico deserved after dominating for long periods against Mauricio Pochettino's inexperienced USA side, who went into the tournament missing several first-choice regulars.
Alvarez's winner capped a fairytale return to Houston after he had limped off in tears at the same venue during Mexico's opening game of the Copa America last year.
"It's a very emotional moment for me," the West Ham midfielder said afterwards.
"Ever since I got to Houston, I've been thinking about that heartbreak. I just asked life to give me one more joy."
The USA had got off to a dream start, center-back Chris Richards heading the hosts into a fourth-minute lead in front of just under 71,000 fans at Houston's NRG Stadium.
Sebastian Berhalter's perfectly flighted curling free-kick from wide on the right sowed panic in the Mexican defence and Crystal Palace defender Richards stooped to glance in a powerful header which cannoned off the underside of the bar and over the line.
But that early effort was to be the USA's best chance of a first half that Mexico controlled, spending most of the opening 45 minutes camped in the host nation's territory.
Mexico's 16-year-old prodigy Gilberto Mora threatened to grab an equaliser in the 24th minute but his curling shot was saved by USA goalkeeper Matt Freese.
Three minutes later though Mexico drew level.
Marcel Ruiz threaded a superb pass through to veteran striker Raul Jimenez, who crashed an unstoppable shot into the roof of the net.
Jimenez celebrated by producing a shirt bearing the name and number 20 of late former Wolverhampton Wanderers team-mate Diogo Jota, the Liverpool and Portugal star who died in a car crash in Spain last week.
Mexico continued to carve out the better chances through the remainder of the half and Roberto Alvarado's low shot forced another good save from Freese in the 35th minute.
Freese needed to be alert again five minutes from half-time, Mora's powerful strike being parried away by the USA goalkeeper as it hurtled towards the top corner.
Alex Freeman almost nodded the USA back in front on the stroke of half-time after pouncing on hesitation by goalkeeper Angel Malagon, but his header cannoned back off the face of the Mexico stopper.
The second half followed a similar pattern, with Mexico looking much the more threatening side as the USA struggled to create anything at the other end.
The breakthrough finally came though in the 77th minute, when Johan Vazquez's flick-on from a free-kick was met by Alvarez who powered a header into the net past Freese.
The goal was chalked off for offside, but replays showed Alvarez was clearly onside, and after a check by the Video Assistant Referee, the on-field decision was overturned and the goal stood.
Mexico have now won the Gold Cup a record 10 times, three more than the USA, who have seven.
"Obviously we're disappointed not to come away with a win," USA captain Tim Ream said after the defeat.
"We started out really well and then they obviously got a spell in the game in the second part of the first half. We just missed a little bit of calmness when we won the ball, to try and move them around a little bit," Ream added. - AFP
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New Straits Times
an hour ago
- New Straits Times
Mbappe and PSG set for Club World Cup reunion as Real Madrid eye final
EAST RUTHERFORD, United States: Kylian Mbappe will come up against Paris Saint-Germain for the first time since leaving the French club a year ago as Xabi Alonso's Real Madrid revolution gets its biggest test yet in Wednesday's Club World Cup semi-final. Mbappe should be remembered as a PSG legend, having spent seven prolific campaigns there and eventually departing as their all-time top scorer with 256 goals in 308 games. But his legacy was a little tainted by the manner of his departure, the sense among many that for the last half of his time in Paris he was just waiting for the right moment to move to Madrid, the club he had dreamed of representing as a young boy. PSG, under their Qatari president Nasser al-Khelaifi, were not happy with the way in which Mbappe chose to run down his contract in order to sign for Real in 2024, denying them a transfer fee. A bitter legal dispute has gone on between the parties for much of the time since, with Mbappe claiming he is owed 55 million euros (US$64.4 million) in unpaid wages and bonuses from his spell in Paris. The latest twist came just this week, when one of Mbappe's lawyers told AFP that the France captain had withdrawn a complaint of moral harassment against his former employers. That was after the Paris prosecutor's office revealed last month that an investigation had been opened following a complaint by the player over the way he was treated by PSG in the summer of 2023. He believes he was sidelined by PSG and made to train with players the club were looking to offload after refusing to agree a new contract. Mbappe missed a pre-season tour to Japan and the start of the next campaign before eventually being reintegrated into Luis Enrique's squad. All of that should have been behind Mbappe long ago, given the way his first season at Real has gone on a personal level. The 26-year-old, a World Cup winner in 2018, scored 43 goals in 56 matches for his new club across all competitions up to the end of the campaign in La Liga, a remarkable tally. However, Mbappe has endured frustration at the Club World Cup, not featuring at all during the group stage due to a stomach bug which led to him requiring hospital treatment. In his absence, young forward Gonzalo Garcia has made the step up in impressive fashion, starting all five matches in the US and scoring four goals. The last of those was the opener in the 3-2 quarter-final win over Borussia Dortmund at the MetLife Stadium on Saturday, but it was Mbappe who got what was ultimately the deciding goal. He came off the bench midway through the second half and scored a brilliant, acrobatic overhead kick for Real's third of the afternoon in stoppage time. "He is still not perfect, not 100 per cent, but he is getting better every day," Alonso said of Mbappe after that match. "Now he will have three days to keep progressing and feeling better ahead of the semi-final." It is hard to imagine Mbappe not getting his first start of the tournament against PSG, the club who won the Champions League in the season following his departure after so many years of disappointment in Europe with him in the team. PSG came to the US fresh from crushing Inter Milan 5-0 in the Champions League final. They reached the last four with a 2-0 win over Bayern Munich in Atlanta in the last eight – despite having Willian Pacho and Lucas Hernandez sent off – and need not fear Real. "It doesn't matter who we play in the semi-finals. All that matters is that we are there and that we want to get to the final," said Luis Enrique, for whom this is also a special occasion given that he spent five years at Madrid as a player in the 1990s. Alonso has just taken over as Real coach after an outstanding spell with Bayer Leverkusen and has already displayed great tactical flexibility, flitting between a back four and a three-man central defence at the tournament. It will be fascinating to see which system he opts for here, and if Mbappe starts as he prepares to play against PSG for the first time since July 2017, when he was still a thrilling teenager at Monaco.


The Star
11 hours ago
- The Star
Hero, traitor – or just Silesian?
WAS he a hero or a traitor? And if he was guilty of treachery, which of the nations that claimed him did he betray? As nationalism surges across Europe, the legacy of – a long-dead footballer who played for both Poland and Nazi Germany – is stirring uncomfortable questions about loyalty and identity. In addition to Poland (for whom he once scored four goals against Brazil in a World Cup) and Germany, Wilimowski had a third allegiance: Silesia, a region with its own language, culture and sense of self – but no nation-state. 'From the Polish perspective, he was a traitor,' said Zbigniew Rokita, a Polish writer and Silesia native. 'But from the perspective of his family and society, the judgement is different.' Fans of Ruch Chorzow, the Polish team where Wilimowski rose to fame in the 1930s, remember him not as a traitor but as a legendary goal scorer. During World War II, he played for Germany and died there in 1997. Fans of Wilimowski's former team cheering against Polonia Warszawa during a game at the Silesian Stadium in Chorzow. — Maciek Nabrdalik/The New York Times Today, his image adorns posters at the Ruch Chorzow stadium, where the club is fundraising for a new tombstone in Germany after the city of Karlsruhe announced plans to demolish part of the cemetery where he is buried. The effort has infuriated Polish nationalists. 'He played in a shirt with a swastika on his chest and took money from the Germans while his teammates from the Polish national team were being murdered,' said Pawel Jablonski, a member of the European Parliament from the right-wing Law and Justice party. But Wilimowski remains a hero to a different group: nationalists of a nation that doesn't officially exist. 'We want to show people that we have our own Lionel Messi,' said Arnold Reinhold Langer, a campaigner for Silesian identity, who runs a store in Katowice packed with flags and T-shirts declaring, 'Not German, Not Polish but Silesian.' Langer insists that he doesn't want to break up Poland, only to promote a more 'flexible' view of national belonging. 'My passport is Polish, but I am not attached to Poland in any emotional way,' he said. That view angers Law and Justice. In 2011, the party dismissed Silesian identity as 'a camouflaged German option'. Arnold Reinhold Langer in Katowice. — Maciek Nabrdalik/The New York Times And last year, President Andrzej Duda – aligned with the party – vetoed legislation recognising Silesian as a distinct language, despite nearly 500,000 speakers. Russia's invasion of Ukraine, he argued, made it vital to 'preserve national identity' and guard against separatism. But Rokita says Silesian identity doesn't easily fit into nationalist moulds: 'It's like an umbrella. It includes many different identities.' Wilimowski's tangled story inspired the Croatian writer Miljenko Jergovic to pen a historical novel in 2016. The lesson, he said, is that 'a person is never just one thing. Our identities change as long as we are alive.' Born in 1916 to a German mother, Wilimowski took his Polish stepfather's surname. He defied both Nazi racial purity and post-war Polish homogeneity – a nation that had lost most of its Jews, Germans and Ukrainians in the Holocaust and forced relocations. 'The Polish press called him a Nazi. The German press called him a 'Polack',' said Grzegorz Joszko, a Chorzow city councillor and historian of the football club. 'How can we say whether he felt more Polish or more German or more Silesian? Or was he just a man trying to survive the war?' Many 'facts' about him – like having six toes or supporting Hitler – are myths, Joszko added, spread under Poland's communist regime after 1945. At a recent game in Chorzow, 16-year-old fan Adam Bilek dismissed accusations of treason. 'He was just trying to stay alive,' he said. 'People don't know much about history.' Upper Silesia, where Wilimowski was born, switched hands repeatedly. German until 1921, Polish until 1939, then seized by Hitler and reclaimed by Poland after the war. 'Silesia's history is not black or white,' said Seweryn Siemianowski, president of Ruch Chorzow. 'We don't know why Wilimowski made the choices he did. We can't judge him today.' What we do know, he added, is that Wilimowski 'brought people a lot of happiness with his skills' – and that might be more important than any flag he played under. — ©2025 The New York Times Company This article originally appeared in The New York Times.


The Star
14 hours ago
- The Star
Soccer-Football returns to war-torn Sudan as elite clubs go back home
(Reuters) -League football has returned to war-torn Sudan for the first time in more than two years with a one-month competition being organised for eight clubs to determine the country's champions. Sudan has been in the grip of conflict between the army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces since April 2023, with more than 150,000 people killed and about 12 million uprooted, creating the largest displacement crisis in the world. Among them have been the country's biggest clubs Al Hilal and Al Merrikh, who between them have won all but four of the championships since the league was created in 1965. Last season, the pair were invited to play in the league in Mauritania, on the other side of the continent, where they could remain active and moved their club structures to the West African country, where Al Hilal emerged as champions. But they are both back in Sudan to take part in a tournament to decide which clubs will compete in continental club competition for the 2025/26 season. Al Hilal were quarter-finalists in this year's African Champions League despite having to host their home games on neutral territory. They were also weekend winners against Al Merghani Kassala in the first round of the Sudanese Elite Championship, which is being played at Ad-Damer, some 430km from the capital Khartoum, which has been badly damaged by the civil war. Matches in the tournament are also being hosted in Atbara, which is 320km north of Khartoum. There will be seven rounds of fixtures, and Al Merrikh also got off to a winning start over the weekend by beating Ahly Madani 1-0. Their derby against Al Hilal is set for the last day of competition on 22 July. The other clubs competing are Zamalek, Umm Rawaba, Al Amal Atbara, Hay Al Wadi Nyala and Merrikh Al Abyad, who will all each play each other once. Sudan's national team, who will compete in the Africa Cup of Nations finals in Morocco at the end of the year and are also chasing a first-ever World Cup appearance next year, have not played a home match since March 2023. (Writing by Mark Gleeson in Cape Town; Editing by Ken Ferris)