
Gotham FC wins inaugural Concacaf Champions Cup with 1-0 victory over Tigres UANL
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The game's only goal came in the 82nd minute, when Gotham striker and NWSL Golden Boot frontrunner Esther González went to convert a penalty, after Tigres defender Jimena Lápez was caught holding and shoving Gotham center back Emily Sonnett in the box before a corner kick. Tigres keeper Itzel González blocked the shot, but this time, Esther González recycled the opportunity for higher value, rebounding the ball and knocking it into the back of the net.
Both sides had created promising scoring opportunities early in the match that tested the back lines, but none were successful until the final few minutes. In first-half stoppage time, Itzel González saved a penalty taken by Gotham striker Midge Purce to keep the score at zero.
The Tigres-heavy crowd at the Estadio Universitario pulsed with energy as every crunching tackle or tricky call was met with an impassioned response. And there was a considerable amount of that; Tigres committed 12 fouls by the end of the match while Gotham committed 14.
Gotham finished the game having taken 23 shots, seven of which were on target.
Esther González is the Superior Player of the Match presented by Michelob Ultra for her title-winning goal for Gotham! 🏅 pic.twitter.com/fZQUwZskQl
— Concacaf W (@ConcacafW) May 25, 2025
'I feel like we really left it all out there and everyone really fought hard to the end,' Gotham defender and team captain Mandy Freeman said. 'We deserved the win, and we really earned it.'
Gotham secured their place in the final with a 3-1 win over Club América on Wednesday's semi-final, which featured goals from Brazilian forward Geyse and Purce. (The third was an own goal.) The Portland Thorns, who lost to Tigres in their semi-final, beat América 3-0 in the bronze medal match on Saturday afternoon.
'I think this has been three years in the making and to finally have this moment to celebrate,' Freeman said. 'I mean, it's still not over, we still have the Women's [Club] World Cup championship, but right now we're really happy and excited.'
Ahead of Saturday night's championship, Gotham head coach Juan Carlos Amorós also acknowledged the team's three-year project coming to fruition in this tournament.
'We've been working incredibly hard — some of us for three seasons, if you include the [2023 NWSL] Championship year — to be here in May, with the chance to lift the trophy next to us and write our name into the history of the game,' he said.
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Lifting their first trophy since 2023 could provide Gotham with the boost it needs to climb back up the NWSL table. They currently sit in ninth place, just outside of playoff contention, level on points with Bay FC and the North Carolina Courage, who play on Sunday.
The FIFA Women's Club World Cup, originally set to debut in 2026, has been delayed until 2028.
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For example, Carter trained this week, working closely around her travel and sleep schedule, while the rest of her Gotham teammates recovered. 'When you're just playing and you're not really training, which is what these tournaments are, you can actually detrain in certain areas,' Epsley said. Stakeholders with competing interests continue to fill the calendar, with players often stuck in the middle between international windows mandated by global governing body FIFA and the demands of their domestic teams. 'We are concerned about the inadequate rest periods between FIFA windows and regular-season games,' Meghann Burke, the NWSL Players Association's executive director, told The Athletic. 'The problem is we don't have a great answer, because FIFA just keeps grabbing more and more days (for FIFA windows), making it difficult for us to be able to play our regular season.' After announcing the new match calendar in March 2023, FIFA president Gianni Infantino said: 'FIFA promoted a truly global approach to the discussions on the International Match Calendar, which considered the perspectives of all key stakeholders. Our fundamental objective is to have clarity on this topic, and to have meaningful football matches while protecting the well-being of the players and recognising that many regions need more competitive football.' The Regulations on the Status and Transfer of Players (RTSP) govern when players must be released by clubs for international duty, and vice versa. FIFA only requires that players be released the morning after a team's last match in a tournament. From there, players coordinate with their clubs. 'The reality is, when you look at the grueling demands of this past window (in July)… it's very clear that players need a rest, and that's a decision that, at this point, needs to be made by the team,' Burke said. 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