logo
CONCACAF Gold Cup gets underway on Saturday without many key players

CONCACAF Gold Cup gets underway on Saturday without many key players

The Hindua day ago

Unlike the World Cup, the CONCACAF Gold Cup often is contested by B and C teams due to vacation, injuries and youth call-ups.
'We have a lot of young players that need more opportunities to play real minutes,' Canada coach Jesse Marsch said ahead of this year's championship of North and Central America and the Caribbean. 'There's a lot of ways to use the tournament to broaden our player pool and to strengthen what we're doing with our team.'
Defending champion Mexico opens the 16-nation event Saturday against the Dominican Republic in a first-round group that also includes Costa Rica and Suriname. The reeling United States, on its first four-game losing streak since 2007, starts Sunday against Trinidad and Tobago, then plays invited guests Saudi Arabia and Haiti.
Canada is grouped with Honduras, El Salvador and Curacao, and Panama is together with Jamaica, Guatemala and Guadeloupe.
'We have the obligation of being the favourite. We have to accept that title,' Javier Aguirre, hired last summer for his third stint as Mexico's coach, said through a translator.
Mexico has won nine Gold Cups, including 2023. The U.S. has won seven, including 2021, and Canada won in 2000. The tournament will be played at the same time as the Club World Cup, which has been given priority for players by FIFA.
'It's not to say that if someone isn't here now they won't be here next year,' Aguirre said. 'So many things can happen in a year.'
ALSO READ: Germany's bid to host women's Euro 2029 leaves out Berlin
Gold Cup matches will be played at 14 stadiums in 11 areas, avoiding the Eastern seaboard. The championship final is in Houston on July 6 (July 7 according to IST).
El Tri will be missing forwards Hirving 'Chucky' Lozano and Henry Martín, who have hamstring injuries.
Canada is without star winger Alphonso Davies, who tore his right ACL during the CONCACAF Nations League third-place game against the U.S. on March 23.
The U.S. roster is notable for the missing as much as the present. The Americans are without star Christian Pulisic (wanted time off); Yunus Musah (personal reason not disclosed); Weston McKennie, Tim Weah, Gio Reyna (headed to the Club World Cup); Antonee Robinson, Tyler Adams and Folarin Balogun (injured); and Sergiño Dest (regaining fitness).
'I don't think there's any denying that some of our performances have fallen short over the past year to 18 months,' defender Walker Zimmerman said.
'When you look at Gold Cup and you look at some players maybe having their first experience with Gold Cup or even new guys coming into the team in general, it's always such a great opportunity to have a month in front of a staff, get a lot of quality trainings in together and find yourself hopefully getting into a rhythm of playing multiple games where you can put everything on the line to try and make a World Cup team in a year's time.'
The U.S. has won its group in 16 of 17 Gold Cups, along with a second-place finish to Panama in 2011, and its group stage record is 40 wins, one loss and five draws.
Related Topics
CONCACAF Gold Cup

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

How South Africa's coach trained players to finally shed the chockers tag by winning the WTC title vs Australia
How South Africa's coach trained players to finally shed the chockers tag by winning the WTC title vs Australia

Time of India

time28 minutes ago

  • Time of India

How South Africa's coach trained players to finally shed the chockers tag by winning the WTC title vs Australia

For decades, South African cricket has battled a painful reputation—of faltering when it matters most. The label of 'chokers' haunted generations, from early World Cup exits to painful collapses in critical games. But that narrative took a historic turn when South Africa, under head coach Shukri Conrad, clinched the World Test Championship (WTC) title with a resolute victory over Australia. The transformation didn't happen overnight. It was a process rooted in mental toughness, self-belief, and calmness under pressure—key attributes Conrad instilled in his squad. A Mindset Shift Under Conrad As per The turning point in South Africa's mental fortitude came in December, during a nerve-wracking run chase against Pakistan. At 19 for 3 chasing 148, the team was on the brink once again. But Conrad, rather than panic, delivered a straightforward message: 'Do you want to be remembered as chokers?' That blunt but necessary intervention sparked a turnaround. South Africa scraped through with a two-wicket win—a win Conrad jokingly labeled the 'Camel classic,' a nod to the calming cigarette break he shared with players mid-crisis. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like 20 Most Expensive Cars In The World That message of staying composed stayed with the team through their WTC campaign. It resurfaced on the eve of the final days of the WTC final against Australia, where South Africa found themselves in a dominant position at Lord's—yet acutely aware of how easily things had fallen apart in the past. Focused on the Moment, Not the Outcome Ashwell Prince, South Africa's batting coach, credited Conrad's calm demeanor for the serene atmosphere in the dressing room during tense phases. Prince recalled how Conrad instructed players to stick to their routines: do the same warm-ups, approach the day as any other, and don't let the magnitude of the occasion overwhelm them. "The messaging has been the same throughout," Prince noted. "Make them believe that they can do it, and then just step out the way and allow them to go and do it." The emphasis was always on staying present—'play one ball at a time,' as Prince described the batting philosophy. Despite facing an Australian side stacked with elite bowlers, South Africa never let the past dictate the present. History Was Watching—But South Africa Looked Ahead Lord's has seen its share of final heartbreaks, and for South Africa, ghosts of past failures loomed large. From the infamous Test loss in 1992 against the West Indies to the heartbreak in the T20 World Cup final in 2023, the fear of history repeating itself was real. Yet the team made a conscious decision not to look too far ahead. Prince even hesitated to discuss Temba Bavuma's heroic innings before the match ended, aware that even the smallest assumption could tempt fate. Still, the signs were positive. From the steady partnership between Bavuma and Aiden Markram to Rabada's dominant bowling across the match, South Africa appeared to be writing a different ending. A Victory That Went Beyond the Scorecard Even before the final moments, South Africa's campaign had won admiration. They reached the final despite criticism over the perceived ease of their fixtures. But as Prince pointed out, the players were made aware of their own quality, not the noise outside. Conrad made it a priority to build confidence internally, not react to external doubts. "There was no talk about proving anybody wrong," Prince emphasized. The focus was on performance, not validation. In defeating Australia, South Africa didn't just win a title—they dismantled a decades-old narrative. The 'chokers' tag wasn't erased with one win, but it was undoubtedly challenged in the most emphatic way. And at the heart of that shift was a coach who believed in calm over chaos, and players who finally began to believe in themselves.

BCCI unveils domestic calendar: 2025-26 season starts on August 28; India vs New Zealand 2026 series venues announced
BCCI unveils domestic calendar: 2025-26 season starts on August 28; India vs New Zealand 2026 series venues announced

Time of India

timean hour ago

  • Time of India

BCCI unveils domestic calendar: 2025-26 season starts on August 28; India vs New Zealand 2026 series venues announced

NEW DELHI: The BCCI confirmed the venues for India's white-ball home series against New Zealand in January 2026 during its 28th Apex Council Meeting held on Saturday. The series will include three ODIs and five T20Is. Go Beyond The Boundary with our YouTube channel. SUBSCRIBE NOW! The ODI matches will be played in Baroda, Rajkot and Indore, while the T20Is will take place in Nagpur, Raipur, Guwahati, Vizag and Trivandrum. The series will mark India's first international assignment of the calendar year and is expected to serve as crucial preparation for the 2026 T20 World Cup. India vs New Zealand Schedule: Alongside the international fixture announcements, the BCCI also approved the 2025–26 domestic calendar, which will kick off with the Duleep Trophy on August 28, 2025, and conclude with the Senior Women's Inter-Zonal Multi-Day Trophy on April 3, 2026. Key Highlights from Domestic Season 2025–26: The Duleep Trophy and Senior Women's Challenger will now feature six zonal teams selected by zonal selectors, aligning with historical traditions. A new Plate Group restructuring has been introduced across all age categories. The bottom six teams from the previous season will compete in the Plate Group. Promotion and relegation rules have been updated, with only one team moving between Elite and Plate Groups in each season. The Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy (men's T20) and the Senior Women's T20 Trophy will now feature a Super League stage instead of a straight knockout, to allow more balanced competition. Most major tournaments, such as the Vijay Hazare Trophy and Men's U23 State A Trophy, will adopt a 4 Elite + 1 Plate Group model. Junior and women's tournaments across U16, U19, and U23 will follow a 5 Elite + 1 Plate Group system. Lobo Predicted It, Again: South Africa's Historic WTC Win vs Australia These sweeping changes are designed to increase competitiveness, streamline tournament formats, and promote balanced talent development across Indian domestic cricket.

The Rise Of Aiden Markram: A Look At His Top 3 Knocks, After WTC Final Heroics
The Rise Of Aiden Markram: A Look At His Top 3 Knocks, After WTC Final Heroics

NDTV

timean hour ago

  • NDTV

The Rise Of Aiden Markram: A Look At His Top 3 Knocks, After WTC Final Heroics

South African Aiden Markram played an innings of a lifetime at the World Test Championship final at Lord's, justifying years of backing despite patches of inconsistency. His class and talent were all on display as he played a stroke-filled century while anchoring the innings from one end. Markram, making his Test debut in 2017, currently has 2,993 runs in 46 Tests at an average of 36.50 with eight centuries and 13 fifties. He has proven to be a paradoxical player. While he is an absolute treat to the eyes, his inconsistency can frustrate fans. His composure and temperament stands amongst the very best in the game, but yet on many occasions, a rash hit has led to his departure from the crease. His not-so-remarkable numbers did attract calls from fans and experts to drop him, but the 30-year-old gave them all a befitting answer. Despite the patchy nature of his career, one thing is for sure, he is the man for the finals for his side. It all started on January 2014, when a young Markram, 19 years of age, played a well-compiled knock of 66* in 125 balls, helping South Africa chase 133 against Pakistan to guide the team to the U19 World Cup title, South Africa's first world title at any level of the game. Along with the World Cup, he walked away with the 'Player of the Tournament' award, for 370 runs in six matches, with two centuries and a fifty. He was the third-highest run-getter in the tournament. Then in 2023, he led South Africa to their only final appearance in white-ball cricket, during the ICC T20 World Cup 2024 at Barbados. While Markram was poor with the bat in the tournament and scored just four in the title clash, his leadership was top-notch, his bowling changes and field placements mostly brilliant. Proteas lost the final by seven runs thanks to a miraculous comeback scripted by the Indian pace attack, but it instilled in Proteas a self-belief needed for big matches. Then during the WTC final, Markram headed into the title clash with not-so-impressive record. In preceding eight calendar years in Tests, five of them saw him average below 40. His record in the knockout matches for Proteas was not spectacular either, with just 68 runs in four matches. However, with each classy drive and punch sent piercing through gaps, Markram proved his class. He dominated spin, continuing his unbeaten record against spin great Nathan Lyon. Even the pace trio of skipper Pat Cummins, Mitchell Starc and Josh Hazlewood were handed some meaty blows. After a first innings duck, he displayed immense resillience, making a huge mental switch during the second innings. Instead of crumbling under pressure, Markram dropped the anchor and struck a fine partnership with skipper Temba Bavuma during a tough 282-run chase in a match which had seen both sides huff and puff to the 200-run mark. Markram's knock is the first century during a tournament final by a South African cricketer. While the previous June ended in a heartbreak, in the month of June this year, Markram produced a career-defining knock that could usher a new era for Test cricket in South Africa, which once faced criticism for sending a B-team during their tour to New Zealand earlier last year during the WTC cycle 2023-25. Best thing about time is, that it changes. Markram proved it in a way South Africans will remember for a long time.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store