
Leagues Cup: Guadalajara edge Charlotte on penalties, Cruz Azul outlast LA Galaxy in thrilling shootout
CD Guadalajara
, helping the visitors earn a 4-2 penalty shootout win after a 2-2 draw with
Charlotte FC
on Matchday 2 of
Leagues Cup
group play.
Chivas (0-1-1, 2 points) stayed in knockout contention thanks to goalkeeper Raúl Rangel, who redeemed himself in the shootout by saving Tyger Smalls' effort - after conceding a soft equaliser to Kerwin Vargas in the 90th minute off a near-post free kick.
Explore courses from Top Institutes in
Please select course:
Select a Course Category
Digital Marketing
MCA
Product Management
Degree
Technology
Finance
healthcare
Cybersecurity
Data Science
MBA
Public Policy
Leadership
Data Science
others
Operations Management
Design Thinking
CXO
Others
Project Management
Healthcare
Management
Data Analytics
Artificial Intelligence
PGDM
Skills you'll gain:
Digital Marketing Strategies
Customer Journey Mapping
Paid Advertising Campaign Management
Emerging Technologies in Digital Marketing
Duration:
12 Weeks
Indian School of Business
Digital Marketing and Analytics
Starts on
May 14, 2024
Get Details
Skills you'll gain:
Digital Marketing Strategy
Search Engine Optimization (SEO) & Content Marketing
Social Media Marketing & Advertising
Data Analytics & Measurement
Duration:
24 Weeks
Indian School of Business
Professional Certificate Programme in Digital Marketing
Starts on
Jun 26, 2024
Get Details
Charlotte (0-1-1, 1 point), later eliminated by other results, had taken an early lead via an own goal from Guadalajara's Gilberto Sepúlveda in the 11th minute.
by Taboola
by Taboola
Sponsored Links
Sponsored Links
Promoted Links
Promoted Links
You May Like
Play War Thunder now for free
War Thunder
Play Now
Undo
Chivas responded with a crisp strike from Ledezma in the 24th minute and a powerful header from González in the 66th. Charlotte's hopes took a further hit when top scorer Pep Biel exited with an injury in the 32nd minute. The draw and shootout win gave Chivas a vital two points.
Cruz Azul
beat
LA Galaxy
8-7 on penalties
Live Events
Kevin Mier emerged as the hero for Cruz Azul, saving consecutive penalty kicks on the LA Galaxy's eighth and ninth attempts to secure a dramatic shootout victory after a 1-1 draw in Leagues Cup group play.
Charly Rodríguez opened the scoring for Cruz Azul (0-1-1, 2 points) in the 21st minute, finishing off a sharp cross from Carlos Rotondi for his first goal of the tournament and third in the Liga MX Apertura.
LA Galaxy found their equaliser late, with Gabriel Pec sliding in Mauricio Cuevas' cross in the 81st minute for his second goal of the competition.
In the shootout, both teams were flawless through seven rounds, before Galaxy's Edwin Cerillo and Emil Garces had their spot kicks denied by Mier - clinching the extra point for Cruz Azul and keeping their knockout stage hopes alive.
Monterrey overcome
New York Red Bulls
5-3 in shootout
CF Monterrey (0-1-1, 2 points) kept their knockout stage hopes alive by converting all five penalties in a shootout victory following a 1-1 draw against the New York Red Bulls in Cincinnati.
Goalkeeper Luis Cárdenas made a crucial save during the shootout, while controversy struck when Carlos Coronel initially appeared to stop Luis Reyes' spot-kick. However, the Red Bulls keeper was ruled to have moved off his line early, and Reyes converted on the retake.
New York took the lead in the 19th minute through Julian Hall, who latched onto Daniel Edelman's long through ball and fired a clinical finish past Cárdenas. Monterrey equalized in the 38th minute when Sergio Canales - scoring his second goal of the tournament - pounced on a rebound after Coronel saved Ricardo Chávez's header.
With the 1-1 draw, Rayados secured an extra point through the shootout, keeping their Leagues Cup campaign alive.
FC Juarez
edge FC Cincinnati 4-3 in tie-breaker
Sebastián Jurado came up clutch with two penalty saves to help Juárez claim a shootout victory after surrendering a two-goal lead in the second half against FC Cincinnati.
Juárez (1-0-1, 5 points) appeared to be in control after Ricardinho opened the scoring with a header assisted by Guilherme Castilho, who later added a goal of his own in the second half. But Cincinnati (1-0-1, 4 points) mounted a comeback, with Evander pulling one back in the 72nd minute before delivering the corner that led to a Juárez own goal just five minutes later.
The match ended 2-2, sending it to penalties. After Cincinnati goalkeeper Roman Celentano denied Jairo Torres, Evander had a chance to extend the shootout - but Jurado made the decisive save, sealing the win for Juárez, who remained well-positioned to reach the knockout stage.
Sounders blank Santos Laguna 2-0
Georgi Minoungou scored his first goal of the season to help Seattle secure a 2-1 win over Santos Laguna, but his night ended early after an unusual red card.
The forward struck in the 72nd minute, lifting his shirt to reveal a message underneath - a celebration that earned him a second yellow card and an immediate ejection, just seven minutes after coming off the bench. He had already been booked for a foul in the 65th minute.
Seattle (2-0-0, 6 points) had earlier taken the lead through an own goal forced by Paul Rothrock's dangerous cross. Despite playing with 10 men, they held firm, even after Cristian Dájome pulled one back in stoppage time for Santos Laguna (0-2-0, 0 points), who were eliminated from Leagues Cup contention with the loss.
Club Tijuana beat Rapids 2-1
Ramiro Arciga's second goal of the Liga MX Apertura helped Tijuana secure a crucial 2-1 win over the
Colorado Rapids
in Commerce City, keeping their Leagues Cup hopes alive.
Tijuana (1-1-0, 3 points) struck first in the 39th minute when Jackson Porozo tapped in a rebound after Unai Bilbao's header hit the post following a corner. Arciga doubled the lead in the 72nd minute, reacting quickly to slot home the rebound from Alejandro Gómez's shot that was parried by Colorado keeper Zack Steffen.
Just two minutes later, Porozo accidentally redirected the ball into his own net, giving Colorado (1-1-0, 3 points) hope. But despite late pressure from the hosts, Tijuana held firm to claim all three points.
Hashtags

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


The Hindu
6 hours ago
- The Hindu
Lionel Messi set to return from injury against LA Galaxy
Inter Miami star Lionel Messi is ready to return from injury for Saturday's match against the Los Angeles Galaxy in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., head coach Javier Mascherano said Friday. The 38-year-old forward missed the Herons' last two matches with a right leg injury sustained in the first half of a Leagues Cup win against Necaxa on August 2. Messi returned to training earlier this week. 'Leo is fine,' Mascherano said. 'He's been with the team since Wednesday. We believe that if nothing unusual happens, he'll be called up for tomorrow's game.' Messi is tied with Nashville's Sam Surridge in the race for the MLS Golden Boot with 18 goals. The eight-time Ballon d'Or winner from Argentina also has 10 assists in 17 MLS matches this season. Miami (12-5-6, 42 points) enters the weekend in sixth place in the Eastern Conference standings, currently six points above the playoff cutline. The Herons have also reached the Leagues Cup quarterfinals.


Time of India
2 days ago
- Time of India
The new distribution math: UFC's shift from PPV culture to Paramount+ bundling
Since its first ESPN deal in 2018, a five-year contract valued at $1.5 billion, the UFC grew familiar with PPV economics under the cable-and-satellite model. The UFC's major events generated revenue by selling individual shows at premium prices, often $60 to $80 per event, on top of existing distribution fees paid by networks. ESPN amplified UFC's visibility via integrated studio segments, weigh-in coverage, and highlights across SportsCenter and other properties, solidifying the UFC's place in mainstream sports media. This era helped elevate both brand awareness and PPV volumes. Now, with ESPN's contract expiring at the end of 2025, the UFC has secured a new seven-year, $7.7 billion US rights deal with Paramount Global . Under this framework, all events, including numbered cards and Fight Nights, will be available on Paramount+, while select marquee cards will simulcast live on CBS. The deal's headline figure dwarfs the previous agreement; however, the shift in delivery models critically transforms how revenue is structured and how audiences engage. Finance Value and Valuation Masterclass - Batch 4 By CA Himanshu Jain View Program Artificial Intelligence AI For Business Professionals Batch 2 By Ansh Mehra View Program Finance Value and Valuation Masterclass - Batch 3 By CA Himanshu Jain View Program Artificial Intelligence AI For Business Professionals By Vaibhav Sisinity View Program Finance Value and Valuation Masterclass - Batch 2 By CA Himanshu Jain View Program Finance Value and Valuation Masterclass Batch-1 By CA Himanshu Jain View Program Also read: Dana White gives major update on proposed UFC fight at the White House by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Play War Thunder now for free War Thunder Play Now Subscription bundling vs. event-by-event PPV In the traditional PPV world, consumers pay per event, often motivated by star power and marquee matchups. That model creates spikes in revenue tied to each big card but places purchasing decisions squarely in viewers' hands every time, a dynamic that can hurt overall event uptake, especially for casual fans. Under ESPN, the UFC's PPV model relied on both the promotion's marketing muscle and ESPN's promotional ecosystem to drive sales. The Paramount+ model moves to subscription-based bundling: UFC events become part of a broader content package. Consumers with subscriptions pay a flat monthly or annual fee, removing per-event friction but also potentially dampening per-card revenue excitement. The success now depends on subscriber growth and retention, whether enough viewers subscribe to Paramount+ primarily for UFC content, or maintain subscriptions long-term. Viewers get more inclusive access, potentially increasing casual viewership, but the promotional juggernaut that ESPN offered, a constant highlight of UFC content in daily programming, is diminishing. Bundling benefits, and risks for viewers and fighters For fans, the all-access model may appear advantageous. Paying for a single service that delivers multiple UFC events removes the pinch of paying $60–$80 per card. It supports binge consumption and discovery, a casual viewer might sample a fight night without extra cost, encouraging engagement. Meanwhile, broadcaster bundling aligns with evolving consumer behavior, favoring flat-rate, multi-content experiences. Live Events But for fighters and promoters, this shift may reduce per-event revenue spikes that PPV models deliver. Under PPV, UFC created direct event revenue and often shared PPV points with high-profile fighters, meaning big-name cards could yield substantial payouts. In the new structure, those spikes may flatten into distributed revenue across subscription tiers. Unless UFC negotiates more favorable revenue-sharing structures or views Paramount+ subscriptions as functionally equivalent to PPV volume on aggregate, fighter compensation dynamics could change. Whether Paramount+ pricing and subscriber growth can replicate, or exceed, total PPV revenue is uncertain, although the $7.7B rights deal provides a baseline. Also read: Paramount acquires UFC rights for $7.7 billion to boost streaming Distribution reach and exposure Paramount+ currently has approximately 77–78 million global subscribers. CBS remains the most-watched broadcast network in the US, dominating primetime ratings. This offers UFC both streaming reach and network visibility for select events. In contrast, ESPN's daily cable viewership and social-media promotions created constant exposure for the UFC. The shift may trade high-volume, event-by-event marketing for concentrated promotions around major cards on CBS. Although UFC may no longer receive heavy exposure as a daily feature across ESPN platforms, it gains access to Paramount+ subscribers and broadcast reach for marquee cards through CBS. Audience habits are rapidly shifting toward streaming: Nielsen reports that streaming has, for the first time, eclipsed combined broadcast and cable viewing in viewership. The model aligns with broader industry movement toward direct-to-consumer (DTC) distribution. The broader industry context The UFC's new arrangement mirrors a broader sports-media trend: marquee content migrating from PPV or cable-based packages to streaming-first distribution. This migration reflects shifting economics in content consumption, where maximal reach is nested in bundled offerings rather than per-item price spikes. The NFL , NBA, and other leagues are exploring or embracing similar models, often through exclusive streaming rights deals or app-based packages. For fans accustomed to choosing individual fight nights, this new paradigm emphasizes subscription maintenance over per-event purchase. Conversely, fans who paid only for select PPV events might now consider shelling out monthly for bundled access. Whether the shift encourages more consistent viewership or loses engagement due to 'subscription fatigue' will be closely watched. Implications for UFC's financial model The new deal represents a marquee annual figure, over $1 billion per year, solidifying the UFC's valuation as a global sports brand. It secures multi-year revenue certainty and aggregates the rights fees into one major partnership. For corporate leadership and fighters, that predictability offers benefits, but may require new compensation formulas. If previously lucrative PPV points disappear, blockbuster paydays may shift to salaries, bonuses, or share of subscription jump spikes tied to all-content releases. Crucially, UFC's leadership, led by Dana White, had sufficient leverage to command premium pricing even as they migrated platforms. But this transition tests a fundamental understanding: are consumers willing to adopt subscriptions rather than pay per fight, and will the model be more profitable in aggregate? Also read: UFC -Paramount+ $7.7 Billion Deal in U.S.: What's included and will fans face higher costs for live sports Long story short The UFC's move from ESPN to Paramount Global marks more than a rights transfer, it signifies a tectonic shift in how live combat sports are packaged and delivered. UFC is trading the PPV model, with its episodic revenue bursts, for a bundling model that favors subscriber scale and platform integration. Viewers may benefit from reduced per-event friction and increased accessibility. Fighters and promoters must recalibrate revenue expectations and value creation models. Meanwhile, UFC's success under Paramount+ will largely depend on its ability to drive subscriptions and maintain engagement without the constant promotional funnel ESPN provided. This new distribution math reflects the evolving media landscape: a world where continuous content access takes precedence over event-by-event spending, marking the UFC's latest chapter in adapting to streaming-era economics.


Time of India
2 days ago
- Time of India
Test format needs to remain viable or some rivals will go 'bankrupt' says Cricket Australia CEO
While the West Indies tries to determine a way to improve its once-fearsome test team, Cricket Australia chief executive Todd Greenberg warns that some rivals - without naming names - will go "bankrupt" if they continue to play the longest form of the game. Greenberg, a former Australian Cricketers' Association chief who took over at the sport's national governing body in March, believes "scarcity in test cricket is our friend, not our foe." Finance Value and Valuation Masterclass - Batch 4 By CA Himanshu Jain View Program Artificial Intelligence AI For Business Professionals Batch 2 By Ansh Mehra View Program Finance Value and Valuation Masterclass - Batch 3 By CA Himanshu Jain View Program Artificial Intelligence AI For Business Professionals By Vaibhav Sisinity View Program Finance Value and Valuation Masterclass - Batch 2 By CA Himanshu Jain View Program Finance Value and Valuation Masterclass Batch-1 By CA Himanshu Jain View Program "I don't think everyone in world cricket needs to aspire to play test cricket, and that might be OK," Greenberg told domestic media at an event marking 100 days to go before the Ashes series Down Under between England and Australia. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like War Thunder - Register now for free and play against over 75 Million real Players War Thunder Play Now Undo There are 12 full members of the International Cricket Council eligible to play test matches. They are Australia, England, South Africa, West Indies, New Zealand, India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Zimbabwe, Bangladesh, Afghanistan and Ireland. But test cricket has taken a back seat to the shorter forms of the game - one-day internationals and the even more popular, made-for-television, Twenty20 matches. The T20 format includes the world's most popular cricket tournament, the Indian Premier League. Live Events "We need to make sure we invest in the right spaces to play test cricket where it means something, and has jeopardy, and that's why the Ashes will be as enormous and as profitable as it is because it means something," Greenberg said. There have been suggestions that a two-tier test system be developed so as to create more balanced results between the test cricket haves and have-nots. West Indies this week held a two-day emergency summit for Caribbean cricket which included greats Brian Lara and Clive Lloyd. They are hoping to help create strategies to lift West Indies back toward the top of the international test format they dominated back in the 1970s and early 1980s. The summit was called after a West Indies lineup scored just 27 runs in its second innings - one run short of the all-time test record for low totals - while losing the third of three tests to Australia. Lara said after the summit that the Caribbean squad needs to take small steps to return to its once-vaunted place in test cricket. "It's a long road, not something that's going to happen tomorrow," Lara said, adding that the review was long overdue. "It was not about the 27 runs. If it was 57 or 107, would we be feeling any better? I don't think so. It's the fact we've got something to address. "And for us to get back on top or be a competitive nation in world cricket, we've got to address these situations shortly, quickly and hopefully we can reap the benefit in years to come." Greenberg says it might be too late for some teams. "A lot of traditionalists might not like that," he said. "I'm not suggesting I know the number that will play, but literally we're trying to send countries bankrupt if we force them to try to play test cricket.