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Copa de Oro de la CONCACAF 2011 (in Spanish) Tournament details; Host country: United States: Dates: June 5–25: Teams: 12 (from 1 confederation) Venue(s) 13 (in 13 host cities) Final positions; Champions Mexico (6th title) Runners-up United States: Tournament statistics; Matches played: 25: Goals scored: 80 (3.2 per match) Attendance ...
The 2011 CONCACAF Gold Cup is an official FIFA international football tournament to be held in United States from June 5 to June 25, 2011. The twelve national teams involved in the tournament are required to register a squad of 23 players, as stipulated in the CONCACAF Gold Cup Tournament Rules and Regulations; only players listed in these squads are eligible to take part in the tournament. [1]
The 2011 CONCACAF Gold Cup final was the 11th final of the CONCACAF Gold Cup, the international championship tournament for teams of the CONCACAF, the governing body of soccer in North and Central America.
The CONCACAF Gold Cup (Spanish: Copa de Oro de la CONCACAF) is an association football competition for men's national football teams in North America, Central America, and the Caribbean, governed by CONCACAF.
The CONCACAF Gold Cup (Spanish: Copa Oro de la CONCACAF) is the main association football competition of the men's national football teams governed by CONCACAF, determining the continental champions of North America (Northern America, Central America, and the Caribbean). The Gold Cup is held every two years.
Real Salt Lake became the first MLS club to make the Champions League Finals. In April 2011, the 2011 CONCACAF Champions League Finals was contested between Monterrey of the Mexican Primera División, and Real Salt Lake of the United States and Canada's Major League Soccer to determine the champion of the 2010–11 CONCACAF Champions League.
The Copa de Oro (English: Gold Cup, Portuguese: Copa Ouro), or Copa de Oro Nicolás Leoz, was a football cup winners' cup competition contested on 3 occasions by the ...
CONCACAF announced the 14 host venues for the 2025 Gold Cup on September 25, 2024. [4] They included a mix of soccer-specific stadiums primarily occupied by Major League Soccer teams and larger American football stadiums.