HOUSTON: Mexico defeated the United States 2-1 at NRG Stadium in Houston, Texas on Sunday to successfully defend their CONCACAF Gold Cup crown and capture their 10th title in a pulsating final that delivered drama from start to finish.
The US went ahead just four minutes in when Sebastian Berhalter’s free-kick found Chris Richards, whose powerful header struck the underside of the crossbar and cannoned straight down, with the referee confirming the goal was good.
Mexico found the equaliser through Raul Jimenez in the 27th minute after the striker converted from close range.
He then dedicated the goal to the late Diogo Jota, his former Wolverhampton Wanderers team-mate, by holding up a Mexico shirt with the Portuguese forward’s name on it.
“We came from behind and are leaving with the title,” Jimenez said. “It’s great and really important to clinch the crown a summer before the World Cup. It’s something we’ve been trying to do since the tournament began.”
Despite Mexico’s first-half dominance they struggled to capitalise on numerous chances.
Roberto Alvarado and 16-year-old Gilberto Mora both tested US goalkeeper Matt Freese, with Mora’s venomous long-range effort requiring a crucial save from the American shot-stopper.
The US created chances through the slick combination play of Malik Tillman and Berhalter but could not breach Mexico’s resolute defence again.
Alex Freeman came closest when his header struck Mexico goalkeeper Luis Malagon in the face and Diego Luna blazed the rebound over the crossbar.
Mexico — who won their record-extending 10th crown — cranked up the pressure after the break and got the second goal when Edson Alvarez powered home a header, though there was a nervous wait due to a VAR review for potential offside.
However, the goal stood and the Mexican contingent erupted with wild celebrations.
Patrick Agyemang had the chance to equalise in the dying minutes but his finish just missed the mark in a tense finale as Mexico held firm.
US coach Mauricio Pochettino told reporters that while it had been a painful night for his side the tournament had been excellent preparation for the 2026 World Cup, which the US will co-host with Mexico and Canada.
“It was a massive lesson for us. It was an amazing tournament to realise in the way that we wanted to grow,” Pochettino said. “When you lose a trophy or you lose a game it’s really painful.
But the most important thing is to have our head up because I think the tournament was fantastic and we keep going, that is the way we want to build our journey into the World Cup.“
The win was Mexico’s second successive Gold Cup triumph.
Published in Dawn, July 8th, 2025