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Mexico, U.S. rule region and other key takeaways from 2025 Concacaf Gold Cup
Mexico players celebrate after defeating United States in the 2025 Concacaf Gold Cup final at NRG Stadium in Houston. Kevin Jairaj-Imagn Images

Mexico, U.S. rule region and other key takeaways from 2025 Concacaf Gold Cup

HOUSTON — The 2025 Concacaf Gold Cup ended Sunday night with Mexico beating the United States Men’s National Team 2-1 at sold-out NRG Stadium.

Thirty-one games, 16 teams and one momentous tournament are now in the rearview for the North American region. With the World Cup coming to the United States, Canada and Mexico in 2026  — and thus putting an extra spotlight on Concacaf’s teams — here are takeaways from this important tournament: 

Mexico, United States are still the top teams in the region, but serious competition is on the way

2025 was Mexico’s 12th Gold Cup final and the USMNT’s 13th. The teams have long been Concacaf’s finest offerings to the global stage, and this summer proved they still are, even amid rebuilds after their disastrous performances in the Copa America in 2024.

It’s a solid achievement for both sides, but they won’t be alone at the top for long. Guatemala entered this tournament in the triple digits of FIFA’s global rankings and nearly earned itself a deserved spot in the final. Costa Rica is finally a contender under Mexican coach Miguel Herrera. And Panama, eliminated in the quarterfinals on a heartbreaking penalty shootout, can lay claim to being the strongest defensive team in the region.

The 2026 World Cup will feature more Concacaf teams than any previous edition of the tournament, and the timing could not be more fortuitous. This region has plenty of talent to send to the world’s biggest stage.

Canada’s rise might not be the foregone conclusion many thought

Few national teams have made more progress in the past decade than Canada. Les Rouges went from regional also-rans to trophy contenders in five years thanks to strong player recruitment and excellent coaching from John Herdman and Jesse Marsch. Canada entered this 2025 Gold Cup hungry to win it.

After kicking things off with a false-positive 6-0 hammering of Honduras— a match colored more by Honduras’ slow start than Canada’s inherent strength — the wheels fell off of the Canada hype train. A 1-1 draw with Curacao was embarrassing; a red card-laden scrap with El Salvador was downright worrying. 

When a 10-man Canada crashed out of the tournament to a spirited, underestimated Guatemala side in the quarterfinals, it didn’t even feel shocking. There’s still plenty of talent coming from Canada, but this team is far from the Concacaf favorite it claimed to be before the Gold Cup.

Concacaf refereeing remains questionable

USMNT coach Mauricio Pochettino was rightfully angry following his team’s loss to Mexico. His sticking point was a controversial no-penalty call when Mexican defender Jorge Sanchez clearly handled the ball in his own box.

“For sure it’s a penalty, he pushed the hand on the ball,” Pochettino said, per The Guardian. “For me, it was embarrassing to see that situation and it’s a shame.”

USMNT defender (and goalscorer) Chris Richards was a bit more punchy. “Homie palmed the ball like he’s Shaq in the box,” he deadpanned. “That’s Concacaf for you.”

Indeed. Mexico saw several goals called off in the group stages in dubious circumstances; Suriname saw several key calls flubbed against Costa Rica in its tournament opener. 

When FIFA president Gianni Infantino welcomed the tournament referees to the champion dais to receive medals for their performances, the 70,000+ crowd in Houston’s NRG Stadium booed in unison. Forget that the vast majority of those fans were on the side of the winning team. There are no winners when Concacaf refs are in charge of the game.

Alyssa Clang

Alyssa is a Boston-born Californian with a passion for global sport. She can yell about misplaced soccer passes in five languages and rattle off the turns of Silverstone in her sleep. You can find her dormant Twitter account at @alyssaclang, but honestly, you’re probably better off finding her here

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