List of CONCACAF Gold Cup stadiums

19 draws Championship and CONCACAF Gold Cup held in eight countries-members of CONCACAF, and two draws (1985 and 1989) had not host countries: In general, during the period 1963–2011 as part of the final tournament held 389 matches, which were held in 48 stadiums of 42 cities in 9 countries (of which 28 stadiums in 26 cities located in the US): information on the number of cities differ, as part of the cities located within the agglomerations of Los Angeles and New York.

Host countries

Times Country Date CONCACAF
Championship
CONCACAF
Gold Cup
18  United States 1991, 1993[a], 1996, 1998, 2000, 2002, 2003[a], 2005, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2013, 2015[b], 2017, 2019[c], 2021, 2023,[b] 2025[b] 0 18
3  Mexico 1977, 1993[a], 2003[a] 1 2
3  Canada 2015,[b] 2023,[b] 2025[b] 0 3
2  Honduras 1967, 1981 2 0
2  Costa Rica 1969, 2019[c] 1 1
1  El Salvador 1963 1 0
1  Guatemala 1965 1 0
1  Trinidad and Tobago 1971 1 0
1  Haiti 1973 1 0
1  Jamaica 2019[c] 0 1
2 No Fixed 1985, 1989 2 0
  1. ^ a b c d Co-hosted by United States and Mexico
  2. ^ a b c d e f Co-hosted by United States and Canada
  3. ^ a b c Co-hosted by United States, Costa Rica and Jamaica

1991 CONCACAF Gold Cup

The 1991 CONCACAF Gold Cup was the first edition of the Gold Cup, the football (soccer) championship of North America, Central America and the Caribbean (CONCACAF). The tournament was held in the United States, in California cities Los Angeles and Pasadena.[1]

United States

Venue Location Capacity Group phase Knockout stage
Memorial Coliseum Los Angeles 93,607 Group A, Group B Semi-finals, third-place, and Final
Rose Bowl Pasadena 92,542 Group B

1993 CONCACAF Gold Cup

Mexico and the United States hosted the second edition of CONCACAF's premier men's football tournament. Mexico hosted Group B, a semi-final, the third place and Final at the Estadio Azteca. The United States hosted Group A and semi-final all played at the Cotton Bowl in Dallas.[2]

Mexico

Venue Location Capacity Group phase Knockout stage
Estadio Azteca Mexico City 105,000 Group B 1 semi-final, third-place and Final

United States

Venue Location Capacity Group phase Knockout stage
Cotton Bowl Dallas 71,615 Group A Semi-final

1996 CONCACAF Gold Cup

For the third edition, the tournament went back to the United States and California; the games were hosted by Los Angeles, San Diego, and Anaheim.[3]

United States

Venue Location Capacity Group phase Knockout stage
Anaheim Stadium Anaheim 64,593 Group A, Group B, and Group C
Memorial Coliseum Los Angeles 93,607 Group B Semi-final, third-place and Final
Jack Murphy Stadium San Diego 60,836 Group A Semi-final

1998 CONCACAF Gold Cup

The 1998 CONCACAF Gold Cup was once again held in the United States, in Los Angeles, Miami, and Oakland.

United States

Venue Location Capacity Group phase Knockout stage
Oakland–Alameda County Coliseum Oakland 63,026 Group B and Group C
Memorial Coliseum Los Angeles 93,607 Group A Semi-finals, third-place and final
Orange Bowl Miami 74,476 Group C

See also

References

  1. ^ "Legacy of 1991: How the United States shocked CONCACAF & won first-ever Gold Cup | THE WORD | MLSSoccer.com".
  2. ^ "CONCACAF Championship, Gold Cup 1993 - Full Details".
  3. ^ "CONCACAF Championship, Gold Cup 1996".