U.S. Cup

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U.S. Cup
Men's Tournament
Organizing bodyUSSF
Founded1992 (1992)
Abolished2000 (2000)
Number of teams4
Most successful team(s) United States
 Mexico
(3 titles each)

U.S. Cup (also known as the USA Cup, United States Cup and Nike U.S. Cup) was a soccer competition held annually in the United States from 1992 to 2000, except for the World Cup years of 1994 and 1998. The tournament, hosted by the United States Soccer Federation, was contested between the United States and three guest teams.

U.S. Cup
Women's Tournament
Organizing bodyUSSF
Founded1995
Abolished2002
Number of teams4
Related competitionsSheBelieves Cup
Most successful team(s) United States (7 titles)

The cup was created to train the American soccer team and to popularize the sport in the US before the men's 1994 FIFA World Cup.[1] Originally known as the U.S. Cup, the name was changed to the Nike U.S. Cup after Nike, Inc. signed a ten-year, $120 million contract with the United States Soccer Federation to sponsor the U.S. national teams in October 1997. As part of the contract, USSF added Nike's name to the U.S. Cup title.[2]

In 1995, USSF added a women's competition which ran every year until 2

002. The 2001 edition was abandoned after three matches due to the September 11 attacks.

Format

The cup was traditionally played in a single round-robin format between the four participating national teams.

The 1999 edition of the men's and 2000 edition of the women's tournaments, were played in single elimination format. The first round was the semifinals. The losers of the semifinals played for third place, and the winners of the semifinals played the Final match.

List of champions

Men's tournament

Year Champion Runner-up Third place Fourth place
1992
details
 United States  Italy  Republic of Ireland  Portugal
1993
details
 Germany  Brazil  United States  England
1995
details
 United States  Colombia  Mexico  Nigeria
1996
details
 Mexico  Republic of Ireland  United States  Bolivia
1997
details
 Mexico  Denmark  Peru  United States
1999
details
 Mexico  United States  Guatemala  Bolivia
2000
details
 United States  Republic of Ireland  Mexico  South Africa

Women's tournament

Year Champion Runner-up Third place Fourth place
1995
details
 United States  Norway  Australia  Chinese Taipei
1996
details
 United States  China  Japan  Canada
1997
details
 United States  Italy  Australia  Canada
1998
details
 United States  Brazil  Russia  Mexico
1999
details
 United States  Brazil  Finland  South Korea
2000
details
 United States  Canada  Mexico  South Korea
2002
details
 United States  Australia  Italy  Russia

Titles by country

Men's tournament

Women's tournament

  •  United States 7 times (all, except for the abandoned 2001 edition)

National team appearances

Men’s

Rank Team Appearance
1
 United States (hosts)
7
2
 Mexico
5
3
 Republic of Ireland
3
4
 Bolivia
2
5  Brazil 1
 Colombia
 Denmark
 England
 Germany
 Guatemala
 Italy
 Nigeria
 Peru
 Portugal
 South Africa

Women’s

Number of appearance excludes the abandoned 2001 edition.

Rank Team Appearance
1
 United States (hosts)
7
2  Australia 3
 Canada
3  Brazil 2
 Italy
 South Korea
 Mexico
 Russia
4  China 1
 Finland
 Japan
 Norway
 Chinese Taipei

Venues

  • Frontier Field
    , Rochester, NY 1998 (2 games)
  • RFK Stadium
    , Washington, DC-1992, 1993 (2 games), 1995 (2 games), 1996, 2000
  • Foxboro Stadium, Foxborough, MA-1992 (2 games), 1993, 1995, 1996, 2000
  • Rose Bowl, Pasadena, CA-1996, 1997 (4 games)
  • Soldier Field, Chicago, IL-1992 (2 games), 1993, 2000
  • Giants Stadium, East Rutherford, NJ-1996 (2 games), 2000 (2 games)
  • Qualcomm Stadium
    , San Diego, CA-1997 (2 games), 1999 (2 games)
  • Yale Bowl, New Haven, CT-1992, 1993
  • Rutgers Stadium
    , Piscataway, NJ-1995 (2 games)
  • Cotton Bowl, Dallas, TX-1996, 2000
  • Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, Los Angeles, CA-1999 (2 games)
  • Pontiac Silverdome, Pontiac, MI-1993

References

  1. ^ Filip Bondy (March 4, 1992). "Soccer; US Cup Might Raise Americans' Game". New York Times. Retrieved November 9, 2015.
  2. ^ "Soccer America". www.socceramerica.com. Archived from the original on January 24, 2004. Retrieved March 14, 2022.

External links