2023 Leagues Cup final

The 2023 Leagues Cup final was the final match of the third edition of the Leagues Cup, a soccer tournament played between clubs from Major League Soccer (MLS) and Liga MX. The match was played on August 19, 2023, at Geodis Park in Nashville, Tennessee, United States. It was contested by hosts Nashville SC and Inter Miami CF, both recent expansion teams who had yet to win a competitive trophy.

2023 Leagues Cup final
Geodis Park in Nashville hosted the final.
Event2023 Leagues Cup
Inter Miami CF won 10–9 on penalties
DateAugust 19, 2023
VenueGeodis Park, Nashville, Tennessee
Man of the MatchDrake Callender (Inter Miami CF)
RefereeIsmail Elfath (United States)
Attendance30,109
WeatherClear, 80 °F (27 °C)[1]
2021
2024

Miami took the lead in the first half through a goal from Lionel Messi, while Fafà Picault equalized after half-time for Nashville; the match was tied 1–1 after regulation and both 15-minute extra time periods. In the ensuing penalty shoot-out, Inter Miami CF won 10–9 with the final round contested by the two goalkeepers for both teams. Miami's goalkeeper Drake Callender won man of the match honors for his play throughout the match, including his save on Elliot Panicco in the penalty shoot-out and his successful penalty to win the title for his team.[2]

Road to the final edit

The Leagues Cup is an annual soccer tournament for clubs from Major League Soccer (MLS) in the United States and Canada and Liga MX of Mexico. The 2023 edition, the third in the tournament's history, was the first to be expanded to include all 47 teams from the two leagues.[3] MLS and Liga MX both paused their regular seasons for the duration of the Leagues Cup, which began with a group stage in mid-July and would conclude with the final in mid-August. The entire tournament was hosted in the United States and Canada.[4] Both finalists qualified for the 2024 CONCACAF Champions Cup.[5]

Both finalists, Nashville SC and Inter Miami CF, entered MLS as expansion teams in the 2020 season.[6] The most recent of their six regular season meetings was on May 17, 2023, which Nashville hosted and won 2–1.[7] Six days later, the two sides met again in the U.S. Open Cup round of 16, which Inter Miami CF hosted and won 2–1.[8] The only previous U.S. club to play in a Leagues Cup final was Seattle Sounders FC, who lost in the 2021 edition.[9] Both finalists had regular season matches scheduled for the same weekend as the Leagues Cup final that were postponed to October due to their advancement in the tournament.[10][11]

Nashville SC edit

 
Nashville SC captain Walker Zimmerman, who scored in the round of 16 and round of 32

Nashville SC had qualified for the MLS Cup Playoffs in its first three seasons in the league and had advanced as far as the quarterfinals in the U.S. Open Cup, but had yet to win a trophy.[12] The team finished tenth in the 2022 regular season standings and were seeded into the Central 4 group alongside Toluca and the Colorado Rapids.[13] Prior to the Leagues Cup break, Nashville SC were fifth in the Supporters' Shield race but had lost five of their six most recent matches.[12][14]

In their opening match against Colorado, Nashville won 2–1 with goals from substitutes Hany Mukhtar and Jacob Shaffelburg in the second half before conceding late to the Rapids.[15] The team gained and lost its lead twice in the first half of their match against Toluca, which included a penalty awarded in stoppage time by the video assistant referee. Toluca scored again the second half and won 4–3;[16] Nashville finished second in the group and advanced to the knockout stage after Colorado's 4–1 loss to Toluca.[17]

The team opened the knockout round against FC Cincinnati, the leaders in the 2023 Supporters' Shield race and host of the match. After a scoreless first half, Nashville took the lead through a tap-in by Anibal Godoy but conceded a penalty kick that was converted by Brandon Vázquez. The match finished at 1–1 in regulation time and was immediately followed by a penalty shootout that Nashville won 5–4 after a save on Matt Miazga's shot.[18] The team returned home to host Mexico's Club América in the round of 16; Walker Zimmerman scored the opening goal for Nashville in the second half, which was followed by an equalizer from Diego Valdés for América. In stoppage time, América earned a penalty that Julián Quiñones converted for a 2–1 lead, but Nashville's debutant striker Sam Surridge equalized in the ninth minute to send the match to a penalty shootout.[19] Nashville manager Gary Smith substituted goalkeeper Elliot Panicco in for Joe Willis, repeating a strategy used in the round of 32 shootout. In the sixth round, a shot by Nashville defender Jack Maher was initially saved by Luis Malagón and triggered a celebration from América and several pitch invaders. A video assistant referee check determined that Malagón had illegally left the touchline before Maher had taken his shot, which necessitated a retake. Maher's retaken penalty was scored and extended the shootout, which ultimately ended with a 6–5 win for Nashville after Jonathan dos Santos missed for América and Daniel Lovitz converted.[19][20]

Nashville SC advanced to the quarterfinals and won 5–0 against Minnesota United FC, who were down to 10 players after defender D. J. Taylor was sent off with a red card in the 34th minute. The team's two first-half goals were created by Jacob Shaffelburg's crosses into the box, which found Shaq Moore and Teal Bunbury; three goals within a nine-minute span followed after half-time.[21] Goalkeeper Joe Willis left the team after the quarterfinal match due to personal reasons and was replaced as starter by Panicco.[22] Nashville then defeated CF Monterrey 2–0 in the semifinals with goals from substitutes Surridge and Picault in the second half while the team managed fatigue and injuries.[23] It was the first defeat for Monterrey against an MLS team in a knockout competition;[24] Monterrey had traveled over 7,600 miles (12,200 km) during the tournament, which the club's president complained was an unfair advantage for MLS teams.[25][3]

Inter Miami CF edit

 
Lionel Messi made his debut for Inter Miami CF in the 2023 Leagues Cup

Inter Miami CF entered MLS as an expansion team in 2020 and had yet to advance to a prior tournament final.[26] The team finished twelfth in the 2022 regular season standings and were seeded into the South 3 group.[13] Before the Leagues Cup break, Miami were at the bottom of the Eastern Conference in regular season play with 18 points in 22 matches and on an 11-match winless streak.[27] During the 2023 summer transfer window, the club signed forward Lionel Messi, midfielder Sergio Busquets, and defender Jordi Alba, all former FC Barcelona players and among the world's best in their positions;[28] Inter Miami CF also signed a trio of young South American prospects to under-22 Designated Player contracts and offloaded veteran players to keep salary costs manageable and under the cap.[29] Head coach Phil Neville was fired on June 1 and temporarily replaced by assistant Javier Morales until Gerardo "Tata" Martino joined in July.[30]

To prepare for the Leagues Cup, an additional 3,000 seats were added to DRV PNK Stadium, the temporary home of Inter Miami CF in the suburb of Fort Lauderdale.[31] Miami made their cup debut against Cruz Azul and took the lead through a Robert Taylor goal before half-time, but Uriel Antuna equalized for Cruz Azul in the 65th minute. Messi entered the match as a substitute prior to the equalizer and scored his first goal for the club—a free kick in stoppage time—to clinch a 2–1 win for Miami.[32] Inter Miami CF then won 4–0 at home against Atlanta United FC, which allowed them to clinch the top spot in their group. Messi scored the first two goals of the match, which was followed by a pair from Taylor; the duo also provided an assist on each other's goals and formed an attacking partnership for the team.[33][34]

Inter Miami CF remained at home to play against in-state rivals Orlando City SC in the round of 32 on August 2 after the match was delayed by 95 minutes due to lightning. Two goals from Messi and a converted penalty by Josef Martínez gave the home side a 3–1 victory.[35] The team advanced to the round of 16 and faced FC Dallas four days later in their first away match of the tournament, which was played with additional security guards and in front of a mixed crowd of home supporters and Messi fans.[36][37] Messi opened the scoring in the sixth minute with a strike that went to video review due to a possible offside that was ruled to have not affected the play; Dallas then equalized and took a 2–1 lead at the end of the first half with goals from Facundo Quignon and Bernard Kamungo. A third goal for Dallas was followed by a goal by Miami rookie substitute Benjamin Cremaschi and an own goal from Robert Taylor, who was tracking back on a counterattack, to make the scoreline 4–2. Messi provided an assist for Cremaschi as well as an own goal by Dallas defender Marco Farfan before scoring his second goal of the match, a free kick in the 85th minute, to close out regulation time at 4–4.[37][38] Miami won 5–3 in the shootout over five rounds, with the only missed shot from Paxton Pomykal in the second round.[39]

Miami then advanced to the quarterfinals and defeated Charlotte FC 4–0 at DRV PNK Stadium. Martínez opened the scoring in the twelfth minute with a penalty kick that was awarded for a foul on Dixon Arroyo; he was followed by Taylor's finish on a DeAndre Yedlin cross for a 2–0 lead at half-time. Charlotte defender Adilson Malanda then scored an own goal ahead of an advancing Leonardo Campana, who also provided an assist to Messi for his goal from close range.[40] In the semifinals, Inter Miami CF won 4–1 on the road to the Philadelphia Union to clinch a place in the final with three goals in the first half on their first three shots. Martínez once again scored first, in the third minute, and was followed by Messi's rolling shot from distance and a stoppage-time finish by Jordi Alba on a through-ball from Taylor.[26] Alejandro Bedoya scored a consolation goal in the 73rd minute, while Ruiz restored Miami's three-goal lead shortly before the end of the match.[41] During their six matches in the Leagues Cup, Inter Miami CF scored 21 goals—one fewer than they did in their 22 regular season matches prior to Messi's arrival.[26] Messi had scored in every Leagues Cup match and entered the final as the tournament's top goalscorer with nine goals, two ahead of Minnesota United FC's Bongokuhle Hlongwane.[26][42]

Summary of results edit

Note: In all results below, the score of the finalist is given first (H: home; A: away). All matches were decided through a penalty shootout (p) if scores were tied after regulation time.
  Nashville SC Round   Inter Miami CF
Opponent Result Group stage Opponent Result
  Colorado Rapids 2–1 (H) Matchday 1   Cruz Azul 2–1 (H)
  Toluca 3–4 (H) Matchday 2   Atlanta United FC 4–0 (H)
Bye Matchday 3 Bye
Group Central 4 runner-up

Pos Team Pld Pts
1   Toluca 2 6
2   Nashville SC 2 3
3   Colorado Rapids 2 0
Source: Leagues Cup
Final standings Group South 3 winner

Pos Team Pld Pts
1   Inter Miami CF 2 6
2   Cruz Azul 2 2
3   Atlanta United FC 2 1
Source: Leagues Cup
Opponent Result Knockout stage Opponent Result
  FC Cincinnati 1–1 (5–4 p) (A) Round of 32   Orlando City SC 3–1 (H)
  América 2–2 (6–5 p) (H) Round of 16   FC Dallas 4–4 (5–3 p) (A)
  Minnesota United FC 5–0 (H) Quarterfinals   Charlotte FC 4–0 (H)
  Monterrey 2–0 (H) Semifinals   Philadelphia Union 4–1 (A)

Venue edit

The Leagues Cup final was played at Geodis Park, a 30,000-seat stadium in Nashville, Tennessee. The stadium is the largest soccer-specific venue in the United States and home to Nashville SC, who hosted due to their higher finish in the 2022 Supporters' Shield standings.[8][43] Ticket sales for the final began with access for season ticket holders on the morning of August 16 and the general public in the afternoon.[44] By the end of the day, resale tickets on Ticketmaster and secondary markets ranged from $484 to $12,000.[45][46] On the day of the final, ticket prices ranged from $285 to $3,748 on secondary markets.[47]

Broadcasting edit

The final was broadcast worldwide in English and Spanish on MLS Season Pass, a streaming service run by Apple as part of their Apple TV+ brand.[48] The English commentary team comprised play-by-play commentator Jake Zivin, color analyst Taylor Twellman, sideline reporter Katie Witham, and a studio team led by host Maurice Edu. The Spanish team included Andrés Agulla for play-by-play, Marcelo Balboa, and Antonella González.[49] TelevisaUnivision also produced a Spanish broadcast to be aired on television in the United States by TUDN and Univision and in Mexico on Canal 5 and TUDN. This broadcast was also streamed on Vix in Mexico.[50]

Match edit

Summary edit

The Leagues Cup final was played in front of a sellout crowd of 30,109 at Geodis Park in Nashville, including several hundred Inter Miami fans who had traveled from Florida as well as other supporters of the club.[51] MLS commissioner Don Garber, Inter Miami part-owner David Beckham, and Nashville SC minority owners Giannis Antetokounmpo and Reese Witherspoon were among those in attendance.[52] Nashville head coach Gary Smith opted to use a 4–4–2 formation and give Sam Surridge his first start in place of Teal Bunbury; Gerardo Martino had an unchanged starting lineup from the semifinals, arranged in a 4–3–3.[53][54] Singer Colbie Caillat performed the U.S. national anthem prior to the match, which began at 8:15 p.m. Central Time with the temperature at 80 °F (27 °C).[1][54]

Nashville began the match with a strong defensive shape and contained pressure from Miami, but eventually conceded the opening goal to Lionel Messi in the 23rd minute. Messi dribbled around defender Walker Zimmerman and took his shot between three players to beat Elliot Panicco.[51][55] A corner kick for Nashville in the 57th minute was headed in by Fafà Picault for the equalizing goal.[51] Despite having the advantage in shots and shots on goal, Nashville was unable to take the lead as the match ended 1–1 in regulation time.[56]

In the early rounds of the shootout, only Randall Leal of Nashville and Víctor Ulloa of Miami missed their shots.[51] The deciding eleventh round was contested by the two goalkeepers: Drake Callender converted his and then saved Panicco's to win the shootout by a 10–9 scoreline.[56]

Details edit

Nashville SC  1–1  Inter Miami CF
  • Picault   57'
Report
Penalties
9–10
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Nashville SC
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Inter Miami CF
GK 30   Elliot Panicco
RB 18   Shaq Moore
CB 25   Walker Zimmerman (c)
CB 3   Lukas MacNaughton
LB 2   Daniel Lovitz
RM 19   Alex Muyl   82'
CM 6   Dax McCarty   72'
CM 20   Aníbal Godoy   54'
LM 7   Fafà Picault   72'
CF 9   Sam Surridge
CF 10   Hany Mukhtar
Substitutes:
GK 1   Joe Willis
GK 67   Ben Martino
DF 5   Jack Maher
DF 16   Laurence Wyke
DF 22   Josh Bauer
DF 23   Taylor Washington
MF 8   Randall Leal   82'
MF 26   Luke Haakenson
MF 27   Brian Anunga
MF 54   Sean Davis   72'
FW 12   Teal Bunbury
FW 14   Jacob Shaffelburg   72'
Manager:
  Gary Smith
 
GK 1   Drake Callender
RB 2   DeAndre Yedlin
CB 27   Serhiy Kryvtsov
CB 31   Kamal Miller
LB 18   Jordi Alba
DM 5   Sergio Busquets
CM 30   Benjamin Cremaschi   68'
CM 3   Dixon Arroyo   81'
RW 10   Lionel Messi (c)
CF 17   Josef Martínez   68'
LW 16   Robert Taylor   81'
Substitutes:
GK 29   CJ dos Santos
GK 99   Cole Jensen
DF 4   Christopher McVey
DF 6   Tomás Avilés
DF 20   Harvey Neville
DF 32   Noah Allen
MF 8   Diego Gómez   68'
MF 11   Facundo Farías
MF 13   Víctor Ulloa   89'   81'
MF 41   David Ruiz   81'
FW 9   Leonardo Campana   68'
FW 19   Robbie Robinson
Manager:
  Gerardo Martino

Man of the Match:
Drake Callender (Inter Miami CF)[57]

Assistant referees:
Corey Parker (United States)
Kyle Atkins (United States)
Fourth official:
Pierre-Luc Lauzière (Canada)
Video assistant referee:
Óscar Macías Romo (Mexico)
Assistant video assistant referee:
Victor Rivas (United States)

Match rules[58]

  • 90 minutes of play with no extra time.
  • Penalty shootout if scores still level.
  • Maximum of twelve named substitutes.
  • Maximum of five substitutions to be made during three windows (including half-time). Two additional substitutions are available for concussed players and do not count towards the five substitutions or three windows.

Post-match edit

As winner of the Leagues Cup final, Inter Miami CF earned $2 million in prize money and qualified directly for the round of 16 in the 2024 CONCACAF Champions Cup.[59] It was the first trophy to be won by the club.[60] Miami goalkeeper Drake Callender was named the man of the match for his saves and deciding penalty kick in the shootout. Lionel Messi was awarded the Best Player of the tournament and was also the top scorer with 10 goals; it was the seventh consecutive match that he had scored in since arriving at Inter Miami CF a month earlier.[60][61] The Leagues Cup was the 44th trophy of Messi's professional career, which set the record for most decorated player in history as he surpassed former Barcelona teammate Dani Alves.[61][62]

The two finalists met again in the CONCACAF Champions Cup round of 16 in March 2024. The first leg in Nashville was a 2–2 draw and was followed by a 3–1 home victory for Inter Miami CF, who advanced with a 5–3 aggregate score.[63]

References edit

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