2019 CONCACAF League explained

Tourney Name:CONCACAF League
Year:2019
Other Titles:2019 Scotiabank CONCACAF League
Num Teams:22
Associations:11
Champion Other: Saprissa
Count:1
Second Other: Motagua
Matches:42
Goals:85
Top Scorer: Johan Venegas
(7 goals)
Player: Johan Venegas
Young Player: Manfred Ugalde
Goalkeeper: Jonathan Rougier
Fair Play: Saprissa
Prevseason:2018
Nextseason:2020

The 2019 CONCACAF League (officially the 2019 Scotiabank CONCACAF League for sponsorship purposes) was the third edition of the CONCACAF League, a football club competition organized by CONCACAF, the regional governing body of North America, Central America, and the Caribbean.[1]

The tournament was expanded from 16 to 22 teams for the 2019 edition, with the addition of a preliminary round. The six new entrants were five teams from Central America, which had previously directly qualified for the CONCACAF Champions League, and a team from Canada playing in the Canadian Premier League, bringing the total number of teams playing in the CONCACAF League/Champions League from 31 to 32. Moreover, a total of six teams now qualified from the CONCACAF League to the CONCACAF Champions League, meaning that the winners of the 2019 CONCACAF League and the next best five teams qualified for the 2020 CONCACAF Champions League.[2] [3]

Saprissa defeated Motagua in the final to win their first CONCACAF League. Herediano were the title holders, but were eliminated by Waterhouse in the Round of 16.

Qualification

A total of 22 teams participated in the CONCACAF League:

1 team (from one association)

18 teams (from seven associations)

3 teams (from two or three associations)

Therefore, teams from either 10 or 11 out of the 41 CONCACAF member associations could participate in the CONCACAF League.

North America

The one berth for the North American Zone (NAFU) was allocated to the Canadian Soccer Association through the Canadian Premier League. As the inaugural 2019 Canadian Premier League season was not scheduled to finish by the start of the 2019 CONCACAF League, the Canadian CONCACAF League berth for this season was decided by the winners of the home and away matches in the Canadian Premier League spring season between FC Edmonton, Forge FC, and Valour FC, the three "inaugural teams" of the Canadian Premier League.[4] They were the second Canadian representative included in CONCACAF competitions, besides the Canadian Championship champions which qualified for the CONCACAF Champions League. In future seasons, the previous year's Canadian Premier League champions would qualify for the CONCACAF League.[5]

Central America

The 18 berths for the Central American Football Union (UNCAF), which consisted of seven member associations, were allocated as follows: three berths for each of Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Panama, two berths for Nicaragua, and one berth for Belize.

All of the leagues of Central America employed a split season with two tournaments in one season, so the following teams qualified for the CONCACAF League:

If teams from any Central American associations were excluded, they were replaced by teams from other Central American associations, with the associations chosen based on results from previous CONCACAF League and CONCACAF Champions League tournaments.[6]

Caribbean

The three berths for the Caribbean Football Union (CFU), which consisted of 31 member associations, were allocated via the CONCACAF Caribbean Club Championship and CONCACAF Caribbean Club Shield, the first-tier and second-tier subcontinental Caribbean club tournaments. Since 2018, the CONCACAF Caribbean Club Championship was open to teams from professional leagues, where they could qualify as champions or runners-up of their respective association's league in the previous season, while the CONCACAF Caribbean Club Shield was open to teams from non-professional leagues, where they could qualify as champions of their respective association's league in the previous season.[7]

Besides the champions of the CONCACAF Caribbean Club Championship which qualified for the CONCACAF Champions League, the runners-up and third-placed team of the CONCACAF Caribbean Club Championship, and the winners of a playoff between the fourth-placed team of the CONCACAF Caribbean Club Championship and the champions of the CONCACAF Caribbean Club Shield, qualified for the CONCACAF League. For the champions of the CONCACAF Caribbean Club Shield to be eligible for the playoff, they had to comply with the minimum CONCACAF Club Licensing requirements for the CONCACAF League.[8]

Teams

The following 22 teams (from eleven associations) qualify for the tournament.

Qualified teams from North America (1 team: entering in preliminary round)
width=15%Associationwidth=14%Teamwidth=11%Entry roundwidth=40%Qualifying methodwidth=7%width=13%Previous best
Forge FCPreliminary round2019 Canadian CONCACAF League series winners1stDebut
Qualified teams from Central America (18 teams: 9 entering in round of 16, 9 entering in preliminary round)
width=15%Associationwidth=14%Teamwidth=11%Entry roundwidth=40%Qualifying methodwidth=7%width=13%Previous best
San CarlosRound of 16Champions with better 2018–19 aggregate record (2019 Clausura)1stDebut
HeredianoRound of 16Champions with worse 2018–19 aggregate record (2018 Apertura)2nd Champions
SaprissaPreliminary roundNon-champions with best 2018–19 aggregate record1stDebut
MotaguaRound of 162018 Apertura and 2019 Clausura champions2nd Runners-up
OlimpiaRound of 162018 Apertura and 2019 Clausura runners-up2nd Champions
MarathónPreliminary roundSemi-finalists with best 2018–19 aggregate record (2019 Clausura)1stDebut
TauroRound of 16Champions with better 2018–19 aggregate record (2018 Apertura)2nd Semi-finals
IndependienteRound of 16Champions with worse 2018–19 aggregate record (2019 Clausura)1stDebut
San FranciscoPreliminary roundRunners-up with better 2018–19 aggregate record (2019 Clausura)1stDebut
ÁguilaRound of 16Champions with better 2018–19 aggregate record (2019 Clausura)2nd Quarter-finals
Santa TeclaPreliminary roundChampions with worse 2018–19 aggregate record (2018 Apertura)2nd Round of 16
AlianzaPreliminary round2018 Apertura and 2019 Clausura runners-up2nd Quarter-finals
GuastatoyaChampions with better 2018–19 aggregate record (2018 Apertura)1stDebut
Antigua GFCPreliminary roundChampions with worse 2018–19 aggregate record (2019 Clausura)1stDebut
ComunicacionesPreliminary roundRunners-up with better 2018–19 aggregate record (2018 Apertura)1stDebut
ManaguaRound of 16Champions with better 2018–19 aggregate record (2018 Apertura)1stDebut
Real EstelíPreliminary roundChampions with worse 2018–19 aggregate record (2019 Clausura)2nd Round of 16
Belmopan BanditsPreliminary roundChampions with better 2018–19 aggregate record (2018 Opening)3rd Round of 16
Qualified teams from Caribbean (3 teams: 1 entering in round of 16, 2 entering in preliminary round)
width=15%Associationwidth=14%Teamwidth=11%Entry roundwidth=40%Qualifying methodwidth=7%width=13%Previous best
WaterhouseRound of 162019 CONCACAF Caribbean Club Championship runners-up1stDebut
CapoisePreliminary round2019 CONCACAF Caribbean Club Championship third place1stDebut
RobinhoodPreliminary round2019 Caribbean CONCACAF League playoff winners1stDebut
Notes

Draw

The draw for the 2019 CONCACAF League was held on 30 May 2019, at 20:00 Eastern Time (18:00 local time), at the Grand Tikal Futura Hotel in Guatemala City, Guatemala.[9] [10] [11]

The draw determined each tie in the preliminary round (numbered 1 through 6) between a team from Pot 1 and a team from Pot 2, each containing six teams. The "Bracket Position Pots" (Pot A and Pot B) contained the bracket positions numbered 1 through 6 corresponding to each tie. The teams from Pot 1 were assigned a bracket position from Pot A and the teams from Pot 2 were assigned a bracket position from Pot B. Teams from the same association could not be drawn against each other in the preliminary round except for "wildcard" teams which replaced a team from another association.

The draw also determined each tie in the round of 16 (numbered 1 through 8) between a team from Pot 3 and a team from Pot 4, each containing eight teams, with the six preliminary round winners, whose identity was not known at the time of the draw, in Pot 4. The "Bracket Position Pots" (Pot A and Pot B) contained the bracket positions numbered 1 through 8 corresponding to each tie. The teams from Pot 3 were assigned a bracket position from Pot A and the teams from Pot 4 were assigned a bracket position from Pot B.

The seeding of teams was based on the CONCACAF Club Index. The CONCACAF Club Index, instead of ranking each team, was based on the on-field performance of the teams that had occupied the respective qualifying slots in the previous five editions of the CONCACAF League and CONCACAF Champions League. To determine the total points awarded to a slot in any single edition of the CONCACAF League or CONCACAF Champions League, CONCACAF used the following formula:

Points perParticipationWinDrawStage advancedChampions
CONCACAF Champions League 43112
CONCACAF League 2310.51

Teams qualified for the CONCACAF League based on criteria set by their association (e.g., tournament champions, runners-up, cup champions), resulting in an assigned slot (e.g., CRC1, CRC2) for each team.

The 22 teams were distributed in the pots as follows:[12]

Teams in preliminary round draw
PotRankSlot2014–15 CCL2015–16 CCL2016–17 CCL2017 CL or
2018 CCL
2018 CL or
2019 CCL
TotalTeam
Pot 1132.5 Santa Tecla
200026 San Francisco
300023.5 Marathón
423.5 Capoise
50022 Antigua GFC
600021.5 Saprissa
Pot 27016 Belmopan Bandits
800015 Alianza
900011.5 Real Estelí
100007 Robinhood
11000000 Comunicaciones
12000000 Forge FC
Teams in round of 16 draw
PotRankSlot2014–15 CCL2015–16 CCL2016–17 CCL2017 CL or
2018 CCL
2018 CL or
2019 CCL
TotalTeam
Pot 3154 Tauro
249 Herediano
347.5 Independiente
445 Motagua
542 San Carlos
635 Olimpia
732 Águila
8032 Guastatoya
Pot 4929 Waterhouse
1026.5 Managua
11Winner preliminary round 1
12Winner preliminary round 2
13Winner preliminary round 3
14Winner preliminary round 4
15Winner preliminary round 5
16Winner preliminary round 6
Notes

Format

In the CONCACAF League, the 22 teams played a single-elimination tournament. Each tie was played on a home-and-away two-legged basis.

Schedule

The schedule of the competition was as follows.

RoundFirst legSecond leg
Preliminary round30 July – 1 August 20196–8 August 2019
Round of 1620–22 August 201927–29 August 2019
Quarter-finals24–26 September 20191–3 October 2019
Semi-finals24 October 201931 October 2019
Final7 November 201926 November 2019

Times are Eastern Time, as listed by CONCACAF (local times are in parentheses):[13]

Preliminary round

In the preliminary round, the matchups were decided by draw: PR-1 through PR-6. The teams from Pot 1 in the draw hosted the second leg.

Summary

The first legs were played on 30 July – 1 August, and the second legs were played on 6–8 August 2019.[14]

|}

Matches

Alianza won 6–1 on aggregate.----1–1 on aggregate. Robinhood won on away goals.----Saprissa won 6–2 on aggregate.----Forge FC won 2–1 on aggregate.----Comunicaciones won 3–2 on aggregate.----2–2 on aggregate. Santa Tecla won on away goals.

Round of 16

In the round of 16, the matchups were decided by draw: R16-1 through R16-8. The teams from Pot 3 in the draw hosted the second leg.

Summary

The first legs were played on 20–22 August, and the second legs were played on 27–29 August 2019.[15]

|}

Matches

Motagua won 3–2 on aggregate.----2–2 on aggregate. Waterhouse won 7–6 on penalties.----0–0 on aggregate. San Carlos won 4–2 on penalties.----Alianza won 2–1 on aggregate.----Independiente won 3–2 on aggregate.----Saprissa won 2–1 on aggregate.----Comunicaciones won 2–1 on aggregate.----Olimpia won 4–2 on aggregate.

Quarter-finals

In the quarter-finals, the matchups were determined as follows:

The winners of round of 16 matchups 1, 3, 5, 7 hosted the second leg.

Summary

The first legs were played on 24–26 September, and the second legs were played on 1–3 October 2019.[16]

|}

Matches

Motagua won 2–0 on aggregate.----Alianza won 2–1 on aggregate.----Saprissa won 4–2 on aggregate.----Olimpia won 2–0 on aggregate.

Semi-finals

In the semi-finals, the matchups were determined as follows:

The semi-finalists in each tie which had the better performance in previous rounds (excluding preliminary round) hosted the second leg.

Summary

The first legs were played on 24 October, and the second legs were played on 31 October 2019.[17]

|}

Matches

Motagua won 4–1 on aggregate.----Saprissa won 4–3 on aggregate.

Final

See main article: 2019 CONCACAF League Final. In the final (Winner SF1 vs. Winner SF2), the finalists which had the better performance in previous rounds (excluding preliminary round) hosted the second leg.

Summary

The first leg was played on 7 November, and the second leg was played on 26 November 2019.[18]

|}

Matches

Saprissa won 1–0 on aggregate.

Top goalscorers

RankPlayerTeamGoalsBy round
    
1 Johan Venegas Saprissa711311
2 Raúl Peñaranda Alianza41111
Manfred Ugalde Saprissa211
4 Marvin Angulo Saprissa22
Jorge Benguché Olimpia2
David Choinière Forge FC11
José Fajardo Independiente11
Gerardo Gordillo Comunicaciones11
Marvin Monterrosa Alianza11
Juan Montes Motagua11

Qualification to CONCACAF Champions League

Starting from the round of 16, teams were ranked based on their results (excluding preliminary round) using the following criteria (Regulations II, Article I):[3]

  1. Points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss, except that teams advancing via a penalty shootout were considered to have won the match and thus earned 3 points);
  2. Goal difference
  1. Goals scored;
  2. Away goals scored;
  3. Wins;
  4. Away wins;
  5. Disciplinary points (1 point for yellow card, 3 points for indirect red card, 4 points for direct red card, 5 points for yellow card and direct red card);
  6. Drawing of lots

Based on the ranking, the top six teams, i.e., champions, runners-up, both losing semi-finalists, and best two losing quarter-finalists, qualified for the 2020 CONCACAF Champions League.[17]

Awards

The following awards were given at the conclusion of the tournament:[19]

AwardPlayerTeam
Golden Ball Johan Venegas Saprissa
Golden Boot Johan Venegas Saprissa
Golden Glove Jonathan Rougier Motagua
Best Young Player Manfred Ugalde Saprissa
Fair Play Award Saprissa

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Details revealed for newly launched Scotiabank CONCACAF League. CONCACAF League. 8 May 2017. 1 August 2018. 17 June 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20190617154846/https://www.concacafleague.com/en/league-news-manual/details-revealed-for-newly-launched-scotiabank-concacaf-league. dead.
  2. Web site: Concacaf Announces Scotiabank Concacaf League Expansion . www.concacafleague.com . 11 February 2019 . en . 11 February 2019 . 23 June 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190623152057/https://www.concacafleague.com/en/article/concacaf-announces-scotiabank-concacaf-league-expansion . dead .
  3. Web site: Scotiabank CONCACAF League 2019 Regulations. CONCACAF. 3 June 2019. 3 June 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20190603082931/https://res.cloudinary.com/concacaf-production/image/upload/v1559260706/concacafleague-prod/assets/2019_Concacaf_League_Regulations-_ENG_1.pdf. dead.
  4. Web site: Canada Soccer continues to provide expanded international opportunities with two spots on the path to Scotiabank Concacaf Champions League. Canadian Soccer Association. 12 February 2019. 13 February 2019. 27 April 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20190427011139/https://canadasoccer.com/canada-soccer-continues-to-provide-expanded-international-opportunities-with-two-spots-on-the-path-to-scotiabank-concacaf-champions-league-p162045. dead.
  5. Web site: A guide to the format for the 2019 season. Canadian Premier League. 25 April 2019.
  6. Web site: Stage Set for Miami Draw for Second Edition of the Scotiabank Concacaf League. Scotiabank CONCACAF League. 18 May 2018. 1 August 2018. 12 October 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20191012172029/https://www.concacafleague.com/en/article/stage-set-for-miami-draw-for-second-edition-of-the-scotiabank-concacaf-league. dead.
  7. Web site: CONCACAF Announces Expanded CONCACAF Caribbean Club Championship for 2018. 15 December 2017. CONCACAF.
  8. Web site: Dominican Republic Selected to Host Inaugural CONCACAF Caribbean Club Shield. CONCACAF.com. 16 February 2018.
  9. Web site: 2019 Scotiabank Concacaf League Draw to Take Place on May 30. CONCACAF. 23 May 2019.
  10. Web site: Official Draw – 2019 Scotiabank Concacaf League. CONCACAF. 24 May 2019.
  11. Web site: Draw Delivers Matchups for the 2019 Scotiabank Concacaf League. CONCACAF. 31 May 2019.
  12. Web site: CONCACAF Club Index 2019. CONCACAF.
  13. Web site: CONCACAF League 2019 Schedule. CONCACAF.
  14. Web site: Schedule Confirmed for the Preliminary and Round of 16 Matches of the 2019 Scotiabank Concacaf League. CONCACAF League. 10 June 2019.
  15. Web site: 2019 Scotiabank Concacaf League Round of 16 Matchups and Schedule Confirmed. CONCACAF League. 9 August 2019.
  16. Web site: 2019 Scotiabank Concacaf League Quarterfinal Matchups and Schedule Confirmed. CONCACAF League. 30 August 2019. 31 August 2019. 31 August 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20190831174946/https://www.concacafleague.com/en/article/2019-scotiabank-concacaf-league-quarterfinal-matchups-and-schedule-confirmed. dead.
  17. Web site: 2019 Scotiabank Concacaf League Semifinal Matchups and Schedule Confirmed. CONCACAF League. 4 October 2019.
  18. Web site: 2019 Scotiabank Concacaf League Final Set. CONCACAF League. 1 November 2019.
  19. Web site: TSG announces the 2019 Scotiabank Concacaf League individual awards . concacafleague.com . Concacaf . 27 November 2019 . 27 November 2019.