2010–11 CONCACAF Champions League explained

Tourney Name:CONCACAF Champions League
Year:2010–11
Dates:July 27, 2010–April 27, 2011
Num Teams:24
Associations:10
Champion Other: Monterrey
Count:1
Second Other: Real Salt Lake
Matches:78
Goals:241
Top Scorer:
Prevseason:2009–10
Nextseason:2011–12

The 2010–11 CONCACAF Champions League was the 3rd edition of the CONCACAF Champions League under its current format, and overall the 46th edition of the premier football club competition organized by CONCACAF, the regional governing body of North America, Central America and the Caribbean. The tournament began on July 27, 2010 and ended on April 27, 2011.[1] Monterrey of Mexico won their first title, defeating Real Salt Lake of the United States 3-2 on aggregate in the final. As winners, Monterrey qualified for the 2011 FIFA Club World Cup as the CONCACAF representative.

Qualification

Twenty-four teams participated in the 2010–11 CONCACAF Champions League from the North American, Central American, and Caribbean zones.[2] Nine of the teams came from North America, twelve from Central America, and three from the Caribbean.

Teams may be disqualified and replaced if they do not have a stadium for the tournament that CONCACAF deems suitable. If a club fails to meet the standards for its home stadium, this club must find a suitable stadium in its own country. If said club fails to provide the adequate facilities, it runs the risk of being replaced.[3]

For the Central American representatives that qualify via split seasons, in nations that play a playoff to determine a national champion, the winner gains the nation's top spot, and in nations that do not, total points over both seasons, followed by other tiebreakers, determine which team gains the nation's top spot.

After having analyzed previous results, the CONCACAF Executive Committee approved a reallocation of berths compared to the previous two seasons, giving Panama one automatic place in the group stage while making both of El Salvador's qualifiers go through the preliminary round.[4]

Teams

Teams in bold qualify directly for the group stage.

AssociationClubQualifying method
North America (9 teams)
Mexico
Monterrey2009 Apertura champion
Toluca2010 Bicentenario champion
Cruz Azul2009 Apertura runner-up
Santos Laguna2010 Bicentenario runner-up
United States
Real Salt Lake2009 MLS Cup champion
Columbus Crew2009 MLS Supporters' Shield winner
Los Angeles Galaxy2009 MLS Cup runner-up
Seattle Sounders FC2009 U.S. Open Cup champion
Canada
Toronto FC2010 Canadian Championship champion
Central America (12 teams)
Honduras
Marathón2009 Apertura champion
Olimpia2010 Clausura champion
Motagua2010 Clausura runner-up1
Panama
Árabe Unido2009 Apertura champion and 2010 Clausura champion
Tauro2009 Apertura runner-up
San Francisco2010 Clausura runner-up1
Costa Rica
Brujas2009 Invierno champion
Saprissa2010 Verano champion
Guatemala
Municipal2009 Apertura champion and 2010 Clausura champion
Xelajú2010 Clausura runner-up with better aggregate record
El Salvador
FAS2009 Apertura champion
Isidro Metapán2010 Clausura champion
Caribbean (3 teams)
Puerto RicoPuerto Rico Islanders2010 CFU Club Championship champion
Trinidad and TobagoJoe Public2010 CFU Club Championship runner-up
San Juan Jabloteh2010 CFU Club Championship third place

1 Berths originally awarded to Belize (Belize Defence Force) and Nicaragua (Real Estelí), but both countries failed CONCACAF stadium requirements, so the spots vacated were awarded to Honduras (Motagua) and Panama (San Francisco) based on the performances of clubs from those countries last season.[5]

Format

Like the previous editions, the tournament featured a two-legged Preliminary Round for 16 clubs. The eight winners of the aggregate series qualified along with the eight seeded teams that earned a direct spot to enter the group stage. The clubs involved in Group Stage were placed into four groups of four with each team playing the others in its group in both home and away matches in a round-robin format. The top two teams from each group advanced to the quarterfinals of the Championship Round, which consisted of two-legged, home and away, knockout fixtures. For the two-legged ties, the away goals rule would be used, but not after a tie enters extra time, and so a tie would be decided by penalty shootout if the aggregate score is level after extra time.[6]

Teams from the same association (excluding "wildcard" teams which replace a team from another association) may not be drawn with each other in the preliminary round and Group Stage, but may be drawn with each other in the Championship Round, where the only restriction is that in the quarterfinals, a group winner was drawn with the runner-up of another group and hosted the second leg.

Group Stage
Pot Awidth = 175 Monterreywidth = 175 Tolucawidth = 175 Columbus Crewwidth = 175 Real Salt Lake
Pot B Saprissa Olimpia Municipal Árabe Unido
Preliminary round
Pot A Cruz Azul Santos Laguna Los Angeles Galaxy Seattle Sounders FC
Brujas Marathón FAS Toronto FC
Pot B Xelajú Tauro Isidro Metapán Motagua
San Francisco Puerto Rico Islanders Joe Public San Juan Jabloteh

Schedule

RoundDraw dateFirst legSecond leg
Preliminary roundPreliminaryMay 19, 2010
(New York, United States)
July 27–29, 2010August 3–5, 2010
Group StageMatchday 1August 17–19, 2010
Matchday 2August 24–26, 2010
Matchday 3September 14–16, 2010
Matchday 4September 21–23, 2010
Matchday 5September 28–30, 2010
Matchday 6October 19–21, 2010
Championship RoundQuarterfinalsNovember 1, 2010
(New York, United States)
February 22–24, 2011March 1–3, 2011
SemifinalsMarch 15–16, 2011April 5–6, 2011
FinalApril 20, 2011April 27, 2011

Preliminary round

See main article: 2010–11 CONCACAF Champions League preliminary round.

The draw for the preliminary round and the group stage was held on May 19, 2010, at the CONCACAF headquarters in New York City.[7] The first legs of the preliminary round were played July 27–29, 2010, while the second legs were played August 3–5, 2010.[1]

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Group stage

See main article: 2010–11 CONCACAF Champions League group stage. The Group Stage was played in 6 rounds during August–October 2010. The rounds are August 17–19, August 24–26, September 14–16, September 21–23, September 28–30, and October 19–21.[1]

Group D

Championship round

See main article: 2010–11 CONCACAF Champions League championship round.

Bracket

The draw for the Championship Round was made on November 1, 2010.[8] In the quarterfinals, the group winners were assured of playing the second leg at home, and were drawn against the group runners-up, with the only restriction being that they could not face the same team that it played in the group stage (and thus they may face a team from the same association).

Quarterfinals

The first legs of the quarterfinals were played February 22–24, 2011, and the second legs were played March 1–3, 2011.[1]

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Semifinals

The first legs of the semifinals were played March 15–16, 2011, and the second legs were played April 5–6, 2011.[1]

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Final

See main article: 2011 CONCACAF Champions League final.

The first leg of the Final was played April 20, 2011, and the second leg was played April 27, 2011.[1]

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CONCACAF Champions League
2010–11 champion
Monterrey
First title

Top goalscorers

PosNameClubGoals
align=center 1 Javier Orozco Cruz Azul11
2 Álvaro Saborío Real Salt Lake8
Emanuel Villa Cruz Azul
align=center 4 Héctor Mancilla Tolucaalign=center 6
5 José María Cárdenas Santos Laguna5
Juan Cuevas Toluca
Roger Rojas Olimpia
8 Christian Giménez Cruz Azul4
Nicholas Addlery Puerto Rico Islanders
Claudio Cardozo Marathón
Aldo de Nigris Monterrey
David Foley Puerto Rico Islanders
Guillermo Ramírez Municipal
Humberto Suazo Monterrey

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2010-2011 CONCACAF Champions League Schedule . PDF . CONCACAF . 2010-04-07 . 2010-06-09 . https://web.archive.org/web/20100601231735/http://www.concacaf.com/staticFiles/b4/4c/0%2C%2C12813~150708%2C00.pdf . 2010-06-01 . dead.
  2. Web site: Qualifying 2010/11 . May 19, 2010 . . https://web.archive.org/web/20101031090737/http://www.concacafchampions.com/page/CL/201011/0,,12856,00.html . 2010-10-31 . dead.
  3. News: CONCACAF Executive Committee tightens stadium standards for next year’s Champions League . CONCACAF Official site . 2008-11-07 . 2008-11-12 . dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20090107121009/http://www.concacaf.com/view_article.aspx?id=4514 . 2009-01-07 .
  4. Web site: CONCACAF Executive Committee alters youth championships qualifying format. CONCACAF. 2009-11-23. 2009-11-24. https://web.archive.org/web/20091127053619/http://www.concacaf.com/page/ConfederationDetail/0,,12813~1884059,00.html. 2009-11-27. dead.
  5. Web site: Motagua, San Francisco get CCL berths. CONCACAF.com. May 18, 2010. 2010-05-19. https://web.archive.org/web/20110610223334/http://www.concacaf.com/page/CL/NewsDetail/0,,12813~2055236,00.html. 2011-06-10. dead.
  6. Web site: CONCACAF Champions League Regulations 2010/2011 . 2011-02-21 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110211085702/http://www.concacaf.com/staticFiles/e7/52/0,,12813~152295,00.pdf . 2011-02-11 . dead.
  7. Web site: Cruz Azul gets San Francisco for CCL Preliminary Round. CONCACAF.com. May 19, 2010. 2010-05-20. https://web.archive.org/web/20100522055031/http://www.concacaf.com/page/CL/NewsDetail/0,,12813~2055806,00.html. 2010-05-22. dead.
  8. Web site: Domestic rivalries highlight CCL quarterfinals. CONCACAF.com. November 1, 2010. 2010-11-02. https://web.archive.org/web/20101104212421/http://www.concacaf.com/page/CL/NewsDetail/0,,12813~2204331,00.html. 2010-11-04. dead.