Costa Rica at the CONCACAF Gold Cup explained

The CONCACAF Gold Cup is North America's major tournament in senior men's football and determines the continental champion. Until 1989, the tournament was known as CONCACAF Championship. It is currently held every two years. From 1996 to 2005, nations from other confederations have regularly joined the tournament as invitees. In earlier editions, the continental championship was held in different countries, but since the inception of the Gold Cup in 1991, the United States are constant hosts or co-hosts.

From 1973 to 1989, the tournament doubled as the confederation's World Cup qualification. CONCACAF's representative team at the FIFA Confederations Cup was decided by a play-off between the winners of the last two tournament editions in 2015 via the CONCACAF Cup, but was then discontinued along with the Confederations Cup.

Since the inaugural tournament in 1963, the Gold Cup was held 27 times and has been won by seven different nations, most often by Mexico (12 titles).

Costa Rica have won the inaugural CONCACAF Championship in 1963 and two more in 1969 and 1989. They are the third-most successful team behind CONCACAF's "big two", Mexico and the United States, both in terms of number of titles and ranking in the all-time table. Since 2000, they have reached the knockout stage eleven times in a row. Since the inception of the CONCACAF Gold Cup in 1991, Costa Rica only reached the final once, but were beaten 2–0 by the United States in 2002.

Overall record

CONCACAF Championship & Gold Cup record width=1% rowspan="30"Qualification record
YearResultPositionSquad
1963Champions1st6510142SquadQualified automatically
1965Third place3rd5221114SquadAutomatically entered
1967Did not enterDid not enter
1969Champions1st5410132SquadQualified as hosts
1971Third place3rd521265SquadQualified as defending champions
1973Did not qualify2 0 1 14 5
19776 1 4 1 8 6
19818 1 4 36 10
1985Third place3rd8251108Squad510459
1989Champions1st8512106SquadQualified automatically
1991Fourth place4th510459SquadQualified as defending champions
1993Third place3rd513165Squad5 401112
1996Did not qualify41 1 2 5 6
1998Group stage5th210184Squad5 3 2 0 123
2000Quarter-finals6th302156Squad5 3 0 2 13 3
2002Runners-up2nd531185Squad5 22 1 8 5
2003Fourth place4th5203108Squad5 4 1 0 5 1
2005Quarter-finals6th421164Squad4 3 1 0 82
20077th411234Squad4 2 1 1 6 3
2009Semi-finals4th5221106Squad4 3 1 0 9 1
2011Quarter-finals5th412186Squad4 1 2 15 4
20135th420242Squad5 4 1 0 6 1
20157th403134Squad3 2 1 0 7 3
2017Semi-finals4th531163Squad5 1 3 1 4 2
2019Quarter-finals5th421184SquadQualified automatically
20215th430164Squad413043
20237th411278Squad420244
Total3 Titles22/271044529301671098238281612564

Winning tournaments

El Salvador 1963

Squad

As follows.[1] Head coach: Alfredo Piedra

First round

width=30Rankwidth=165 style="text-align:left;"Teamwidth=20Ptswidth=20Pldwidth=20Wwidth=20D*width=20Lwidth=20GFwidth=20GAwidth=20GD
153210707
243201431
333111927
403003116−15
Results

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Final round

width=30Rankwidth=165 style="text-align:left;"Teamwidth=20Ptswidth=20Pldwidth=20Wwidth=20D*width=20Lwidth=20GFwidth=20GAwidth=20GD
163300725
243201761
323102651
40300329−7

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Costa Rica 1969

In 1969, Costa Rica hosted the continental championship for their first and only time. The six qualified teams played each other once in a single group. Costa Rica won their first four matches, but were only one point ahead of Guatemala, which they faced directly in the last match. A 1–1 draw secured them the tournament victory in front of the home crowd.

Final round

width=30RankTeamwidth=20Ptswidth=20Pldwidth=20Wwidth=20D*width=20Lwidth=20GFwidth=20GAwidth=20GD
19541013211
2853201028
355212912−3
44512245−1
535113412−8
615014310−7
----------------

1989 CONCACAF Championship

In the qualification for the tournament, Costa Rica were about to face the favored team from Mexico. However, before the matches were played, Mexico was disqualified and Costa Rica given a bye to the tournament stage.

In a group of five teams, home and away matches were played against each opponent. When Costa Rica were done with their eight matches in July, the United States still had four matches ahead of them, and were only trailing behind leaders Costa Rica by six points and three goals. However, the US team ended up drawing twice and only won the other two matches by one goal each. With that, Costa Rica won the tournament on account of better goal difference, four months after their own last match.

Final round

width=165width=25width=25width=25*width=25width=25width=25width=25width=25
8512106+411
843163+311
833275+29
611447−33
602428−62
width=165 
1–02–11–01–0
2–4X–X0–00–1
1–0X–X0–10–0
1–12–02–10–1
1–00–02–11–1

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See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Costa Rica wins 1963 NORCECA title. https://web.archive.org/web/20120621061058/http://www.concacaf.com/articles/20120406/costa-rica-wins-1963-norceca-title_2304746_2735454. dead. June 21, 2012. August 15, 2018.