• Loading stock data...
Wednesday, July 30, 2025
Tuned In returns to NYC on September 16. Hear from the biggest names in sports media. Click here to get your spot

Gold Cup Is Complicated for USMNT—but U.S. Soccer Has Its Eyes on Another Prize

The lean USMNT roster and packed soccer calendar may make filling stadiums a difficult proposition. Still, U.S. Soccer isn’t worried, especially with the 2026 World Cup on the way.

Jun 10, 2025; Nashville, Tennessee, USA; United States head coach Mauricio Pochettino stands during the anthem against the Switzerland during the first at Geodis Park
Steve Roberts/Imagn Images
LeBron James
Exclusive

LeBron Boat Meeting in France With Jokić Agent Was About New League

The power trio was discussing a new global basketball league.
Read Now
July 30, 2025 |

The United States men’s national team is playing in a major international tournament this summer, but it isn’t on the radar of many fans outside of the bleeding-heart contingent. The hype surrounding the Concacaf Gold Cup has been muted—and also swallowed whole by a historically bloated soccer calendar.

As the USMNT’s biggest regional competition, it’s an important event that the U.S. has won seven times, last lifting the trophy in 2021. The tournament, played every other year, takes place from June 14 to July 6 across 13 stadiums in the U.S. and one in Vancouver.

Sixteen Concacaf member nations are scheduled to compete across 31 matches. In the past, the Gold Cup has roped in casual viewers alongside the team’s devotees. But this year, the marketplace is crowded; the USMNT’s stars are sitting out; and the U.S. has little on the line, having already qualified for the men’s 2026 FIFA World Cup as host. 

The Gold Cup takes place amid a full slate of soccer competitions crisscrossing the country, including Major League Soccer’s regular season and the Premier League Summer Series. The biggest rival is the Club World Cup—featuring the star power of Real Madrid, Juventus, and Chelsea—which is kicking off the same weekend on the U.S. East Coast. Inter Miami will be there, too—and Club World Cup tickets have fallen so sharply, fans can see Lionel Messi for $4. All this soccer is swarming North America mere weeks after a grueling nine-month campaign ended for European clubs in May. 

Soccer fans’ attention—and their dollars—are being pulled in all directions.

The fixture congestion complicates U.S. Soccer’s quest to grab the spotlight. “It’s going to be incredibly hard for the U.S. to sell this competition,” says Nick Watanabe, a professor of sports and entertainment management at the University of South Carolina. Plus, the fact that the USMNT plays the event every other year means the novelty of the biannual Gold Cup has worn thin, he tells Front Office Sports: “Because we play it so often, it makes it hard to sell, especially when you have 100 [other] matches packed into a month.” 

Jul 16, 2023; Inglewood, California, USA; The Gold Cup trophy pictured at SoFi Stadium.
Gary A. Vasquez/Imagn Images

It doesn’t help that new USMNT head coach Mauricio Pochettino is working with a threadbare roster.

Fullback Antonee Robinson underwent knee surgery last month after his exertions with Fulham in the Premier League; midfielder Gio Reyna of Borussia Dortmund and the Juventus duo of forward Tim Weah and midfielder Weston McKennie are playing in the Club World Cup; AC Milan midfielder Yunus Musah is also missing play for personal reasons. And then there’s Christian Pulisic—for some viewers, the only recognizable name. The USMNT’s crown prince and AC Milan forward is controversially sitting out the Gold Cup, much to the dismay and anger of pundits like Landon Donovan, who recently ripped Pulisic’s decision to rest after two injury-laden seasons in Italy. 

These games, absent the draw of the USMNT’s best players, will be played in colossal arenas. The Gold Cup’s venues are largely NFL mega-stadiums, including the 80,000-seat AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas. Tickets are still available, and according to ticketing marketplace TickPick, average prices for USMNT matches have fallen around $30 throughout the past month. The U.S. hasn’t done itself any favors in the lead-up to the tournament kickoff: It dropped its table-setter friendly match against Switzerland 4–0. The ongoing back-and-forth about Pulisic’s absence is drawing negative attention as well.

The timing for anemic crowds doesn’t help the hype machine for the U.S. as it prepares to host the World Cup. It’s not lost on some USMNT fans, who have griped about poor attendance at past tournaments. 

Yet while it’s true that the Gold Cup is a dress rehearsal for the USMNT ahead of the sport’s biggest spectacle—and the U.S. cares about the result—the organization isn’t treating the tournament with a lot of promotional urgency, says a source inside U.S. Soccer, who spoke to FOS on the condition of anonymity. 

The bulk of promotion is paid for and coordinated by Concacaf, and although U.S. Soccer has drawn attention to the tournament on social media and made players and coaches available for interviews, they haven’t made an overwhelming publicity push. The source adds they also aren’t worried that poor attendance could hamper their growth, especially in the lead-up to the World Cup.

In fact, spirits around the financials of U.S. Soccer are just fine, according to the source.

Business is, indeed, humming along. U.S. Soccer began managing its own commercial rights in 2023, and quickly secured a raft of A-list sponsors such as Coca-Cola, Nike, and Visa. Last year, the nonprofit netted $196 million in operating revenue, though it still recorded $190 million in expenses. In the grand scheme, a $6 million profit is not much, but it was the first time U.S. Soccer posted a profit since 2018, and it was largely driven through $102 million in sponsorship revenue, according to U.S. Soccer’s Form 990. Ahead of the Gold Cup, the organization also announced a multiyear sponsorship with American Airlines to produce social content from Gold Cup highlights to drum up interest in the World Cup.

It is expecting the World Cup to be a gold mine in terms of attendance, commercial rights, and media deals—making this Concacaf event just a whisper in the larger financial picture for the organization. Even if the Gold Cup’s reception is ultimately lukewarm and the national team disappoints, U.S. Soccer has its eyes on another prize, anyway. 

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

LeBron James
exclusive

LeBron Boat Meeting in France With Jokić Agent Was About New League

The power trio was discussing a new global basketball league.

Shannon Sharpe Out at ESPN Following Rape Suit Settlement

He’s been off-air since April, planning to return for the NFL season.

Ex-NBPA Director Defends Two-Apron System: ‘There’s No Hard Cap’

The NBA’s two-apron system started in the 2023–24 season.

How Sports Leagues Are Responding to NFL Headquarters Shooting

The building housing the NFL headquarters was barricaded and closed Tuesday.

Featured Today

Las Vegas sign

College Sports Embracing Vegas After Years of Cold Shoulder

The Big Ten became the latest newcomer to Sin City.
2000, Jupiter, FL, USA; FILE PHOTO; Montreal Expos pitcher Hideki Irabu in action on the mound against the New York Mets at Roger Dean Stadium during Spring Training
July 28, 2025

Dead Sports Franchises Are Alive and Well on Twitter

The Expos, Sonics, and Whalers have active social media accounts.
Limited Hype
July 27, 2025

Sneaker Reselling Was Once Easy Money. Success Is Now Complicated

Vendors need to evolve what they’re selling and how they do it.
HAPPY GILMORE 2. BTS - (L to R) Adam Sandler as Happy Gilmore and Rory McIlroy as himself on the set of Happy Gilmore2.
July 26, 2025

‘Cool As Hell’: How ‘Happy Gilmore 2’ Hooked Golf’s Top Stars

The process was “cool as hell,” Adam Sandler tells FOS.

Mayor Calls Commanders RFK Stadium Deal ‘a BFD’ for D.C.’s Future

The NFL team makes a series of additional commitments.
July 29, 2025

Wrexham’s Ambition Replaces Fan Favorites With Pricey Additions

Wrexham has already added six new players.
July 30, 2025

Trey Hendrickson Ends $450K Holdout Without New Bengals Deal

The defensive end is seeking a raise on his $16 million 2025 salary.
Sponsored

Game On: Portfolio Players Stories, Brought to You by E*TRADE from Morgan Stanley

Dealmaker Jeffrey Kaplan maps the evolution of sports as an asset class
July 29, 2025

Mario Lemieux Trying to Reacquire Penguins 4 Years After Selling

The former NHL great looks to return to team ownership.
Jun 10, 2025; College Park, Georgia, USA; Indiana Fever injured guard Caitlin Clark (22) follows the action from the bench against the Atlanta Dream during the second half at Gateway Center Arena at College Park.
July 24, 2025

Caitlin Clark’s Injury Not Worse, but Status for Chicago, Dallas Unclear

Clark has been out since suffering a groin injury on July 15.
Jul 9, 2025; Uncasville, Connecticut, USA; Connecticut Sun center Tina Charles (31) hugs guard Leila Lacan (47) after a play against the Seattle Storm in the second half at Mohegan Sun Arena.
July 24, 2025

Sun Will Play in Connecticut Next Year Amid Relocation Rumors

The team told season-ticket holders they’ll stay for 2026.
July 23, 2025

Packers Hit Record $719M in Revenue, Riding NFL’s Growth Wave

The NFL team’s annual revenue and operating profit both grow strongly.