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2000 U.S. Cup


The 2000 Nike United States Cup (U.S. Cup), a Nike-sponsored, United States Soccer Federation (USSF)-organized international football tournament, took place in June 2000. It was the seventh and last U.S. Cup in the series, which began in 1992.

2000 U.S. Cup
Genresporting event
Date(s)June
VenueRFK Stadium
Location(s)Washington, DC
CountryU.S.
ParticipantsUnited States, South Africa, Mexico, Ireland

The four teams in the competition were the United States team, Ireland, South Africa and Mexico. Of the three teams invited, Ireland was playing its third cup, Mexico its fifth (plus one U.S. Women's Cup) and South Africa its first. Ireland played in the inaugural cup in 1992 while Mexico won three straight Cups before the 2000 tournament. South Africa was the second African team to compete, after Nigeria in 1995.

Pre-tournament controversy edit

The USSF had deliberately scheduled the 2000 U.S. Cup to fall during the 2000 European Championship. USSF hoped to attract two European nations from the pool of countries that failed to qualify for the Euro Cup. Once Euro Cup qualifications determined the final competitors, the USSF invited Ireland, Russia and Scotland, but only Ireland accepted the offer. The USSF then invited South Africa, an African Cup semi-finalist six months earlier. However, South Africa elected to use the U.S. Cup to give several younger players international experience and therefore did not bring its full senior team. While both the lack of European participation and South Africa's decision on player selection disappointed USSF, these paled in comparison to the controversy surrounding Mexico's participation.

After the 1999 U.S. Cup, USSF had negotiated a three-year contract with the Mexican Soccer Federation, obliging Mexico to send its full international team to the next three U.S. Cups. By the time the 2000 Cup was staged, three major developments threatened Mexico's participation. First, in May 2000 Alberto de la Torre became the new Mexican Football Association president. He took control of a federation which had just failed to qualify for the Summer Olympics and had lost badly at the Gold Cup. He quickly fired Hugo Enrique Kiese, chief of the national team commission and the official most responsible for Mexico's three-year contract with USSF. De la Torre was publicly critical of both Kiese and the U.S. Cup contract. To make matters worse, the Mexican League had also extended its season due to weathered out games. This meant that many of the top Mexican players would still be in the post-season during the tournament. Finally, FIFA had pressured CONCACAF to alter its World Cup qualification schedule, making the games earlier than anticipated. In fact, the United States and Mexican teams would leave the U.S. Cup and go immediately into preparation for those games. This meant that Mexican players, coming from their domestic league schedule, would have no time to rest before beginning a World Cup qualification campaign. Therefore, de la Torre, just weeks before the cup, asked USSF to reschedule it for August. With Ireland and South Africa confirmed and stadiums scheduled, USSF refused. De la Torre then told USSF that he would refuse to send the Mexican team, but USSF threatened a lawsuit, as well as FIFA sanctions. De la Torre brought Kiese back into the Mexican Federation and sent him to break the news to USSF, Mexico would send its "national team", but it would look a lot like the UNAM Pumas.[1][permanent dead link] After the tournament, USSF considered canceling its U.S. Cup contract with Mexico, a point which became moot as the 2000 tournament was the last played.

June 3: Opening Day edit

The 2000 U.S. Cup opened with two games on 3 June 2000. The first match pitted South Africa against the host United States in Washington, D.C.'s RFK Stadium. While the United States team had typically drawn well at RFK Stadium in the past, only 16,750 fans arrived for a game played on a clear, 78 °F (26 °C) day. The USSF later blamed the low turnout to poor marketing by the local professional club D.C. United with which USSF had contracted, but this was merely one in a series of mis-steps associated with this cup. On the field, the United States dominated South Africa. In the 36th minute, Cobi Jones took a pass from Chris Armas, and cut from right to left across the box. As Jones recalls it, "As I was dribbling across the box, the player who was marking me said, 'Shoot it! Shoot it!' So I said, 'OK, I'll shoot it.' I think he was a little bit surprised after the fact." Jones scored again, then assisted on second half goals by Claudio Reyna and Ben Olsen. The game was also notable as United States defender Jeff Agoos reached his 100th cap.

United States  4–0  South Africa
Jones   36', 43'
Reyna   65'
Stewart   65'
 
Attendance: 16,570
Referee: Antonio Marrufo (MEX) (Mexico)

United States - Kasey Keller; Tony Sanneh, Carlos Llamosa, Jeff Agoos, David Regis; Earnie Stewart (Steve Ralston 82'), Chris Armas, Claudio Reyna (captain), Eddie Lewis (Ben Olsen 66'); Brian McBride (Ante Razov 70'), Cobi Jones (Jason Kreis 84')

South Africa - Andre Arendse; Cyril Nzama, Pierre Issa, Andrew Rabutla, David Kannemeyer (Jacob Lekgetho 73'); Helman Mkhalele, Dumisa Ngobe, Thabo Mngomeni, Ivan McKinley (Delron Buckley 33'); Benedict McCarthy (George Koumantarakis 73'), Shaun Bartlett (captain)

June 4: Mexico vs. Ireland edit

The second game began one day later in Chicago's Soldier Field where Mexico and Ireland played to a 2-2 tie. Over 36,000 fans attended despite heavy and nearly constant rain. Mexico dominated the first half but Ireland made a late comeback with goals by Richard Dunne and Dominic Foley. In the last minutes of the game, both teams had opportunities to score the winning goal, but Ireland's Kevin Kilbane shot just wide and Mexico's Joaquin Beltran's header was punched over the bar by Ireland's goalkeeper, Dean Kiely.

Republic of Ireland  2–2  Mexico
Dunne   60'
Foley   71'
Osorno   38'
Sánchez   54'
Attendance: 36,469
Referee: unknown

Ireland - Dean Kiely, Stephen Carr, Terry Phelan, Gary Breen, Richard Dunne (Phil Babb 82'), Jason McAteer, Matt Holland, Mark Kennedy, Barry Quinn (Kevin Kilbane 41'); Niall Quinn (captain), Robbie Keane (Dominic Foley 46')

Mexico - Sergio Bernal, Joaquin Beltran, Christian Ramirez (Gilberto Jimenez 69'), Raul Alpizar, Israel Lopez, Gerardo Torrado, Luis Perez, Antonio Sancho (captain) (Gerardo Galindo 81'), Horacio Sanchez Aguirre, Luis Ignacio Gonzalez, Daniel Osorno

June 6: United States vs. Ireland edit

Ireland and the United States played to a 1-1 draw in front of another disappointingly low turnout. Only 16,319 fans, from a heavily Irish immigrant community, came to see the game which was played in a driving rainstorm in Foxboro Stadium. Once again, the USSF blamed local promoters for the poor numbers. On the field, Ireland's Dominic Foley scored first, taking a feed from Stephen McPhail before slipping past United States defender C.J. Brown and beating United States goalkeeper Brad Friedel. The Irish retained their lead until Ante Razov evened the match with a controversial goal. Earnie Stewart hit a clearly off-side Razov who scored as the Irish players stood still anticipating that the referee would whistle the ball dead. Instead, the referee and linesmen, all from Mexico, allowed the goal. Three minutes later, the stadium lost power for ten minutes. The game was delayed a further ten minutes as the lights warmed up. The low turnout, off-side goal and power outage merely added to the sense that this was a poorly run tournament.

After the game, the Irish hinted at a conspiracy between the United States and Mexico as an Irish victory would have won the tournament. Whatever the reason the Mexican officials allowed the goal, the USSF secretary general Hank Steinbrecher denied it was a conspiracy, saying, "I wish we were that sophisticated."

United States  1–1  Republic of Ireland
Razov   68' Foley   31'
Attendance: 16,319
Referee: Armando Archundia (MEX) (Mexico)

United States - Brad Friedel, Frankie Hejduk, C.J. Brown, Gregg Berhalter, Greg Vanney, Steve Ralston (Earnie Stewart 46'), John O'Brien (Claudio Reyna 60), Jovan Kirovski, Ben Olsen (Tony Sanneh 75'); Jason Kreis (Cobi Jones 65'), Ante Razov (Brian McBride 88')

Ireland - Alan Kelly; Stephen Carr, Gary Breen, Phill Babb, Terry Phelan; Stephen McPhail (Jason McAteer 37'), Matt Holland, Gareth Farrelly (Mark Kennedy 72'), Kevin Kilbane, Gary Doherty (Niall Quinn 72'), Dominic Foley (Barry Quinn 88')

June 7: Mexico vs. South Africa edit

Mexico met South Africa before 27,815 fans in the Cotton Bowl. Mexico, clearly the superior side, defeated South Africa 4-2. The Mexican team scored twice in the first half before South Africa staged a brief come-back when Benni McCarthy scored in the 52nd minute making it 2-1. Mexican substitute and coach's son Horacio Sanchez Aguirre came into the game in the 79th minute and scored two quick goals. Thabo Mngomeni of South Africa scored from a penalty kick in the 89th minute.

Mexico  4–2  South Africa
Olalde   39'
Pérez   43'
Sánchez   80', 83'
McCarthy   52'
Mngomeni 89'
Attendance: 27,815
Referee: Hall (USA)

Mexico - Sergio Bernal, Joaquin Beltran, Christian Ramirez, Raul Alpizar, Israel Lopez, Gerardo Torrado, Luis Perez, Paulo Cesar Chavez (Carlos Cariño 68'), Jesus Olade (Horacio Sáchez 79'), Luis Hernandez (Luis Ignacio Gonzalez 68'), Daniel Orsono (Jaime Lozano 79')

South Africa - Andre Arendse, Cyril Nzama, Fabian McCarthy, Pierre Issa, Jacob Lekgetho, Dumisi Ngobe (Thabo Mngomeni 71'), Helman Mkhalele (Arthur Zwane 85'), Godfrey Sapula, George Koumantarakis (Patrick Mayo 71'), Benni McCarthy, Delron Buckley

June 11: United States vs Mexico (US wins Cup) edit

Two games were played at Giants Stadium on the final day. In the first match, the United States and Mexico faced each other for the Cup title while Ireland and South Africa played for second place.

In the first game, the United States, for the first time in years, easily handled Mexico with a 3-0 win in front of 45,008 fans. In the 33rd minute, Brian McBride took a cross from Earnie Stewart and easily scored from 10 yards. Mexico kept it close until Christian Ramirez received his second yellow of the match in the 70th minute for pulling Cobi Jones to the ground. With Mexico down to ten men, Frankie Hejduk of the United States scored nine minutes later from a rebound from a Cobi Jones shot. Ante Razov scored his second goal of the tournament, when he intercepted a poorly timed pass between Mexican defender Paul Cesar Chavez and his goalkeeper. With this victory, the United States claimed its third U.S. Cup.

United States  3–0  Mexico
McBride   33'
Hejduk   79'
Razov   85'
 
Attendance: 45,008
Referee: Prendergast (Jamaica)

United States - Kasey Keller, Tony Sanneh, Carlos Llamosa (Gregg Berhalter 71'), Jeff Agoos, David Regis, Earnie Stewart (Frankie Hejduk 76'), Chris Armas, Claudio Reyna (captain), John O'Brien (Ben Olsen 64'), Brian McBride (Ante Razov 81'), Cobi Jones (Jovan Kirovski 89') Coach: Bruce Arena

Mexico - Sergio Bernal, Joaquin Beltran, Israel Lopez (captain), Gerrado Torrado, Luis Perez (Luis Ignacio Gonzalez 66'), Paulo Cesar Chavez (Carlos Carino 85'), Horacio Sanchez Aguirre (Jaime Lozano 46'), Jesus Olalde, Christian Ramirez Raul Lapizar, Daniel Orsono (Ignacio Flores 77') Coach: Hugo Sánchez


In the second game of the day, Ireland claimed the second spot in the Cup standings with a 2-1 victory over South Africa. South Africa scored first when captain Shaun Bartlett fed Benni McCarthy for a 14th-minute goal. Ireland came back with a Stephen McPhail goal in the 24th minute. Late in the second half, Niall Quinn scored the winning goal. This was his 20th international goal, placing him in a tie with Frank Stapleton on Ireland's all time goals list.

Republic of Ireland  2–1  South Africa
McPhail   24'
Quinn   80'
McCarthy   14'
Attendance: 45,008
Referee: Badilla (Costa Rica)

Ireland - Shay Given, Stephen Carr, Terry Phelan, Phil Babb, Gary Breen, Jason McAteer (Mark Kennedy 45'), Matt Holland, Stephen McPhail (Barry Quinn 86'), Alan Mahon (Kevin Kilbane 42'), Dominic Foley (Robbie Keane 46'), Niall Quinn (captain)

South Africa - Andre Arendse, Cyril Nzama, Andrew Rabutla, Jacob Lekgetho, Aaron Mokoena, Quinton Fortune (Arthur Zwane 75'), Dumisi Ngobe (Patrick Mayo 46'), Helman Mkhalele (Thabo Mngomeni 75'), Benni McCarthy (Dillon Sheppard 46'), Delron Buckley (Godfrey Sapula 46'), Shaun Barlett (captain)

Champion edit


2000 Nike U.S. Cup Winner:

 
USA
Third title

Scorers edit

Three Goals

  •   Horacio Sanchez Aguirre (Golden Boot)

Two Goals

One Goal

Final rankings edit

Team Pts GP W D L GF GA Dif Perc
1   United States 7 3 2 1 0 8 1 +7 77.8%
2   Republic of Ireland 5 3 1 2 0 5 4 +1 55.6%
3   Mexico 4 3 1 1 1 6 7 -1 44.4%
4   South Africa 0 3 0 0 3 3 10 -7 00.0%

External links edit

2000 U.S. Cup page - Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation

2000, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, need, rewritten, comply, with, wikipedia, quality, standards, help, talk, page, contain, suggestion. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article may need to be rewritten to comply with Wikipedia s quality standards You can help The talk page may contain suggestions March 2021 This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources 2000 U S Cup news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Not to be confused with U S Open Cup American Cup America s Cup disambiguation or Cup unit The 2000 Nike United States Cup U S Cup a Nike sponsored United States Soccer Federation USSF organized international football tournament took place in June 2000 It was the seventh and last U S Cup in the series which began in 1992 2000 U S CupGenresporting eventDate s JuneVenueRFK StadiumLocation s Washington DCCountryU S ParticipantsUnited States South Africa Mexico IrelandThe four teams in the competition were the United States team Ireland South Africa and Mexico Of the three teams invited Ireland was playing its third cup Mexico its fifth plus one U S Women s Cup and South Africa its first Ireland played in the inaugural cup in 1992 while Mexico won three straight Cups before the 2000 tournament South Africa was the second African team to compete after Nigeria in 1995 Contents 1 Pre tournament controversy 2 June 3 Opening Day 3 June 4 Mexico vs Ireland 4 June 6 United States vs Ireland 5 June 7 Mexico vs South Africa 6 June 11 United States vs Mexico US wins Cup 7 Champion 8 Scorers 9 Final rankings 10 External linksPre tournament controversy editThe USSF had deliberately scheduled the 2000 U S Cup to fall during the 2000 European Championship USSF hoped to attract two European nations from the pool of countries that failed to qualify for the Euro Cup Once Euro Cup qualifications determined the final competitors the USSF invited Ireland Russia and Scotland but only Ireland accepted the offer The USSF then invited South Africa an African Cup semi finalist six months earlier However South Africa elected to use the U S Cup to give several younger players international experience and therefore did not bring its full senior team While both the lack of European participation and South Africa s decision on player selection disappointed USSF these paled in comparison to the controversy surrounding Mexico s participation After the 1999 U S Cup USSF had negotiated a three year contract with the Mexican Soccer Federation obliging Mexico to send its full international team to the next three U S Cups By the time the 2000 Cup was staged three major developments threatened Mexico s participation First in May 2000 Alberto de la Torre became the new Mexican Football Association president He took control of a federation which had just failed to qualify for the Summer Olympics and had lost badly at the Gold Cup He quickly fired Hugo Enrique Kiese chief of the national team commission and the official most responsible for Mexico s three year contract with USSF De la Torre was publicly critical of both Kiese and the U S Cup contract To make matters worse the Mexican League had also extended its season due to weathered out games This meant that many of the top Mexican players would still be in the post season during the tournament Finally FIFA had pressured CONCACAF to alter its World Cup qualification schedule making the games earlier than anticipated In fact the United States and Mexican teams would leave the U S Cup and go immediately into preparation for those games This meant that Mexican players coming from their domestic league schedule would have no time to rest before beginning a World Cup qualification campaign Therefore de la Torre just weeks before the cup asked USSF to reschedule it for August With Ireland and South Africa confirmed and stadiums scheduled USSF refused De la Torre then told USSF that he would refuse to send the Mexican team but USSF threatened a lawsuit as well as FIFA sanctions De la Torre brought Kiese back into the Mexican Federation and sent him to break the news to USSF Mexico would send its national team but it would look a lot like the UNAM Pumas 1 permanent dead link After the tournament USSF considered canceling its U S Cup contract with Mexico a point which became moot as the 2000 tournament was the last played June 3 Opening Day editThe 2000 U S Cup opened with two games on 3 June 2000 The first match pitted South Africa against the host United States in Washington D C s RFK Stadium While the United States team had typically drawn well at RFK Stadium in the past only 16 750 fans arrived for a game played on a clear 78 F 26 C day The USSF later blamed the low turnout to poor marketing by the local professional club D C United with which USSF had contracted but this was merely one in a series of mis steps associated with this cup On the field the United States dominated South Africa In the 36th minute Cobi Jones took a pass from Chris Armas and cut from right to left across the box As Jones recalls it As I was dribbling across the box the player who was marking me said Shoot it Shoot it So I said OK I ll shoot it I think he was a little bit surprised after the fact Jones scored again then assisted on second half goals by Claudio Reyna and Ben Olsen The game was also notable as United States defender Jeff Agoos reached his 100th cap June 3 200016 00United States nbsp 4 0 nbsp South AfricaJones nbsp 36 43 Reyna nbsp 65 Stewart nbsp 65 Report RFK StadiumAttendance 16 570Referee Antonio Marrufo MEX Mexico United States Kasey Keller Tony Sanneh Carlos Llamosa Jeff Agoos David Regis Earnie Stewart Steve Ralston 82 Chris Armas Claudio Reyna captain Eddie Lewis Ben Olsen 66 Brian McBride Ante Razov 70 Cobi Jones Jason Kreis 84 South Africa Andre Arendse Cyril Nzama Pierre Issa Andrew Rabutla David Kannemeyer Jacob Lekgetho 73 Helman Mkhalele Dumisa Ngobe Thabo Mngomeni Ivan McKinley Delron Buckley 33 Benedict McCarthy George Koumantarakis 73 Shaun Bartlett captain June 4 Mexico vs Ireland editThe second game began one day later in Chicago s Soldier Field where Mexico and Ireland played to a 2 2 tie Over 36 000 fans attended despite heavy and nearly constant rain Mexico dominated the first half but Ireland made a late comeback with goals by Richard Dunne and Dominic Foley In the last minutes of the game both teams had opportunities to score the winning goal but Ireland s Kevin Kilbane shot just wide and Mexico s Joaquin Beltran s header was punched over the bar by Ireland s goalkeeper Dean Kiely June 4 200016 30Republic of Ireland nbsp 2 2 nbsp MexicoDunne nbsp 60 Foley nbsp 71 Report Osorno nbsp 38 Sanchez nbsp 54 Soldier FieldAttendance 36 469Referee unknown Ireland Dean Kiely Stephen Carr Terry Phelan Gary Breen Richard Dunne Phil Babb 82 Jason McAteer Matt Holland Mark Kennedy Barry Quinn Kevin Kilbane 41 Niall Quinn captain Robbie Keane Dominic Foley 46 Mexico Sergio Bernal Joaquin Beltran Christian Ramirez Gilberto Jimenez 69 Raul Alpizar Israel Lopez Gerardo Torrado Luis Perez Antonio Sancho captain Gerardo Galindo 81 Horacio Sanchez Aguirre Luis Ignacio Gonzalez Daniel OsornoJune 6 United States vs Ireland editIreland and the United States played to a 1 1 draw in front of another disappointingly low turnout Only 16 319 fans from a heavily Irish immigrant community came to see the game which was played in a driving rainstorm in Foxboro Stadium Once again the USSF blamed local promoters for the poor numbers On the field Ireland s Dominic Foley scored first taking a feed from Stephen McPhail before slipping past United States defender C J Brown and beating United States goalkeeper Brad Friedel The Irish retained their lead until Ante Razov evened the match with a controversial goal Earnie Stewart hit a clearly off side Razov who scored as the Irish players stood still anticipating that the referee would whistle the ball dead Instead the referee and linesmen all from Mexico allowed the goal Three minutes later the stadium lost power for ten minutes The game was delayed a further ten minutes as the lights warmed up The low turnout off side goal and power outage merely added to the sense that this was a poorly run tournament After the game the Irish hinted at a conspiracy between the United States and Mexico as an Irish victory would have won the tournament Whatever the reason the Mexican officials allowed the goal the USSF secretary general Hank Steinbrecher denied it was a conspiracy saying I wish we were that sophisticated June 6 200020 00United States nbsp 1 1 nbsp Republic of IrelandRazov nbsp 68 Report Foley nbsp 31 Foxboro StadiumAttendance 16 319Referee Armando Archundia MEX Mexico United States Brad Friedel Frankie Hejduk C J Brown Gregg Berhalter Greg Vanney Steve Ralston Earnie Stewart 46 John O Brien Claudio Reyna 60 Jovan Kirovski Ben Olsen Tony Sanneh 75 Jason Kreis Cobi Jones 65 Ante Razov Brian McBride 88 Ireland Alan Kelly Stephen Carr Gary Breen Phill Babb Terry Phelan Stephen McPhail Jason McAteer 37 Matt Holland Gareth Farrelly Mark Kennedy 72 Kevin Kilbane Gary Doherty Niall Quinn 72 Dominic Foley Barry Quinn 88 June 7 Mexico vs South Africa editMexico met South Africa before 27 815 fans in the Cotton Bowl Mexico clearly the superior side defeated South Africa 4 2 The Mexican team scored twice in the first half before South Africa staged a brief come back when Benni McCarthy scored in the 52nd minute making it 2 1 Mexican substitute and coach s son Horacio Sanchez Aguirre came into the game in the 79th minute and scored two quick goals Thabo Mngomeni of South Africa scored from a penalty kick in the 89th minute June 7 200020 00Mexico nbsp 4 2 nbsp South AfricaOlalde nbsp 39 Perez nbsp 43 Sanchez nbsp 80 83 Report McCarthy nbsp 52 Mngomeni 89 Cotton BowlAttendance 27 815Referee Hall USA Mexico Sergio Bernal Joaquin Beltran Christian Ramirez Raul Alpizar Israel Lopez Gerardo Torrado Luis Perez Paulo Cesar Chavez Carlos Carino 68 Jesus Olade Horacio Sachez 79 Luis Hernandez Luis Ignacio Gonzalez 68 Daniel Orsono Jaime Lozano 79 South Africa Andre Arendse Cyril Nzama Fabian McCarthy Pierre Issa Jacob Lekgetho Dumisi Ngobe Thabo Mngomeni 71 Helman Mkhalele Arthur Zwane 85 Godfrey Sapula George Koumantarakis Patrick Mayo 71 Benni McCarthy Delron BuckleyJune 11 United States vs Mexico US wins Cup editTwo games were played at Giants Stadium on the final day In the first match the United States and Mexico faced each other for the Cup title while Ireland and South Africa played for second place In the first game the United States for the first time in years easily handled Mexico with a 3 0 win in front of 45 008 fans In the 33rd minute Brian McBride took a cross from Earnie Stewart and easily scored from 10 yards Mexico kept it close until Christian Ramirez received his second yellow of the match in the 70th minute for pulling Cobi Jones to the ground With Mexico down to ten men Frankie Hejduk of the United States scored nine minutes later from a rebound from a Cobi Jones shot Ante Razov scored his second goal of the tournament when he intercepted a poorly timed pass between Mexican defender Paul Cesar Chavez and his goalkeeper With this victory the United States claimed its third U S Cup June 11 200013 00United States nbsp 3 0 nbsp MexicoMcBride nbsp 33 Hejduk nbsp 79 Razov nbsp 85 2 Giants StadiumAttendance 45 008Referee Prendergast Jamaica United States Kasey Keller Tony Sanneh Carlos Llamosa Gregg Berhalter 71 Jeff Agoos David Regis Earnie Stewart Frankie Hejduk 76 Chris Armas Claudio Reyna captain John O Brien Ben Olsen 64 Brian McBride Ante Razov 81 Cobi Jones Jovan Kirovski 89 Coach Bruce ArenaMexico Sergio Bernal Joaquin Beltran Israel Lopez captain Gerrado Torrado Luis Perez Luis Ignacio Gonzalez 66 Paulo Cesar Chavez Carlos Carino 85 Horacio Sanchez Aguirre Jaime Lozano 46 Jesus Olalde Christian Ramirez Raul Lapizar Daniel Orsono Ignacio Flores 77 Coach Hugo Sanchez In the second game of the day Ireland claimed the second spot in the Cup standings with a 2 1 victory over South Africa South Africa scored first when captain Shaun Bartlett fed Benni McCarthy for a 14th minute goal Ireland came back with a Stephen McPhail goal in the 24th minute Late in the second half Niall Quinn scored the winning goal This was his 20th international goal placing him in a tie with Frank Stapleton on Ireland s all time goals list June 11 200015 30Republic of Ireland nbsp 2 1 nbsp South AfricaMcPhail nbsp 24 Quinn nbsp 80 Report McCarthy nbsp 14 Giants StadiumAttendance 45 008Referee Badilla Costa Rica Ireland Shay Given Stephen Carr Terry Phelan Phil Babb Gary Breen Jason McAteer Mark Kennedy 45 Matt Holland Stephen McPhail Barry Quinn 86 Alan Mahon Kevin Kilbane 42 Dominic Foley Robbie Keane 46 Niall Quinn captain South Africa Andre Arendse Cyril Nzama Andrew Rabutla Jacob Lekgetho Aaron Mokoena Quinton Fortune Arthur Zwane 75 Dumisi Ngobe Patrick Mayo 46 Helman Mkhalele Thabo Mngomeni 75 Benni McCarthy Dillon Sheppard 46 Delron Buckley Godfrey Sapula 46 Shaun Barlett captain Champion edit2000 Nike U S Cup Winner nbsp USAThird titleScorers editThree Goals nbsp Horacio Sanchez Aguirre Golden Boot Two Goals nbsp Cobi Jones nbsp Ante Razov nbsp Dominic Foley nbsp Benni McCarthyOne Goal nbsp Claudio Reyna nbsp Earnie Stewart nbsp Frankie Hejduk nbsp Brian McBride nbsp Richard Dunne nbsp Stephen McPhail nbsp Niall Quinn nbsp Thabo Mngomeni nbsp Jesus Olalde nbsp Daniel Osorno nbsp Luis PerezFinal rankings editTeam Pts GP W D L GF GA Dif Perc1 nbsp United States 7 3 2 1 0 8 1 7 77 8 2 nbsp Republic of Ireland 5 3 1 2 0 5 4 1 55 6 3 nbsp Mexico 4 3 1 1 1 6 7 1 44 4 4 nbsp South Africa 0 3 0 0 3 3 10 7 00 0 External links editArena Jones and Reyna on U S Cup 2000 Soccer America2000 U S Cup page Rec Sport Soccer Statistics Foundation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2000 U S Cup amp oldid 1202345602, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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