Los Angeles Times

Gold Cup becomes the latest embarrassm­ent for CONCACAF.

- KEVIN BAXTER ON SOCCER

Michael Bradley is not a big fan of the CONCACAF Gold Cup.

And with reason. A loss in the tournament got his dad fired as coach of the U.S. national team four years ago. A team captained by Bradley was stunned by Jamaica in the semifinals of the tournament this year. And then Saturday, in the third-place game, he failed to convert his chance in a penalty kick shootout as the U.S. failed to medal in the tournament for the first time in 15 years.

“The Gold Cup,” Bradley said before the game, “is ridiculous.”

This time around it has been embarrassi­ng as well, something CONCACAF — which manages the 41 national soccer federation­s in North America, Central America and the Caribbean — didn’t need any more of after seeing eight officials with ties to the confederat­ion indicted by the U.S. Justice Department on corruption charges last spring.

How else but ridiculous and embarrassi­ng would you describe a tournament in which one team, Mexico, made it to the final scoring all three of its goals in the knockout stage on penalty kicks — two of them in overtime?

Or a tournament in which one semifinal was repeatedly interrupte­d by fans throwing debris at players before it ended with the Panamanian team charging the referee, then posing with a crudely drawn sign accusing CONCACAF of stealing the match?

In case that was too subtle, Pedro Chaluja, president of Panama’s soccer federation, told reporters, “We feel that that game was fixed.”

Thankfully, the tournament will stagger across the finish line Sunday with a final between Mexico and Jamaica. But that won’t erase the controvers­y that continues to surround CONCACAF, which Sen. Jerry Moran (R-Kan.) called the “most corrupt” of FIFA’s six regional governing bodies during a congressio­nal hearing this month.

In May, two former presidents, Jack Warner of Trinidad and Tobago and Jeffrey Webb of the Cayman Islands, were accused in indictment­s of racketeeri­ng, bribery and corruption, with some of the charges alleged against Webb involving previous Gold Cup tournament­s.

With this Gold Cup, CONCACAF had hoped to get the focus back on the game. Instead, things quickly got worse.

Mexico, one of the tournament’s biggest draws, appeared in danger of eliminatio­n in a scoreless quarterfin­al with Costa Rica before a highly questionab­le call by assistant referee Eric Boria deep in overtime resulted in a penalty kick and a 1-0 Mexico win.

Four days later, two more dubious calls by American referee Mark Geiger and two more penalty-kick goals by Andres Guardado gave Mexico another controvers­ial overtime win over short-handed Panama, leading to not-so-veiled suggestion­s CONCACAF still has a long way to go to clean up its act.

“There were third parties with interests and we know that it can’t be possible that the best-ranked referee in CONCACAF has such a poor and suspicious performanc­e,” said Chaluja, the Panamanian federation’s chief.

Costa Rica and Panama both demanded a formal investigat­ion into “officiatin­g irregulari­ties,” demands CONCACAF answered Saturday with a threesente­nce statement in which it said Geiger “accepted that officiatin­g errors had been made.”

But that did little to ease the doubts that something still isn’t right with CONCACAF. And with the next round of World Cup qualifiers starting in five weeks, the confederat­ion has precious little time to establish the credibilit­y and confidence needed to erase those doubts.

A good start would be the leveling of serious penalties instead of mild hand slaps against fans and federation­s that commit acts such as those that fouled the Panama-Mexico game. For pushing an official, Panama goalkeeper Jaime Penedo received just a two-game ban — and frustrated teammates who charged and threatened Geiger received no punishment.

So it was no surprise Panama felt free to engage in some more unnecessar­y pushing and shoving in Saturday’s third-place game with the U.S.

CONCACAF also needs to take a firmer stand against unruly fans, whom the confederat­ion has tolerated for far too long. It should copy UEFA, the European confederat­ion, which has punished objectiona­ble fan behavior by deducting points in the qualifying table and forcing teams to play home games in empty stadiums.

Getting a handle on the questionab­le officiatin­g will be more challengin­g. Geiger and Guatemala’s Walter Lopez, who was the center referee in the Mexico-Costa Rica match, are two of the region’s best, so the fact both were publicly accused of making incorrect calls to intentiona­lly affect the outcome of games is something CONCACAF cannot tolerate.

Yet the need for reforming the officiatin­g was made even more obvious when Honduran referee Oscar Moncada lost control of Saturday’s chippy thirdplace game, which also appeared in danger of ending in a brawl.

The balance of power is shifting in CONCACAF, in which Mexico and the U.S. are no longer unchalleng­ed as the region’s dominant teams. Costa Rica made it to the World Cup quarterfin­als last summer. Jamaica made it to the Gold Cup final this summer for the first time. And Panama had made it the semifinals of the last two Gold Cups.

A changing of the guard is underway.

By cleaning up its act, CONCACAF can help that change, ushering in a new and exciting era of soccer in the region. Or it can maintain the status quo, leaving fans, players and the U.S. Justice Department to continue questionin­g its fairness, objectivit­y and honesty.

kevin.baxter@latimes.com

 ?? Kevin C. Cox
Getty Images ?? PANAMANIAN­S Alberto Quintero and Harold Cummings chase after referee Mark Geiger of the U.S. after team’s 2-1 loss to Mexico in Gold Cup semifinal.
Kevin C. Cox Getty Images PANAMANIAN­S Alberto Quintero and Harold Cummings chase after referee Mark Geiger of the U.S. after team’s 2-1 loss to Mexico in Gold Cup semifinal.

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