Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The 2025 Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup is the 110th edition of the U.S. Open Cup, the knockout domestic cup competition of American soccer.It is organized by the United States Soccer Federation and will comprise 96 teams, 64 teams from all three professional tiers of the United States soccer league system and 32 amateur teams in the "Open Division".
The tournament proper will feature both professional and amateur teams in the United States soccer league system. Qualification for the 2025 tournament includes local qualifying matches contested by 114 amateur teams, fighting for 14 local qualifying slots, and is scheduled to take place in 2024.
In 1999, the U.S. Soccer Federation honored one of American soccer's most important patrons, Lamar Hunt, by changing the official title of the tournament to the Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup. The winners of the tournament were awarded the Dewar Cup, donated by Sir Thomas Dewar for the promotion of soccer in America in 1912, until it was retired for ...
The tournament was established in 1980 and is held in Dallas, Texas, with FC Dallas serving as its host club. Venues used for the tournament include the Cotton Bowl and Toyota Stadium . The Dallas Cup includes divisions ranging from U-12 to U-19 in the Boys' tournament and U-15 through U-19 in the Dallas Cup Girls' Invitational presented by ...
1952 U.S. Open (golf) 1963 PGA Championship; 1989 Major Indoor Soccer League All-Star Game; 1999 Stanley Cup Finals; 2003 NCAA Division I women's volleyball tournament; 2007 National Hockey League All-Star Game; 2014 Roller Derby World Cup; 2017 NCAA Division I women's basketball championship game; 2020 NHL Winter Classic; 2022 Athletes ...
Annual U.S. tournament creates rare opportunity for franchises from two different levels of professional soccer to meet on the pitch. A rivalry is born: Lexington SC, Louisville City FC to collide ...
The United States Soccer Federation's Open Cup Committee manages both the tournament proper and the local qualification process. [2]Clubs based in the United States that play in a league that is an organization member of U.S. Soccer are generally eligible to compete for the U.S. Open Cup, so long as their league includes at least four teams and has a schedule of at least 10 matches for each club.
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us