Snow Clasico

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Snow Clasico
The Dick's Sporting Goods Park hosted the match under similar conditions as in this picture
Event2014 FIFA World Cup qualification match
Date22 March 2013
VenueDick's Sporting Goods Park, Commerce City, Colorado, United States
RefereeJoel Aguilar (El Salvador)
Attendance19,734
WeatherSnowstorm
28 °F (−2 °C)[1]

The United States versus Costa Rica football (soccer) match was held on 22 March 2013 at the Dick's Sporting Goods Park in Commerce City, Colorado. It was part of the second matchday of the final qualification round in CONCACAF for the 2014 FIFA World Cup.

Both teams reached the match after not winning as visitors on the first matchday; the United States lost in San Pedro Sula against Honduras and Costa Rica reached a draw in Panama City against Panama.

Under heavy snowfall, the United States won the match with a lone goal by Clint Dempsey. The unusual conditions of the match sparked outrage in Costa Rica, whose football federation's formal complaint was rejected by FIFA;[2] in contrast, US players and commentators point out that both teams had to play in the same conditions.[3] Subsequent reactions from Costa Rican fans saw them turning their backs on FIFA's Fair Play anthem and flag during Costa Rica's following home match,[4] as well as receiving the American players with hostility for their game in San José months later.[5]

American media refers to the match as Snow Clasico,[6] a name subsequently evoked by MLS matches played under similar conditions.[1] In contrast, the match is considered by Costa Rican media as a watershed moment, as the following months saw their national team qualify to the 2014 World Cup with five consecutive victories at home—including a 3–1 victory against the United States seen as a revenge—and achieve their best performance at a FIFA World Cup by reaching the quarter-finals.[7]

Both teams reached the match without victories in the Hexagonal, as the first matchday saw the United States lose 2–1 in Honduran soil and Costa Rica draw 2–2 as visitors against Panama.[8]

This was the first FIFA World Cup qualification match between both teams since their 2–2 draw at Washington's Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium, in the last matchday of the Hexagonal for the 2010 FIFA World Cup. In that game, a last minute equalizer by Jonathan Bornstein prevented Costa Rica from qualifying directly to the World Cup; instead, Honduras qualified, while Costa Rica was sent to an intercontinental play-off, which they lost against Uruguay.[8] The United States Soccer Federation noted that "no goal resonated more in Costa Rica" than Bornstein's, who became "a national hero in Honduras."[9] La Nación's Álvaro Murillo recounted the moments that led to the goal in a note titled "That damned corner [kick]".[10]

Hours before the match in Colorado, another FIFA World Cup qualifier match in Europe between Northern Ireland and Russia, scheduled to be held at Windsor Park in Belfast, was suspended because of a heavy snowfall.[11] The match was postponed to the next day, but because the conditions did not improve, it was postponed once more to be played in August.[12]

About three hours before the match, La Nación's Juan José Herrera reported an increasing snowfall, and that despite forecasts of worsening conditions, the stadium authorities expressed that calling the match off was "very unlikely."[13]

The match

First half

Clint Dempsey scored the winning goal

Sixteen minutes into the match, Clint Dempsey scored the winning goal, as he took advantage of a shot by Jozy Altidore that was deflected to Dempsey's position by Costa Rican defender Roy Miller.[14] La Nación's Diego Ureña reported, at the end of the first half, that the field was threatening to the players' integrity, and that by the end of the 21st minute, after a missed chance by Costa Rican player Christian Bolaños, the game showed little actual football, highlighting the foul play and slips,[15] which coincides with Jorge Luis Pinto's description that "football-wise, the match can only be evaluated from its earlier twenty or twenty-five minutes."[16]

For Michael Bradley, the field during the first half "was still O.K. even though it was a little hard to see."[14] La Nación's Ureña, once the match was finished, expressed that "the match actually lasted fifteen minutes and became a snowfight afterwards."[17]

Second half

Conditions worsened heavily during the second half. Bradley described that "as the snow accumulated in the second half, it was almost impossible to play."[14] Around the fifty-fourth minute, referee Joel Aguilar halted the match momentarily, and gathered captains Clint Dempsey and Bryan Ruiz to discuss a possible suspension of the match with FIFA commissioner Victor Daniel.[18][19] The United States' coach Jurgen Klinsmann ran to the pitch as he angrily expressed, in a "bad Spanish", his desire for the match to continue.[14]

Eventually, the match resumed, as some of the personnel of the stadium used plows and shovels to remove the snow off the field demarcations.[20] While recounting the minute-by-minute action of the match, Costa Rican newspaper Al Día indicated that the game "is being played under unsportsmanlike conditions," that "the ball is rolling very slowly," and "the snowfall is getting stronger."[18] Costa Rica had a goal disallowed on the 70th minute as Michael Umaña was caught offside,[18] while the United States were denied a penalty after Clint Dempsey was tripped on the box.[14]

Details

2014 FIFA World Cup qualification – CONCACAF fourth round – Second matchday
United States 1–0 Costa Rica
Dempsey 16' Report
United States
Costa Rica

Assistant referees:
Juan Zumba (El Salvador)
William Torres (El Salvador)
Fourth official:
Marlon Mejía (El Salvador)

Reactions

Aftermath

References

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