A spirited crowd of 46,080 spectators cascading noise across a future World Cup venue. Rosters packed with elite talent from across the hemisphere and beyond. The parry and thrust of two wealthy, ambitious clubs, one with the rƩsumƩ of a true continental giant and the other determined to reach that level in record time.
Saturday nightās Leagues Cup clash between Tigres UANL and Inter Miami CF felt like two heavyweight prizefighters squaring off ā but in the early rounds.
In an occasion rich with intensity and meaning, but inevitably a prelude to the win-or-else situations that lie ahead, Tigres drew first blood at Houstonās NRG Stadium, their adopted US home for this monthās trophy quest, and eventually hung on for a 2-1 victory over the Herons. Juan Brunettaās first-half golazo and a thumping late winner from Juan Pablo VigĆ³n booked first place in East 3 for Los Felines and salvaged some pride for LIGA MX amid a cascade of unfavorable results against MLS opposition in this tournamentās opening stages.
Over the decades, the powerhouse from Nuevo LeĆ³n have won just about everything there is to win in this part of the world. But the celebrations of players and fans at the full-time whistle suggested this one meant something, even with Miami shorn of their full contingent of superstars.
āThis is a prestige game for us; it was an opportunity for us to play against a very good opponent and show ourselves that we are capable of acting like we did tonight,ā Tigres boss and former Chicago Fire head coach Veljko Paunovic said in Spanish afterwards.
āAnd this has been very important motivation, because in the process that we are, we have to start seeing, believing that we can win games against strong opponents, with history, whoāve been shown to be champions.ā
Measuring stick
All that said, itās not quite crunch time yet. Thanks to victories over Club Puebla in their opening matches of the tournament, both combatants in this group-stage fixture were already assured of advancing to the knockout phase.
That surely influenced Paunovic to keep AndrĆ©-Pierre Gignac among the substitutes, and Gerardo āTataā Martinoās decision to leave Luis SuĆ”rez back in Florida to rest, while Sergio Busquets was held on the bench until the 69th minute. Lionel Messiās recovery from his ankle injury continues, while Diego GĆ³mez and Benja Cremaschi are returning from France on Olympic duty with Paraguay and the United States, respectively ā their national teamsā quarterfinal losses mean theyāll soon be available to Martino for selection again.
All of which added up to the Argentine manager feeling good about his sideās performance even in a losing effort. This was despite the Herons conceding the gameās first goal, as they so often have this year, and yet again the product of self-inflicted errors in the back line, with Brunettaās excellence swiftly punishing TomĆ”s AvilĆ©s for an overly casual attempt to pass out of his own penalty box.
āIt was a good measure of where we are standing. Sometimes you start to stack up wins, like is happening in the league; until you face opponents with the power of Tigres, you don't know where you stand. So we discovered that in that sense weāre on a good path here,ā said Martino, whose squad entered Leagues Cup atop the overall MLS standings, winning six of seven matches.
āIf I'm not mistaken, Tigres has a full roster today,ā he noted, āand we are missing four players ā¦ we could compete with an opponent who is a contender in the Mexican league, also for us it was very important ā¦ to show that this team is growing. Weāre quite solid, we allowed goals on the edge of the penalty area that were more the product of individual quality than a scheme of play. What Brunetta did is very difficult to do; he scored an extraordinary goal.ā
More to come?
As dominant ā and at times admirably resourceful ā as theyāve been in league play, Miamiās limitations were exposed in their last meeting with Mexican aristocrats, a humbling Concacaf Champions Cup quarterfinal exit to CF Monterrey back in the spring. Depth was a clear bugaboo then, and Martino said he was encouraged by the resilience of Saturdayās rotated lineup.
While Los Felinos were clearly the superior team in the first half, IMCF rallied after the break, leveling through a penalty kick earned, then coolly dispatched by Leo Campana. It took a couple of sharp saves from Tigres goalkeeper Nahuel GuzmĆ”n to prevent them from finding a second ā ālike in LIGA MX, they have the best goalkeeper in the competition,ā Martino said of his countryman ā only for a poor clearance from substitute Sergii Kryvtsov to hand VigĆ³n an inviting look he did not spurn.
āWe competed well, we played well, we managed to equalize, we had opportunities for the second goal, and we couldn't do it,ā said Martino. āIt seemed like we deserved a little bit more than what we got; we have the sensation that we can compete well with high-level teams.ā
The level of contribution provided by the likes of Campana and Kryvtsov has been and will remain key to Miamiās hopes of achieving great things, starting with their Leagues Cup title defense. As to whether Tigres or their fellow LIGA MX giants will expose the Heronsā soft spots in the knockout rounds when theyāre closer to full strength? Only time will tell.
āWe felt it [a lack of depth] a lot when we played against Monterrey [in CCC]. But from Monterrey until now, we have a roster that is fit to be able to make changes that are at the same level as the ones that are playing, like Tigres, Monterrey, Cruz Azul and AmĆ©rica,ā contended Martino.
āWe had a competitive team today and still we have four players out. So we can compete in this. We are missing the four players, I know. We know what they represent for our team. But today I can say that when we have a full roster, we can have the same importance and changes same as the strongest, most important teams in Mexico.ā