Mexico scored five goals for Mexico in the tournament.
Mexico, nicknamed El Tri, were the most successful team in the history of the Gold Cup, having won the tournament seven times since
1993, most recently in
2015. The team qualified automatically for the 2019 Gold Cup because of their participation in the
final round of regional qualification for the 2018 World Cup. The tournament would be the first for the team under
Gerardo "Tata" Martino, who took over as head coach in January 2019 after leaving
Atlanta United FC of
Major League Soccer (MLS). Martino named his preliminary roster in May, leaving out regular starters like
Carlos Vela,
Javier Hernández,
Giovani dos Santos,
Hirving Lozano,
Jesus Manuel Corona, and
Héctor Herrera due to requests for personal or recovery time from the players. El Tri were drawn into
Group A alongside
Canada,
Cuba, and
Martinique—all of whom qualified through the
Nations League preliminary rounds. In their opening match against Cuba at the
Rose Bowl, Mexico won 7–0 with a
hat-trick for
Uriel Antuna of the local
LA Galaxy, who was a late addition to the roster to replace the injured
Jorge Sánchez, and two goals by
Raúl Jiménez. The team then secured its quarter-final berth by defeating Canada 3–1 in
Denver, with a first-half goal from midfielder
Roberto Alvarado and a pair of second-half goals by substitute
Andrés Guardado;
Lucas Cavallini scored a consolation goal for the Canadians in the 75th minute, cutting the lead to 2–1 before Guardado's second goal. Martino opted to rest several starting players in the final group stage match against Martinique, which saw El Tri take the lead in the first half through a goal by Antuna but concede an equalizer to Martiniquais forward
Kévin Parsemain's free kick in the 56th minute. Jiménez and defender
Fernando Navarro added a pair of goals to win the match 3–2 for Mexico after
Jordy Delem was able to score a consolation goal in the 84th minute for Martinique. In the quarter-finals, Mexico played
Group B runners-up
Costa Rica in
Houston. They took the lead before halftime with a goal by Jiménez, but conceded a penalty in the 52nd minute after a controversial foul on
Joel Campbell; Costa Rican captain
Bryan Ruiz scored from the penalty spot to level the match. Both teams had chances to score in regulation and extra time, including a shot by
Jonathan McDonald that was saved by Mexican goalkeeper
Guillermo Ochoa, but the score remained 1–1 and triggered a
penalty shoot-out. Jiménez, the first kick-taker, had his shot stopped by
Leonel Moreira, but a miss by
Randall Leal kept the shootout even through five rounds; in the sixth round,
Keysher Fuller's penalty was saved by Ochoa to give Mexico a 5–4 shoot-out victory. Mexico advanced to the semi-finals to play Group B winners
Haiti, who had
upset Canada with a 3–2 comeback victory in the quarter-finals. Martino was suspended from the match due to yellow card accumulation. The match was scoreless at the end of regulation time despite several chances for Mexico, including two saves for goalkeeper
Johny Placide. Jiménez was fouled in the penalty area and was awarded a penalty kick for Mexico, which he took and scored in the 93rd minute; Haiti were unable to equalize, missing a chance in the 119th minute that hit the crossbar, and Mexico advanced to the final with a 1–0 victory.
United States scored three times for the United States during the group stage. The
United States, the primary host of the tournament, were the defending champions of the Gold Cup and the second most successful, with six titles in ten appearances in the final. They have a
major rivalry with Mexico, who they met in five previous Gold Cup finals, winning only once. The U.S. qualified as another participant in the final round of World Cup qualification, Following a year with an interim manager,
Gregg Berhalter of the
Columbus Crew was hired as the team's head coach in December 2018; in his first four matches as head coach, the U.S. were unbeaten while playing against opponents from Central and South America with experimental lineups. Berhalter's preliminary Gold Cup roster excluded several holdover veterans, including defenders
DeAndre Yedlin and
John Brooks, and goalkeeper
Bill Hamid; in the final roster, released after two exhibition losses, he opted to exclude young striker
Josh Sargent in favor of
Tyler Boyd, who had not played for the U.S. after switching allegiances from New Zealand. The Americans were placed in
Group D, playing against Gold Cup debutants
Guyana,
Panama, who qualified for the World Cup ahead of the U.S., and
Trinidad and Tobago, who had defeated the U.S. in the final game of qualification and prevented them from participating in the World Cup. The United States opened against Guyana at
Allianz Field in Minnesota, winning 4–0 with a first-half goal by
Paul Arriola, two from Tyler Boyd in his second match for the team, and another by
Gyasi Zardes that was scored with a deflection off his eye. The Americans won 6–0 in their match against Trinidad and Tobago in
Cleveland, clinching them a place in the quarter-finals with two goals each from Zardes and
Aaron Long, and one each from
Christian Pulisic and
Paul Arriola. A fully rotated U.S. squad closed out the group by defeating Panama 1–0 in
Kansas City to finish at the top of the standings;
Jozy Altidore scored the lone goal of the match in the 66th minute with a
bicycle kick after Panama failed to clear a corner. The U.S. faced Caribbean side
Curaçao in the quarter-finals after the team had unexpectedly finished second in Group C on goal differential. The Americans took the lead in the 25th minute, with a header by
Weston McKennie from , and were held to a 1–0 win in
Philadelphia. The semi-final fixture against
Jamaica in
Nashville, a rematch of the
previous final, began with a goal for McKennie in the ninth minute to finish a long passing sequence, but the match was suspended in the 16th minute because of a
lightning delay. It was resumed 90 minutes later and Jamaica were initially dominant, but conceded a goal to the U.S. in the 52nd minute, with
Christian Pulisic finishing a rebound from goalkeeper
Andre Blake, who had parried away a shot from
Jordan Morris.
Shamar Nicholson scored with a header in the 69th minute to cut the lead down to a one-goal margin, but Pulisic got his second goal in the 87th minute from another rebound off Blake. The U.S. won 3–1 and advanced to their second consecutive final, having conceded only one goal. ==Venue==