U.S. Soccer is now accepting team entries from Open Division teams for the 2023 Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup. The Qualifying Rounds will begin in September. The relevant links with the calendar, Open Division / Qualifying Rounds Handbook and Entry Instructions are available online at usopencup.com as linked below.
Before completing the online Entry Form, teams should understand the competition regulations, competition dates and the information required to enter. Teams that have entered previously will find that the Entry Form, Venue Declaration Form and Home Game Application Form have been consolidated into a single-entry form. Please note that the entire form, including payment by check (via mail) OR credit card must be completed in a single session.
The entry deadline is Monday, August 8, 2022.
Questions can be addressed to our U.S. Open Cup staff at opencup@ussoccer.org.
Please see 2023 Open Division Handbook for complete details.
The first U.S. Open Cup was played in 1914, making it the oldest cup competition for soccer in the United States and the country’s oldest annual tournament for team sports. While professional soccer came and went in various forms and incarnations, at various stages of the 20th century, the Open Cup crowned a champion for each of the last 104 years. Even through the want and woe of the Great Depression and the challenges of two World Wars, the U.S. Open Cup survived. Teams from 17 different states have won the title.
The romance of the U.S. Open Cup derives, in large part, from its format as a single-elimination competition open to all affiliated professional and amateur teams in the United States. $250,000 in prize money is on offer to the winner of the 2017 event, an unfathomable amount for the hopeful amateurs from the Open Division. And while a non-Major League Soccer side hasn’t won since the Rochester Rhinos did it back in 1999, the dream of a fairytale scramble to the final is a spur for those small sides who play for the love of the game. Financial inducements don’t stop with the champions, either, as the runner-up collects $60,000 and the team that advances farthest from each lower division gets $15,000.
Some of the most magical moments in recent Open Cup history have occurred by local qualifiers making headlines:
Tag(s): News