Copa América: USMNT loses to Panama in chaotic, red card-stained stunner


Salvadoran referee Ivan Barton shows a red card to USA's forward #21 Tim Weah during the Conmebol 2024 Copa America tournament group C football match between Panama and USA at Mercedes Benz Stadium in Atlanta, Georgia, on June 27, 2024. (Photo by EDUARDO MUNOZ / AFP) (Photo by EDUARDO MUNOZ/AFP via Getty Images)

If the USMNT’s debut at the 2024 Copa América was simple, its follow-up act was dramatic, damaging and chaotic.

It finished Panama 2, U.S. 1, on Thursday night in Atlanta. And it left the Americans likely needing to beat Uruguay in their Group C finale on Monday to avoid elimination.

They played over 75 minutes of the game with 10 men after Tim Weah’s early red card. For most of the second half, they appeared to be hanging on for a draw and a valuable point.

But in the 83rd minute, Panama’s José Fajardo broke the American resistance, and propelled Panama to a famous win.

The game was scrappy from the opening whistle. It almost swung five minutes in, when Weston McKennie scored to seemingly put the U.S. ahead. But, upon video review, Tim Ream had been offside in the scruffy buildup to the goal. VAR disallowed it.

Ten minutes after that, the game did change for good. As it heated up, Weah overheated. After a bit of jostling off the ball, he lashed out at Panamanian defender Roderick Miller with his hand, and caught Miller in the head. He was initially shown a yellow card. But referee Ivan Barton needed only one look at the replay on his pitchside monitor to change the color of the card to red.

Weah didn’t argue. As he walked off the field, he pulled his jersey over his face. He knew he’d erred. And he knew his team would now have to play 70-plus minutes down a man.

Those disadvantaged 70 minutes began with a stunner. Folarin Balogun picked out the top corner, and put the U.S. ahead.

But three minutes after the game restarted, Panama equalized, and the Americans were back to square one — down a man, without a lead, and with more than half a game to endure.

For the rest of the first half, they wobbled, and scrambled to keep the score at 1-1.

In the second half, they essentially conceded that this would be a difficult game to win; so they slowed it down, and shut up shop.

Head coach Gregg Berhalter made three halftime changes. One was for Matt Turner, who gutted through an injury after a first-half collision, but couldn’t continue after the break. (In fact, his injury might have impacted his ability to keep out Panama’s goal.)

The other two substitutions, for Tyler Adams and Gio Reyna, set the U.S. up to play the rest of the game in a 5-3-1.

The second half, then, was more calm. It was tense, but less chaotic. Panama’s brightest moment, for a while, was a potential penalty, which Barton actually awarded on the field; but upon video review, he erased it.

But then, as U.S. legs tired, Panama took advantage.

Panama’s Adalberto “Coco” Carrasquilla hacked down Christian Pulisic late on, and was also sent off, reducing the game to 10 vs. 10.

But the U.S. only had a few minutes of stoppage time to find an equalizer. Nobody could find it. And a no good, very bad night ended with heads down, and pressure suddenly on the hosts of this Copa América.

LIVE COVERAGE IS OVER43 updates

  • 93′ Freddy Gondola booked

  • 10 v. 10 now!

    Coco Carrasquilla gets sent off for an ugly tackle on Christian Pulisic from behind.

    The U.S. will have at least several minutes of stoppage time to try to find an equalizer.

    It probably should be close to 10 minutes.

  • 88′ Red card to Panama’s Adalberto Carrasquilla

  • 72′ Substitution

    Ricardo Pepi comes in for Folarin Balogun.

  • Flo goes close

    The U.S. is playing very defensive, but just had its first real chance of the second half.

    Christian Pulisic dances, plays Balogun down the left with a reverse pass, and Balogun flashes his curling shot past the far post.

    Still 1-1, 72nd minute.

  • VAR giveth, VAR taketh away

    Panama appeared to have won a penalty, via a reckless tackle from U.S. center back Cameron Carter-Vickers

    But, upon review, there was hardly any contact, and the penalty is overturned.

    VAR works well sometimes!

  • 66′ Penalty overturned after VAR review

  • 63′ Penalty awarded to Panama

  • Ethan Horvath passes his first test

    Five minutes into the second half, Panama’s Edgardo Fariña rips a shot from 30 yards out.

    It was knuckling. Ethan Horvath, on for the injured Matt Turner at halftime, stayed behind it and batted it away.

    He has experience making heroic saves off the bench for the USMNT. He might have to make one or more again tonight.

  • THREE halftime changes for the U.S.

    Matt Turn is off, injured. Ethan Horvath is replacing him.

    Cameron Carter-Vickers and Johnny Cardoso are also on for Tyler Adams and Gio Reyna.

    That’s a clear sign that Berhalter plans to shut up shop and dig deep for a draw. They’ll play in a 5-3-1.

  • Halftime questions for the USMNT

    There are a lot of personnel questions entering the second half…

    • How long can Tyler Adams last? He’s ideal for playing with 10 men, because he can cover so much ground … but he’s not 90-minutes fit

    • Will Gio Reyna be sacrificed for a more defensive-minded player?

    • Is Matt Turner injured? Can he last the 90, or is there a chance they’ll have to use a sub at goalkeeper?

  • HALFTIME: USA 1-1 PANAMA

  • A bonkers, CONCACAFy first half

    It’s 1-1 at halftime. To recap:

    • Scrappy, chippy, s***housy start

    • Weston McKennie scores, but VAR disallows it

    • Tim Weah lashes out at a Panama player and gets sent off

    • Folarin Balogun scores a banger to put the U.S. ahead

    • Panama almost immediately equalizes

    • More chippiness and s***housery

    • U.S. scrambling to keep it 1-1, both teams look capable of scoring

    • To cap it off …

  • 45′ Eduardo Guerrero shown a yellow

  • The Weah red card

    It got a bit lost in the craziness of the 15 minutes that followed … but here’s the angle of the Tim Weah incident that referee Iván Barton looked at and immediately thought: That’s a red card.

    Does the angle and the Panamanian reaction make it look worse than it actually was? Maybe. But either way, it was really stupid. And Weah, after the video review, looked like he knew it was stupid.



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