Mount Pleasant Football Academy’s Concacaf Champions Cup adventure came to a firm end on Thursday night, as LA Galaxy sealed a 3-0 victory at the National Stadium to complete a commanding 6-0 aggregate triumph in the Round of 16.
Already burdened by a three-goal deficit from the first leg in California, Mount Pleasant needed something extraordinary on home soil to revive the tie. Instead, the Jamaican club found itself undone once more by a sharper, more composed opponent that controlled the key moments and punished every opening.
By the final whistle, the scoreline had confirmed what the two-legged contest had gradually made clear: Mount Pleasant’s bold run had met a level too high to overcome.
Early warning signs became an early setback
LA Galaxy did not wait long to show their intent.
The visitors carved out the first meaningful chance of the evening after careless passing at the back from Mount Pleasant opened space for Gabriel Pec to drive into the area. He failed to convert that opportunity, but the warning was unmistakable.
The breakthrough arrived in the 18th minute. From a corner kick, Mount Pleasant failed to clear at the near post, and Joao Klauss was left unmarked in the box to turn home a header. In a tie where the margin for error was already narrow, the goal effectively pushed the mountain even higher.
Mount Pleasant tried to respond quickly, but Raheem Edwards dragged an effort wide three minutes later. As the half wore on, LA Galaxy continued to look dangerous, with Harbor Miller weaving past two defenders just after the half-hour mark before being denied a shooting chance.
Mount Pleasant showed fight, but not a finish
To their credit, Mount Pleasant emerged for the second half with more urgency and for a brief stretch appeared capable of at least taking control of the night’s momentum.
Five minutes after the restart, Edwards found himself in promising position and seemed poised to pull one back, only for his close-range effort to strike wide. It was the kind of moment the hosts desperately needed to turn into belief.
Soon after, another opening went abegging. Brown slipped beyond the goalkeeper and found himself with a sight of goal, but from a tightening angle he chose to shoot rather than square the ball to the onrushing Edwards. The chance evaporated, and with it went perhaps Mount Pleasant’s clearest route back into the contest.
Pec punishes the hosts
Having survived that brief period of pressure, LA Galaxy responded in decisive fashion.
In the 61st minute, Gabriel Pec produced the visitors’ second goal, accelerating away from his markers with ease before finishing calmly around goalkeeper Shaquan Davis. It was a crushing blow, particularly because it came during one of Mount Pleasant’s better spells of the match.
Pec returned late to add the third and complete his brace in the 87th minute. After Davis parried an initial effort from Miller, the Galaxy attacker reacted quickest inside the box and rolled the rebound into an empty net.
That final goal served as the last punctuation mark on an emphatic performance from the American side.
Another Jamaican exit at the same stage
Mount Pleasant’s elimination means a Jamaican club has now fallen in the Champions Cup Round of 16 in consecutive seasons. Last year, Cavalier exited at the same phase after a 4-0 aggregate defeat to Inter Miami.
This time, Mount Pleasant carried the nation’s hopes into the knockout stage and showed flashes of ambition across the two legs, but LA Galaxy’s quality, pace, and efficiency proved too much to handle.
There was disappointment in Kingston, certainly, but also perspective. Mount Pleasant’s players were tested by one of the region’s biggest clubs and discovered just how unforgiving the Champions Cup becomes once the margins tighten and the opposition sharpens.
Their campaign ended without the comeback their supporters had hoped to witness, yet the experience should still carry value. On this stage, against this caliber of opponent, hesitancy was punished, missed opportunities multiplied, and control of the tie slipped away for good.
LA Galaxy advanced with authority. Mount Pleasant exited with hard lessons, a harsh scoreline, and a clearer view of the standard required to go deeper in Concacaf’s premier club competition.
















