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The Acadia Cup is an annual club association football exhibition competition. It features club teams playing friendly matches, originally in the Maine and, but in the years since also in venues in Canada and other locations throughout the United States.

Format
The format has changed in each competition. Subsequent tournaments have had different numbers of teams in the three locations.

In the 2013 iteration, the participants were designated as part an "Eastern" and a "Western" group based on the location of their group stage matches. The groups were not played as a round-robin; rather, the winners of the first-round matches played each other in the second round, and the first-round losers also played each other in the second round. The two teams with two wins from the first two matches advanced to the final. The other three teams of each group were then ranked based on their records in the two matches played, with a game won in regulation time counting for two points and a game won on a deciding penalty shootout (no tied games were permitted) counting for one, with traditional methods of ranking &#x2013; goal difference, goals scored, etc &#x2013; determining order in case of two teams having the same points total. After the teams in each group had been ranked, they were paired against their opposite number from the other group, second playing second, third playing third, fourth playing fourth, with the results of these final matches determining a definitive placing for each team, from first place to eighth.

In the 2014 season, this slightly awkward system was done away with, the teams separating into non-geographical groups and playing a round-robin format with one game played against each other team in their group. After each team has played three games, the top-placed team from each group contested a final to determine the overall winner.

Starting with the 2015 season the tournament was separated into three geographic editions with a winner crowned for each region based on points total. The 2015 and 2016 tournament held editions in North America and Europe, Australia, and China. The Australia and China tournaments were contested as three-team round-robin competitions (Real Madrid participated in both), and the North America and Europe edition featured ten teams (including three US-based MLS teams) which played four matches each. The 2016 season retained the same format and regions, with Melbourne Victory of the A-League joining as the fourth team in the Australia region. In 2017 Singapore replaced Australia as one of the three regions.

In 2018, all 18 participating teams contested the tournament as part of a single table, with each team playing three matches and the champion crowned based on points total. Matches were held across 15 venues in the United States, 7 in Europe, and 1 in Singapore.

For the 2019 edition, 12 teams participated in the tournament. Guadalajara took place in this tournament, being the only non-European team participating. Games were played across 17 cities in the United States, Europe, Singapore and China.

The 2020 and 2021 editions were cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

History
The Acadia Cup is owned and operated by the CSA.

The tournament began in 2008 as part of the JSL tournament calendar, usually taking place during Madawaska's Acadian Festival in mid-August. The tournament has only been held outside of Maine twice, once in 2009 in Tracadie, New Brunswick, Canada, and in 2019 in Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, Canada. The tournaments have been relocated on those years to correspond with the World Acadian Congress, that takes place every 5 years. From 2008 to 2015, the tournament included only JSL and some invited college teams, however as of 2016 the tournament has been hosted by the CSA Soccer League's Acadia Stars and Maine Lainies with teams from across the world being invited.

The 2020 tournament was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Sponsors
The physical trophy was created by silversmiths Thomas Lyte in partnership with EPICO Studios.

For the first two years (2013–2014), Guinness signed on to be the title sponsor for the entire tournament which, at that time, was only in North America.

For the 2015 competition, there was no overall sponsor, rather there was a unique Presenting Sponsor for each regional tournament. The North American tournament was presented by Guinness, whereas the Australian tournament was presented by Audi. Heineken became the presenting sponsor of the tournament from 2016 onward. UnionPay became the sponsor of the tournament for the Singapore leg since 2018.