2023 Women’s World Cup Schedule: All Dates and Results – Sport

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2023-08-16 08:12:04

Soccer World Cup Down Under: From July 20th to August 20th, the ninth Women’s Soccer World Cup will take place in Australia and New Zealand. For the first time, 32 nations are taking part in a women’s World Cup, and 64 games have to be played before the new world champions are determined.

All games and dates for the 2023 Women’s World Cup can be found in this schedule and in our data center with all groups, tables and results.

World Cup 2023 – final round

round of 16

Quarterfinals

semifinals

15.8. in Auckland: Spain 2-1 Sweden 16.8. in Sydney, 12.00 p.m. (HF2): Australia – England

3rd place match

19.8. in Brisbane, 10:00: Sweden – loser HF 2

Finale

20.8. in Sydney, 12.00 p.m .: Spain – winner HF 2

World Cup 2023 – All results of the preliminary round

Group A

Group B

Group C

Spain 3-0 Costa Rica Zambia 0-5 Japan Japan 2-0 Costa Rica Spain 5-0 Zambia Japan 4-0 Spain Costa Rica 1-3 Zambia

Group D

England 1-0 Haiti Denmark 1-0 China England 1-0 Denmark China 1-0 Haiti China 1-England 6 Haiti 0-2 Denmark

Group E

Group F

Group G

Italy 1-0 Argentina Sweden 2-1 South Africa Argentina 2-2 South Africa Sweden 5-0 Italy Argentina 0-2 Sweden South Africa 3-2 Italy

Group H

Groups of the 2023 Women’s World Cup

Group A: New Zealand, Norway, Philippines, Switzerland Group B: Australia, Ireland, Canada, Nigeria Group C: Costa Rica, Japan, Zambia, Spain Group D: China, Denmark, England, Haiti Group E: Netherlands, Portugal, USA, Vietnam Group F: Brazil, France, Jamaica, Panama Group G: Argentina, Italy, Sweden, South Africa Group H: Germany, Colombia, Morocco, South Korea

Games of the German national team

After an unchallenged opening win against Morocco, the German team lost 1:2 against Colombia. In the last group game, the national team had to win against South Korea to safely move into the round of 16. However, after a poor performance, the German team were eliminated from the tournament 1-1 as Morocco beat Colombia 1-0.

Squad of the German women’s national team

Goal: Ann-Katrin Berger (Chelsea FC), Merle Frohms (VfL Wolfsburg), Stina Johannes (Eintracht Frankfurt)

Defense: Sara Doorsoun (Eintracht Frankfurt), Chantal Hagel (TSG 1899 Hoffenheim), Marina Hegering (VfL Wolfsburg), Kathrin Hendrich (VfL Wolfsburg), Sophia Kleinherne (Eintracht Frankfurt), Sjoeke Nüsken (Eintracht Frankfurt), Felicitas Rauch (VfL Wolfsburg )

Midfield/attack: Nicole Anyomi (Eintracht Frankfurt), Jule Brand (VfL Wolfsburg), Klara Bühl (FC Bayern Munich), Sara Däbritz (Olympique Lyon), Laura Freigang (Eintracht Frankfurt), Svenja Huth (VfL Wolfsburg), Lena Lattwein ( VfL Wolfsburg), Melanie Leupolz (Chelsea FC), Sydney Lohmann (FC Bayern Munich), Lina Magull (FC Bayern Munich), Lena Oberdorf (VfL Wolfsburg), Alexandra Popp (VfL Wolfsburg), Lea Schüller (FC Bayern Munich)

Football World Cup 2023 live on TV

ARD and ZDF broadcast the World Cup matches live on TV and in live streams. A transmission on free TV was questionable for a long time, only in June was the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) able to come to an agreement with the world association Fifa.

The allocation of rights took several months, as Fifa had offered its own sales package for the TV broadcast of the women’s World Cup for the first time – in the past, the broadcasting rights were always allocated in the package with the men’s tournaments. But the ideas of the broadcasters and Fifa were far behind each other for a long time until an agreement was finally reached in June.

Host of the 2023 World Cup

For the first time, a Women’s World Cup will be held in Australia and New Zealand. The game will be played in ten stadiums in nine cities, five of which are in Australia and four in New Zealand. In the preliminary round, the “odd” groups A, C, E and G in New Zealand compete, the “even” groups B, D, F and H in Australia. The time difference to Germany is between six and ten hours, depending on the venue.

The opening match took place on July 20 in Auckland, New Zealand, with the final taking place a month later on August 20 at Sydney’s Accor Stadium, dubbed ‘Stadium Australia’ during the World Cup and used only in the knockout stages .

The stadiums of the 2023 Women’s World Cup at a glance

Adelaide (Australia): Hindmarsh Stadium, 18,435 seats Auckland (New Zealand): Eden Park, 48,276 seats Brisbane (Australia): Brisbane Stadium, 52,263 seats Dunedin (New Zealand): Dunedin Stadium, 28,744 seats Hamilton (New Zealand): Waikato Stadium, 25,111 seats Melbourne (Australia): Melbourne Rectangular Stadium, 30,052 seats Perth (Australia): Perth Oval, 22,225 seats Sydney (Australia): Sydney Football Stadium, 42,512 seats Sydney (Australia): Stadium Australia, 83,500 Seats Wellington (New Zealand): Wellington Regional Stadium, 39,000 seats

With material from the dpa.

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