The ninth Women’s World Cup will be lifted by a first-time champion
USA had won four of the eight previous edition
Germany (2), Norway and Japan the only other teams to have triumphed
This year’s FIFA Women’s World Cup™ will see a new champion crowned, with all the tournament’s previous winners now eliminated.
Four-time victors USA saw their hopes of a third successive triumph ended in the Round of 16 following a dramatic penalty shootout defeat by Sweden.
Germany crashed out in the group stage, Norway were eliminated by Japan, with the Nadeshiko then seeing their own dreams ended by the Swedes in the quarter-finals.
As the 2023 final at Stadium Australia on 20 August draws ever closer, and with a new name guaranteed to be on the trophy, FIFA looks at the sides that have etched their names in Women’s World Cup history across the eight previous editions.
FIFA Women’s World Cup Sweden 1995™
Winners: Norway Runners-up: Germany Third place: USA
Despite that Akers-inspired defeat in ’91, the Norwegians remained a thorn in USA’s flesh for much of the ensuing decade. European champions in 1993, they went one better by claiming the world crown two years later in neighbouring Sweden, edging out the Americans in the last four before seeing off Germany 2-0 in the final.
Norway would go on win the Women’s Olympic Football Tournament in 2000 too, beating the US – who else – in the final. But Hege Riise, Norway’s talented talisman and current coach, had no difficulty in choosing between these two triumphs. “Winning the Olympics was wonderful, but the flow of the tournament wasn’t the same,” she told FIFA in 2016. “1995 was the best moment of my career without any doubt.”
Germany v Norway | Final | FIFA Women’s World Cup Sweden 1995™ | Highlights
Watch the highlights from the match between Germany and Norway played at Rasunda Stadium, Solna on Sunday, 18 June 1995.
FIFA Women’s World Cup USA 1999™
Winners: USA Runners-up: China PR Third place: Brazil
In all but one of the Women’s World Cups to date, the hosts have exited in the quarter or semi-finals. USA 99 was exceptional in that sense, and in many more besides.
The tournament and its champions – the Americans’ fabled ‘99ers’ – are still remembered as having provided a crucial breakthrough in the evolution of this tournament and the women’s game as a whole. Their matches were played out before vast, packed stadiums, with a total attendance of 1.194 million that stood as a record until 2015.
On the field, and while Sun Wen’s China PR and Sissi’s Brazil dazzled, it was the US – with the beloved Mia Hamm now centre stage – who took the title. They did so, of course, with a dramatic final penalty shootout win over the Chinese, capped by Brandi Chastain’s iconic celebration.
USA v China PR | Final | FIFA Women’s World Cup USA 1999™ | Highlights
Watch the highlights from the match between USA and China PR played at Rose Bowl, Pasadena on Saturday, 10 July 1999 at 12:50.
FIFA Women’s World Cup USA 2003™
Winners: Germany Runners-up: Sweden Third place: USA
When USA stepped in to host the tournament again four years later after a SARS outbreak forced its relocation from China, the hosts were almost universally expected to once again reign supreme.
The ever-improving Germans had other ideas, however, and heralded the beginning of their golden era by outclassing and outmuscling the Americans in a 3-0 semi-final defeat. The European champions, who had demolished Russia 7-1 in the last eight, then pipped Sweden to the title, with Nia Kunzer scoring a legendary 98th-minute golden goal.
Birgit Prinz and Co ended the tournament having found the net 25 times, setting an average of 4.16 goals per match that equalled USA’s record from 1991 and has never been matched since.
Germany v Sweden | Final | FIFA Women’s World Cup USA 2003™ | Highlights
Watch the highlights from the match between Germany and Sweden played at StubHub Center, Carson on Sunday, 12 October 2003.
FIFA Women’s World Cup China PR 2007™
Winners: Germany Runners-up: Brazil Third place: USA
If high scoring marked out their 2003 triumph, Germany’s success in China four years later was indebted to the tightest defence in the tournament’s history.
With goalkeeper Nadine Angerer in the form of her life, and a sturdy, well-organised backline assembled in front of her, Silvia Neid’s side saw off the likes of Japan, Norway and final opponents Brazil – fresh from a Marta-inspired demolition of the US – without conceding a single goal. No-one in the men’s or women’s World Cup has managed that feat before or since.
Germany v Brazil | Final | FIFA Women’s World Cup China 2007™ | Highlights
Watch the highlights from the match between Germany and Brazil played at Shanghai Hongkou Football Stadium, Shanghai on Sunday, 30 September 2007.
FIFA Women’s World Cup Germany 2011™
Winners: Japan Runners-up: USA Third place: Sweden
Home advantage made Germany heavy favourites to win a third successive crown but, as with USA in 2003, the hosts found themselves in the shadow of first-time champions.
No team has won the Women’s World Cup scoring as few goals (12) or conceding as many (6) as Japan in 2011. But those statistics belied a hard-earned triumph that contained plenty of slick football and warmed plenty of hearts, coming as it did just a few months after the country had been devastated by a tsunami.
Nadeshiko
How Japan overcame all odds to win the 2011 FIFA Women’s World Cup.
FIFA Women’s World Cup Canada 2015™
Winners: USA Runners-up: Japan Third place: England
The first 24-team edition has come to be remembered for the highest-scoring final in Women’s World Cup history, won convincingly by a resurgent US and illuminated by a historic Carli Lloyd hat-trick.
What’s often forgotten is that the Americans’ campaign was the ultimate slow burner; they scored just four times in their three group-stages matches, labouring to a goalless draw with Sweden amid murmured criticisms of coach Jill Ellis. But Lloyd and Co improved with every knockout round and rose to the big occasion by crushing Japan 5-2 – the most lopsided scoreline yet recorded a Women’s World Cup final.
USA | All Champions Goals | FIFA Women’s World Cup Canada 2015™
Watch all goals scored by USA at FIFA Women’s World Cup Canada 2015™.
FIFA Women’s World Cup France 2019™
Winners: USA Runners-up: The Netherlands Third place: Sweden
Ellis was there again, as was the core of the 2015 squad, as the US became just the second team – after Germany (2003, 2007) – to retain the crown.
If their Canadian campaign was a slow burner, this was anything but, with 13 goals in their opening match paving the way to a tournament-record haul of 26. The knockout stage saw Europe’s leading sides swept aside, with Spain, hosts France, England and the Netherlands – then continental champions – unable to halt this unstoppable American juggernaut.
USA | All Champions Goals | FIFA Women’s World Cup France 2019™
Watch all goals scored by USA at FIFA Women’s World Cup France 2019™.
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