When, where and with whom?: The most important information about the 2023 Down Under World Cup

class=”sc-29f61514-0 fQbOYE”>

1/7
The final of the FIFA World Cup takes place in Sydney.

When and where will the 2023 World Cup take place?

The World Cup will take place in Australia and New Zealand from July 20 to August 20. For the first time, a final tournament will be held in two countries and for the first time 32 countries will participate. The opening game will take place in Auckland, the final in Sydney. Games are also played in Adelaide, Brisbane, Melbourne, Perth, Dunedin, Hamilton and Wellington.

In which stadiums will the matches be played?

The matches will take place in ten stadiums in nine cities. Four locations are in New Zealand (Hamilton, Auckland, Dunedin and Wellington) and the others in Australia (Melbourne, Sydney, Perth, Brisbane and Adelaide).

  • Australia Stadium, Sydney: 83,000 spectators – a round of 16, a quarter and a semi-final and the final
  • Brisbane Stadium, Brisbane: 52,263 spectators – 5 group matches, a round of 16 and a quarter final and a match for third place
  • Eden Park, Auckland: 48,276 spectators – 5 group matches, a round of 16, a quarter and a semi-final
  • Sydney Football Stadium, Sydney: 42,512 spectators – 6 group matches and a round of 16
  • Wellington Regional Stadium, Wellington: 39,000 spectators – 6 group matches, a round of 16 and a quarter final
  • Melbourne rectangular stadium: 30,052 spectators – 4 group matches and 2 eighths
  • Dunedin Stadium, Dunedin: 28,744 spectators – 6 group matches
  • Waikato Stadium, Hamilton: 25,111 spectators – 5 group matches
  • Perth Oval, Perth: 22,225 spectators – 5 group matches
  • Hindmarsh Stadium, Adelaide: 18,435 spectators – 3 group matches and a round of 16

Who is the defending champion?

At the 2019 tournament in France, the USA defeated the Netherlands 2-0 in the final. The Americans have won four of the previous eight World Championships.

Who qualified?

  • Host: Australia and New Zealand
  • North America and the Caribbean: USA, Canada, Costa Rica, Jamaica, Haiti and Panama
  • Asia: China, Japan, South Korea, the Philippines and Vietnam
  • Africa: Zambia, Morocco, Nigeria and South Africa
  • South America: Brazil, Colombia and Argentina
  • Europe: Sweden, Spain, France, Denmark, Norway, Germany, England, Netherlands, Portugal, Italy, Ireland and Switzerland

How much money is it?

At the 2019 World Cup, almost CHF 50 million was paid out in prizes and bonuses for the World Cup preparation. World champion USA received a prize money of $ 4 million, all participants at least $ 750,000 entry fee. With the 2023 tournament in mind, FIFA aims to double the prize money. The federations receive around one million Swiss francs just for the preparations for the World Cup.

Advertisement

How many times has Switzerland participated in a World Cup?

It is Switzerland’s second participation in the World Cup. At the premiere in Canada in 2015, Martina Voss-Tecklenburg’s team qualified for the round of 16, losing 1-0 to the hosts in Vancouver.

The Swiss team

National coach Inka Grings has called up 23 players for the World Cup. Surprisingly, she does without Riola Xhemaili. The only 16-year-old Iman Beney should have traveled to the tournament for that. But she ruptures her cruciate ligament during training for the final test match and is out. Grings nominated Amira Arfaoui for her. Click through the gallery for the list.

1/29
National coach Inka Grings chose the following 23 players for her World Cup selection:

The game plan

In October 2022, the eight groups of four were drawn in Auckland. The teams of numbers 1 and 2 qualify for the eighth finals, for the others it is time to pack their bags again after the group phase.

group stage

group A

Advertisement
  • July 20
    9:00 New Zealand v Norway, Auckland
  • 21 July
    07:00: Philippines – SwitzerlandDunedin
  • July 25
    7.30am New Zealand v Philippines, Wellington
    10am: Switzerland —Norway, Hamilton
  • July 30
    9:00 am.: Switzerland – New Zealand, Dunedin
    9:00 Norway-Philippines, Auckland

Group B

  • July 20
    12pm: Australia v Ireland, Sydney
  • 21 July
    4.30am: Nigeria v Canada, Melbourne
  • July 26
    2pm Canada-Ireland, Perth
  • July 27
    12:00 Australia v Nigeria, Brisbane
  • July 31
    12pm Canada-Australia, Melbourne
    12.00 Ireland – Nigeria, Brisbane

Group C

Advertisement
  • 21 July
    9.30am Spain v Costa Rica, Wellington
  • July 22
    9am: Zambia v Japan, Hamilton
  • July 26
    07:00 Japan-Costa Rica, Dunedin
    9.30am Spain v Zambia, Auckland
  • July 31
    9am Japan-Spain, Wellington
    9am: Costa Rica v Zambia, Hamilton

Group D

  • July 22
    11.30am England v Haiti, Brisbane
    2pm Denmark-China, Perth
  • July 28
    10.30am England v Denmark, Sydney
    1pm: China-Haiti, Adelaide
  • 1 August
    1pm: China v England, Adelaide
    1pm: Haiti-Denmark, Perth

Group E

Advertisement
  • July 22
    3:00 US-Vietnam, Auckland
  • July 23
    9.30am Holland-Portugal, Dunedin
  • July 27
    3am: USA v Holland, Wellington
    9.30am Portugal-Vietnam, Hamilton
  • 1 August
    9am Vietnam-Holland, Dunedin
    9:00 Portugal-USA, Auckland

Group F

  • July 23
    12:00 France – Jamaica, Sydney
  • July 24
    1pm: Brazil v Panama, Adelaide
  • July 29
    12:00 France – Brazil, Brisbane
    2:30 p.m. Panama-Jamaica, Perth
  • August 2
    12:00 Jamaica-Brazil, Melbourne
    12 noon: Panama-France, Sydney

Group G

Advertisement
  • July 23
    7am Sweden v South Africa, Wellington
  • July 24
    8am Italy-Argentina, Auckland
  • July 28
    2.00 Argentina v South Africa, Dunedin
  • July 29
    9.30am Sweden v Italy, Wellington
  • August 2
    9am Argentina-Sweden, Hamilton
    9am South Africa v Italy, Wellington

Group H

  • July 24
    10.30am: Germany v Morocco, Melbourne
  • July 25
    4am: Colombia v South Korea, Sydney
  • July 30
    6.30am South Korea v Morocco, Adelaide
    11.30am: Germany v Colombia, Sydney
  • 3 August
    12pm: South Korea v Germany, Brisbane
    12:00 Morocco-Colombia, Perth

round of 16

  • August 5
    AF1 7.00: Winner A – Second Place C, Auckland
    AF2 10am: Winner C – Second Place A, Wellington
  • August 6
    AF3 4.00: Winner E – Second Place G, Sydney
    AF4 11am: Winner G – Second Place E, Melbourne
  • August 7
    AF5 9.30am: Winner D – Second Place B, Brisbane
    AF6 12.30pm: Winner B – Second Place D, Sydney
  • August the 8th
    AF7 10am: Winner H – Second Place F, Melbourne
    AF8 1pm: Winner F – Second H, Adelaide
Advertisement

Quarterfinals

  • August 11
    VF1 3.00: Winner AF1 – Winner AF3, Wellington
    VF2 9.30am: Winner AF2 – Winner AF4, Auckland
  • August 12
    VF3 9am: Winner AF6 – Winner AF8, Brisbane
    VF4 12.30pm: Winner AF5 – Winner AF7, Sydney

semi-finals

  • August 15
    HF1 10am: Winner VF1 – Winner VF2, Auckland
  • August 16
    HF2 12 hours: Winner VF3 – Winner VF4, Sydney

Small final

  • August 19
    10am: Loser HF1 – Loser HF2, Brisbane

Last

  • 20th of August
    12 noon: Winner HF1 – Winner HF2, Sydney
Advertisement

Where can I watch the World Cup?

SRF delivers the full load of the Women’s World Cup. All matches are broadcast on TV on SRFzwei or SRFinfo, or can be followed online in the web stream.

Past world champions

In 1991, a Women’s World Cup was held for the first time. Since then, the US in particular has dominated the tournament. Four of the eight world titles to date have gone to the Americans. They are also the defending champions in Australia and New Zealand. Here is an overview of the previous finals:

  • 1991: USA – Norway 2:1
  • 1994: Norway – Germany 2-0
  • 1999: US – China 0:0 aet / 5:4 aet
  • 2003: Germany 2-1 Sweden (98th minute golden goal)
  • 2007: Germany 2-0 Brazil
  • 2011: Japan – US 2:2 aet / 3:1 aet
  • 2015: United States 5-2 Japan
  • 2019: USA – Netherlands 2-0
█ █ █ █
team
SP
TD
pt
1
█ █ █ █
0
0
0
2
█ █ █ █
0
0
0
3
█ █ █ █
0
0
0
4
█ █ █ █
0
0
0
█ █ █ █
team
SP
TD
pt
1
█ █ █ █
0
0
0
2
█ █ █ █
0
0
0
3
█ █ █ █
0
0
0
4
█ █ █ █
0
0
0
█ █ █ █
team
SP
TD
pt
1
█ █ █ █
0
0
0
2
█ █ █ █
0
0
0
3
█ █ █ █
0
0
0
4
█ █ █ █
0
0
0
█ █ █ █
team
SP
TD
pt
1
█ █ █ █
0
0
0
2
█ █ █ █
0
0
0
3
█ █ █ █
0
0
0
4
█ █ █ █
0
0
0
█ █ █ █
team
SP
TD
pt
1
█ █ █ █
0
0
0
2
█ █ █ █
0
0
0
3
█ █ █ █
0
0
0
4
█ █ █ █
0
0
0
█ █ █ █
team
SP
TD
pt
1
█ █ █ █
0
0
0
2
█ █ █ █
0
0
0
3
█ █ █ █
0
0
0
4
█ █ █ █
0
0
0
█ █ █ █
team
SP
TD
pt
1
█ █ █ █
0
0
0
2
█ █ █ █
0
0
0
3
█ █ █ █
0
0
0
4
█ █ █ █
0
0
0
█ █ █ █
team
SP
TD
pt
1
█ █ █ █
0
0
0
2
█ █ █ █
0
0
0
3
█ █ █ █
0
0
0
4
█ █ █ █
0
0
0

Source : Blick

follow:
Emma

Emma

I'm Emma Jack, a news website author at 24 News Reporters. I have been in the industry for over five years and it has been an incredible journey so far. I specialize in sports reporting and am highly knowledgeable about the latest trends and developments in this field.

Related Posts