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The United States is the most successful team in Women's World Cup history, having won four titles in five finals. Germany has two titles and finished as runners-up once; Japan and Norway each have one title and have both finished as runners-up in another final.
As of 2023, four of the six FIFA confederations have made it to a Women's World Cup final, the only exceptions being CAF (Africa) and the OFC (Oceania). CONMEBOL is the only confederation to have made a World Cup final without winning, following Brazil's defeat in the 2007 final.
The tournament, held every four years and one year after the men's World Cup, was first played in 1991 in China, and was expanded to 32 teams beginning with the 2023 edition. The tournament is contested with eight round-robin groups followed by a knockout round for 16 teams.
19 lip 2023 · 1999 – USA Spot-on against unfortunate China. America was the venue for the 1999 final as an incredible 90,000 people inside a sold-out Rose Bowl in Pasadena saw the host nation lift the...
Relive the iconic 1999 FIFA Women's World Cup final as we count down to the kick-off of the 2023 edition.
23 sie 2023 · We now know the identity of the first-time World Cup champion to emerge from the 2023 Women’s World Cup, as Spain beat England 1-0 in the final of an engrossing tournament staged in Australia and New Zealand. For the first time ever the FIFA Women’s World Cup had two host nations, with matches played in both Australia and New Zealand.
19 lip 2023 · America was the venue for the 1999 final as an incredible 90,000 people inside a sold-out Rose Bowl in Pasadena saw the host nation lift the World Cup for a second time. China pushed them all the way however, with the showpiece match ended 0-0 and requiring penalties.