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FIFA provides breakdown of expanded 32-team Women’s World Cup field

Dec 24, 2020 | 9:28 AM

CONCACAF will have four direct berths for the expanded Women’s World Cup in 2023 with two more teams from the region having a chance to join them via a 10-team playoff tournament.

Canada, the U.S. and Jamaica represented the confederation covering North and Central America and the Caribbean at the 24-team World Cup in France last year. A fourth CONCACAF country, Panama, had a chance to qualify but lost 5-1 on aggregate to Argentina in a home-and-away CONCACAF-CONMEBOL playoff.

On Thursday, FIFA released the breakdown for the enlarged 32-team women’s showcase,

Europe (UEFA) will get 11 direct slots while Asia (AFC) gets six and Africa (CAF), like CONCACAF, gets four. South America (CONMEBOL) gets three and Oceania (OFC) one.

Host Australia and New Zealand automatically qualify with their slots taken directly from the quotas allocated to their confederations (AFC and OFC, respectively). 

Host Australia and New Zealand automatically qualify with their slots taken directly from the quotas allocated to their confederations (AFC and OFC, respectively). ,one each from Oceania and Europe.

The 2019 World Cup field featured nine teams from Europe, including host France, five from Asia, three from Africa and CONCACAF, two from South America, one from Oceania and the winner of the CONCACAF-CONMEBOL playoff.

The first Women’s World Cup, held in 1991 in China, had 12 participants. Canada failed to qualify for the first edition, with the U.S. the lone representative from CONCACAF.

But Canada has played in the seven tournaments since. Its best showing was in 2003 when it finished fourth in the U.S. The Canadian women reached the quarterfinals in 2015 on home soil and exited in the round-of-16 last year in France.

Four teams will be seeded in the 2023 playoff tournament, based on the latest FIFA world rankings prior to the draw, with a maximum of one seeded team per confederation. The teams will be divided into three pools — two of three countries and one of four — with sides from the same confederation kept apart.

The three-team groups will see the seeded country against the winner of a knockout game involving the two unseeded teams in the group with a World Cup berth on the line. The four-team group will see seeds No. 3 and 4 playing against the two unseeded teams in the group, with the two winners then playing for a place in the World Cup. 

The playoff tournament will serve as a test event in Australia and New Zealand with both hosts taking part in friendly matches against the teams in Group 1 and Group 2, ensuring all teams play two matches during the competition.

In other tournament news, FIFA has cancelled the 2021 editions of the men’s FIFA U-20 World Cup and FIFA U-17 World Cup due to the pandemic. Indonesia and Peru, which were to host the tournaments in 2021, will serve as hosts in 2023.

“It became clear that the global situation has failed to normalize to a sufficient level to address the challenges associated with hosting both tournaments, including the feasibility of the relevant qualification pathways,” FIFA said in a statement.

 

Follow @NeilMDavidson on Twitter

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Dec. 24, 2020

Neil Davidson, The Canadian Press