Women's World Cup: What to expect on Day 20
Hosts Australia and England secured their places in the World Cup quarter-finals with wins on Monday and the round of 16 finishes on Tuesday as Colombia, Jamaica, France and Morocco all seek to join them.
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Hosts Australia and England secured their places in the World Cup quarter-finals with wins on Monday and the round of 16 finishes on Tuesday as Colombia, Jamaica, France and Morocco all seek to join them.
SYDNEY : France will aim to halt debutants Morocco's fairytale run at the Women's World Cup when the teams meet in the last 16 in Adelaide on Tuesday while Jamaica and Colombia battle to reach the quarter-finals for the first time.
MELBOURNE : Spreading joy on and off the pitch at the Women's World Cup, Jamaica and Colombia will battle for a quarter-final place on Tuesday after partying with each other at a Sydney nightclub.
ADELAIDE : France coach Herve Renard has fond memories of managing Morocco's men's soccer team, but when his Les Bleues meet the North African nation in the round of 16 at the Women's World Cup the only thing on his mind will be winning.
The Panama Canal, one of the world’s busiest maritime trade passages, is facing tough times.
The 2023 Women's World Cup is in full swing, and after an incredible group stage that saw shocks galore — Germany, out! Brazil, out! Italy, out! Nigeria in! The U.S. finished second in its group! — we're given a scant 48 hours (or less) to breathe, digest and regroup ahead of the round of 16.
SYDNEY : The current Women's World Cup will be the best attended ever and is on course to smash the per-match record set in Canada in 2015, Football Australia chief executive James Johnson said on Friday.
Group play in the Women's World Cup is over, with nations 16 through to the knockout rounds.