Women’s World Cup Standings: Who’s Leading the Way?
Every year, the Women’s World Cup is first-rate performance, complete of emotion, high-quality talent, and extreme opposition. Teams from everywhere in the global gather to compete for the coveted crown each four years and show their competencies. Fans anxiously watch the standings as the competition is going on to decide which teams are inside the lead and most in all likelihood to win the trophy. Let’s take a look at the top teams grabbing media interest by delving into the Women’s World Cup standings as of right now.
What times do it start and end?
The competition runs from Friday, when the hosts play South Korea at Paris’s Parc des Princes, to July 7, when the final is held. Stade de Lyon, popularly known as Groupama Stadium in Lyon, will host that game as well as all of the semi-finals. There are a total of nine venues in use.
Format: What is it?
Six groups of four comprise the 24 participating teams. Each pool will have winners and runners-up, as well as the four teams that rank highest when comparing the records of the third-place finishers in their groups, all earning a spot in the round of 16. The day before the final, the two eliminated semi-finalists will compete against one another in Nice for third place overall.
Previously, what happened at the tournaments?
The United States is the team with the most victories in the competition. They won the trophy three times, the last time it was held in Canada four years ago. In 1991 and 1999, the US emerged victorious in both of the initial three tournaments, with Norway emerging victorious in the interim. Germany won the World Cup twice in a row in 2003 and 2007. While Japan won the 2011 championship after defeating the US in the final. Japan lost the 2015 final.
Who are the top picks?
In addition to the United States, leading the FIFA rankings, Germany and the host nation, France, placed second and fourth, are also considered serious candidates for the championship. There has also been a lot of discussion on England’s chances of winning. The third-ranked Lionesses in the world gained confidence earlier this year when they won the SheBelieves Cup, a four-team competition. Holland wants to build on their home victory at Euro 2017.
The Women’s World Cup standings: a tool of transformation
In women’s sports, there has been much inequity for too long. It may surprise you to learn that male athletes earn anywhere from 15% to 100% more than their skilled female peers. Professional soccer is not an anomaly either.
In the run-up to this year’s event, shamefully underfunded and devalued teams from South Africa, Nigeria (who may be organizing a boycott), and Canada have all demonstrated over pay-related concerns. In order to pay for its participation, the Jamaican women’s team actually had to put up a number of fundraisers and crowdfunders with little to no help from its national federation.
But things are beginning to even out and level the playing field. The fact that Sarai Bareman, FIFA’s first Chief Women’s Football Officer, is in charge of this year’s competition is among the most obvious signs of change in professional soccer.
FIFA Women’s World Cup team rankings
As of the most recent ranking announcement on June 9, the defending world champions USA are a top the world rankings. An elite spot they have maintained consistently since 2017 and overall for an incredible 5,638 days.
- Since implementing the rankings, only Germany has held the top spot.
- They did so for the longest period of time, from 2003 to 2007.
- Zambia, the first African team to compete in the World Cup, now ranks 77th in the world.
- Iceland, presently rated 15th in the world, was the highest-ranked team to miss out on the event.
Does the team with the best ranking win the Women’s World Cup?
- In each of the four World Cups since the rankings were introduced in 2003. The USA, the top-ranked team, did not win the competition and Germany and Brazil eliminated them in the quarterfinals, respectively.
- They advanced to the 2011 final, but Japan stunned them by defeating them in a penalty shootout.
- In the end, the United States of America emerged victorious in the 2015 World Cup. But only after momentarily surpassing Germany in the global rankings. The Americans secured the victory in the tournament semifinals, though.
How Women’s World Cup Standings are determined?
A team needs to have played at least five games and one match in the last eighteen months to be eligible for ranking.
FIFA ranks teams according to a value that measures their actual strength. So, stronger teams will not gain many points by winning big against weaker teams. While smaller teams won’t suffer as much from crushing losses to bigger opponents. The primary factors that determine how many points teams gain or lose are the outcome of the game, whether they play at home, away, or on neutral ground, the significance of the contest, and the disparity in rankings between the two teams.
.