FIFA confirm final four bidders for 2023 Women’s World Cup

18 December, 2019

Brazil, Colombia and Japan will rival Australia and New Zealand for the right to host the 2023 FIFA Women’s World Cup. A joint bid from Football Federation Australia (FFA) and New Zealand Football (NZF) for the first 32-team edition of the competition was announced in Melbourne earlier on Friday.

FIFA has now confirmed that the Brazilian Football Confederation (CBF), Colombian Football Federation (FCF) and Japan Football Association (JFA) all submitted bids prior to the December 13 deadline.

A proposed joint bid from North and South Korea was not included in the final shortlist, with the Korea Football Association (KFA) having withdrawn their application, citing diplomatic tension between the two countries.

An assessment of the bids will now follow, which includes inspection visits to each member association, likely in January and February of next year.
The eligible bids will then be presented to the FIFA Council, which will select the host at a meeting in Addis Ababa in June 2020.
“France 2019 was certainly a watershed moment for women’s football, and now it is FIFA’s responsibility to take concrete measures to keep fostering the game’s incredible growth,” FIFA president Gianni Infantino said.

“With the FIFA Women’s World Cup generating an unprecedented interest across member associations, we are ensuring that the process to select the hosts is seamless, objective, ethical and transparent.

“By the time the FIFA Council announces the hosts, there should be no doubt whatsoever as to why that choice was made.”
The United States won the 2019 World Cup, beating Netherlands 2-0 in the final in Lyon to defend the trophy they claimed in 2015.

Dark
Light

Latest News

Chinas mission six launch

China’s Chang’e 6 mission and the vision of “The High Frontier”

There are a lot of questions on the launch of

What just happened to Bonza? Why new budget airlines always struggle in Australia

The history of budget jet airlines in Australia is a
Global Military Budgets

The US has unequivocally lost the race for supremacy

This situation is quite confussing. The American Enterprise Institute (AEI),