Calgary Herald

Women’s World Cup looks to build on surging interest

Colombia, Australia/new Zealand final bidders to host 2023 tournament

- NICK MULVENNEY

SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA The task of building on the huge success of last year’s Women’s World Cup will fall to a region that has never staged it before when Colombia and a joint bid from Australia and New Zealand vie for the 2023 hosting rights in Thursday’s FIFA vote.

The 2019 World Cup in France was hailed as a watershed for global interest in the women’s game and FIFA president Gianni Infantino personally drove the campaign to increase the field to 32 teams from 24 for 2023.

The greater weight on potential hosts to show they have the infrastruc­ture necessary to welcome so many teams has helped make the Australia-new Zealand bid the favourite.

The FIFA evaluation report gave the joint bid, unpreceden­ted for any senior World Cup in that Australia is in the Asian confederat­ion while New Zealand remains in Oceania, 4.1 points out of five.

Colombia received a rating of 2.8, but the local soccer federation and CONMEBOL confederat­ion have furiously protested its findings, in particular the use of the word “terrorism” when discussing security threats.

FIFA stood by the report. Ramon Jesurun, president of the Colombian Football Federation, also says government backing will ensure any apparent deficienci­es in infrastruc­ture will be easily ironed out over the next three years.

“Today we easily have eight or nine cities that are apt, with hotel capacity, with health capacity,” he told Reuters on Tuesday.

“Undoubtedl­y we’ll have to make some alteration­s, some improvemen­ts, but we have an immense backing from the federal government, the sports minister, from the president himself.”

All the bids, including that of Japan, which quit the race on Monday, have emphasized the impact hosting the tournament would have on the take-up of the game by girls and women in their regions.

Colombian success on Thursday would mean the event being played in the soccer hotbed of South America for the first time, while the matches would be played at a time most appropriat­e for the all-important North American market.

Even in the women’s game, Australasi­a has nowhere near South America’s soccer pedigree, and matches would have to be played at an hour when only diehards and insomniacs are awake in the U.S.

The trans-tasman Sea neighbours do, however, know how to put on major sporting events, and have proved it from the 2000 Sydney Olympics through the 2011 Rugby World Cup to soccer’s Asian Cup in 2015.

Australia also hosted this year’s women’s Twenty20 cricket World Cup, which culminated in a final played in front of 86,174 fans at the Melbourne Cricket Ground.

That New Zealand and Australia have both managed to contain COVID-19 relatively successful­ly might also play on the minds of the 37 members of FIFA’S ruling council when they meet via video conference on Thursday.

Most crucially, perhaps, the FIFA evaluation report rated the Australia-new Zealand bid as “the most commercial­ly viable.”

“Certainly, the technical committee report has given us some confidence, but we’re not taking it for granted,” New Zealand Football chief executive Andrew Pragnell told Reuters. “We’re both nervous and excited at this point.”

The technical committee report has given us some confidence, but we’re not taking it for granted. We’re both nervous and excited at this point.

 ?? MAJA HITIJ/GETTY IMAGES ?? The USA defeated the Netherland­s in the 2019 FIFA Women’s World Cup final. The tournament, held in France, has been hailed as a watershed moment for global interest in the women’s game.
MAJA HITIJ/GETTY IMAGES The USA defeated the Netherland­s in the 2019 FIFA Women’s World Cup final. The tournament, held in France, has been hailed as a watershed moment for global interest in the women’s game.

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