Times Colonist

Women’s World Cup grows to 32 teams

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FIFA’s Council has unanimousl­y approved expanding the Women’s World Cup from 24 teams to 32 for 2023 and has reopened bidding to host the tournament but made no mention of changing prize money.

FIFA said Wednesday the decision was made remotely.

Nine national soccer associatio­ns had expressed interest in hosting and were due to submit their formal bids by Oct. 4: Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Bolivia, Colombia, Japan, New Zealand, South Africa and South Korea, which could bid jointly with North Korea

Under the new timetable, any national associatio­n has until December to make a bid. FIFA expects a bid evaluation report next April and a decision the following month.

FIFA made no mention of prize money. The U.S. received $4 million US of a $30-million prize pool for winning the World Cup on July 7, a small percentage of the $38 million from a $400-million pool that France got for winning the 2018 men’s World Cup. FIFA has increased prize money for the 2022 men’s World Cup to $440 million and FIFA President Gianni Infantino said July 5 that he was proposing FIFA double the women’s prize money to $60 million US for 2023.

After the U.S. won the women’s final in Lyon, France, fans in the stadium chanted: “Equal Pay!”

Infantino said in a statement that “this is the time to keep the momentum going and take concrete steps to foster the growth of women’s football” and “it means that, from now on, dozens more member associatio­ns will organize their women’s football program knowing they have a realistic chance of qualifying.”

“We have a duty to do the groundwork and strengthen women’s football developmen­t infrastruc­ture across all confederat­ions,” he said.

The men’s World Cup was played with 13-16 teams from 1930-78, 24 from 1982-94 and has been contested with 32 since. It is due to expand to 48 in 2026, when the tournament is co-hosted by the United States, Mexico and Canada.

Infantino also has proposed a Women’s Club World Cup and creating a women’s world league. FIFA is also doubling the funding being made available to women’s soccer in the next four-year cycle to $1 billion US.

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