Brazil’s tournament, in 2027, will be the last one to use the 32-team format.
ZURICH, Netherlands β The Womenβs World Cup will increase to 48 teams in 2031 when the United States is expected to host the tournament,Β FIFA confirmed Friday.
FIFA has wanted to expand the womenβs tournament from 32 teams to match the menβs World Cup which has 48 teams for the first time next year, when the U.S. will co-host with Canada and Mexico.
The decision follows one month afterΒ FIFA president Gianni Infantino said it had just one candidate bidding for each of the 2031 and 2035 womenβs tournaments β the U.S. followed by the United Kingdom. FIFA is expected to confirm these two hosts next year.
Brazil will host a 32-team Womenβs World Cup in 2027.
FIFA said the bigger, 104-game tournament with 48 teams βwill significantly broaden representation, offering more nations and players access to elite competition and accelerating investment in womenβs football worldwide.β
Going up
The Womenβs World Cup had just 16 teams as recently as the 2011 edition in Germany, 24 teams at each of the next two tournaments in Canada and France, then 32 teams for the first time in 2023 co-hosted by Australia and New Zealand.
The 2023 edition defied concerns the tournament had grown too fast, would have too many overmatched teams and too many lop-sided results.
In 2019, the defending champion U.S. team beat Thailand 13-0 in their opening group-stage game.
In 2023, the biggest win was the Netherlands beating Thailand 7-0, and the tournament βset a new standard for global competitiveness,β Infantino said Friday in a statement, because βteams from all confederations won at least one game and teams from five confederations reached the knockout stage.β
Players’ union welcomes expansion plan
The expected expansion plan was welcomed by the global players’ union FIFPRO, which called for βinclusive decision-making and cooperative planning.β
βIt is critical that the global development of womenβs competitions goes hand in hand with improved labor conditions and the advancement of players, as well as development further down the pyramid,β the Netherlands-based union said. βThis is the only path to true sustainability, expansion, and progress.β
In recent years, FIFA has updated andΒ improved contractual protections for players and coaches during pregnancy and after giving birth.
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