Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Retrieved 2020-01-30. ^ "U.S. Women's National Team Kicks Off Emma Hayes Era in Grand Fashion with Dominant 4-0 Victory Over Korea Republic". www.ussoccer.com. Retrieved 2024-06-02. ^ "USA Defeats Mexico 1-0 In First-Ever Snow Game For WNT As Abby Wambach Gets Game-Winner in 60th Minute - U.S. Soccer". 2010-04-04.
The United States is one of five countries including Germany, Japan, Norway, and Spain to win a FIFA Women's World Cup. (The United States won in China in 1991, in the United States in 1999, in Canada in 2015, and in France in 2019). The United States was also the only team that played the maximum number of matches possible in every tournament ...
The 1999 World Cup final, in which the United States defeated China, set a world attendance record for a women's soccer event of 90,185 in a sellout at the Rose Bowl in Southern California (until it was broken on March 30, 2022, with 91,553 people at the Camp Nou in Barcelona, Spain in the second-leg of a UEFA Women's Champions League match). [106]
10: United States (1991–1995), Germany (1999–2007), United States (2015–2023). Most consecutive matches scoring at least three goals 5: United States (1991), Germany (2003). Most consecutive matches scoring at least five goals 2: United States (1991). Most consecutive matches without conceding a goal (clean sheets) 6: Germany (2007).
The USA are aiming to win the World Cup for the third time in a row in what is Megan Rapinoe’s final tournament USA vs Vietnam LIVE: USWNT win 3-0 as Sophia Smith nets twice in Women’s World ...
1.4 2023. 1.5 2024. 2 References. Toggle the table of contents. United States women's national soccer team results (2020–present) Add languages. ... United States 0 ...
20 years, 196 days, Stina Blackstenius ( Sweden), vs Germany, 19 August 2016. Oldest hat-trick scorer. 29 years, 55 days, Christine Sinclair ( Canada), vs United States, 6 August 2012. Oldest goalscorer, final. 30 years, 24 days, Carli Lloyd ( United States), vs Japan, 9 August 2012.
Overview. The FIFA Women's World Cup is a professional association football (soccer) tournament contested by senior women's national football teams, organised by FIFA. [20] The tournament, held every four years and one year after the men's World Cup, was first played in 1991 in China, and was expanded to 32 teams beginning with the 2023 edition.