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FIFA Women's World Cup qualification is the process a national women's association football team goes through to qualify for the FIFA Women's World Cup.. Qualifying tournaments are held within the six FIFA continental zones (Africa, Asia, North and Central America and Caribbean, South America, Oceania, Europe), and are organized by their respective confederations.
8 April 2021 2020 AFC Women's Olympic Qualifying ... 20 January 2022 () AFC Women's Asian Cup: ... 1 August FIFA Women's World Cup: China ...
At the World Cup group stages, China PR defeated Denmark by 3–2, [7] lost against Brazil by 0–4, the highest score defeat of a host of a women's World Cup, [8] but with a 2–0 win against New Zealand still reached quarter-finals as group second. [9] They were eliminated at this stage with a 0–1 loss against Norway. [10]
The FIFA Women's World Cup is an international association football competition contested by the senior women's national teams of the members of Fédération Internationale de Football Association (), the sport's international governing body.
While it may be one of soccer’s biggest underachievers, China’s national team is the envy of Asia in terms of preparation for the 2022 World Cup. Serious resources are being poured into ...
The Asian section of the 2022 FIFA World Cup qualification acted as qualifiers for the 2022 FIFA World Cup held in Qatar for national teams who are members of the Asian Football Confederation (AFC). Apart from Qatar (who qualified automatically as hosts), a total of 4.5 slots (4 direct slots and 1 inter-confederation play-off slot) in the final ...
The opening two rounds of qualifying also served as qualification for the 2023 AFC Asian Cup. Therefore, Qatar, the 2022 FIFA World Cup host, only participated in the first two rounds of qualifying. [22] The qualification structure was as follows: [23] First round: Twelve teams (ranked 35–46) played home-and-away over two legs. The six ...
It served as the final stage of Asian qualification for the 2023 FIFA Women's World Cup in Australia and New Zealand (Regulations Article 4.6), [3] with Australia qualifying automatically as co-hosts. [10] Five teams qualified directly for the World Cup via the knockout stage and two more advanced to the inter-confederation play-offs.